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tv   Americas News Headquarters  FOX News  July 16, 2011 10:00am-11:00am PDT

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i don't get asked out, ever. (laught) >> so i was very flat theered by that. it's an honor. >> timberlake's co-star was asked to the marine corps ball and she accepted at his urging. that will do it for us. have a great day everybody! >>. >> jamie: hi everyone, welcome to america's news headquarters, i'm jamie colby. good to see you. >> good to see you as well. i'm kelly wright and deadlocked on deals. the president and republicans holding their ground as the deadline fast approaches for dealing with america's debt. that as the battle now moves from the white house to the capitol hill, you'll find out what this now means for your retirement plan and your savings account. >> casey anthony, just hours away from freedom after serving nearly three years behind bars and now, one of her lawyers is saying, he will
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be armed when she goes free. and 25,000 breaches of security for the tsa, after the september 11th attacks, and those are only the ones we know about so far. so, what needs to be done to keep our airports safe? got to begin though with the debt ceiling debate, raging in our nation's capital today. both sides offering little sign of a compromise. as an august 2nd deadline is fast approaching, talks between the president and members of congress are on hold, so far today, as well as a proposed trip to camp david that was talked about, instead, the president is taking his case directly to the american people, using his weekly radio and internet address to push his package of spending cuts p and tax increases. molly henneberg is covering the very latest for us in washington.
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and molly, tell us more about what the president had to say today. >> hi, jamie, part of his raid he yo address today is he's willing to quote, compromise, include cuts or quote, reforms, to entitlements like social security and medicare as part of the debt negotiations which the president says, doesn't, quote, make folks in my party too happy, but wants to include tax hikes which republicans say is a no go. the president is appealing two americans to back his plan of his quote, shared sacrifice. >> we have to ask everyone to play their part because we are all part of the same country, we're all in this together. so i've put things on the table for me and for democrats and expect republican leaders to do the same. >> the president argued in a press conference yesterday that the public is on his side in this debate with his call for spending cuts and tax hikes, jamie. >> jamie: there's a definite difference of opinions, molly. republicans are saying a no
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go, not even the right fix. >> reporter: right, right, the republicans say the reason the u.s. has a debt problem is not because americans aren't paying enough to taxes, it's because washington spends too much. >> the situation is only gotten worse after the obama administration in his first two years in office, discretionary spending has skyrocketed by 84%. including the failed stimulus, with spending reaching 25 percent of our nation's economic output. we haven't seen spending levels this high since world war ii! >> republican house speaker john boehner has said repeatedly he does not have the votes for the debt reduction in the house including tax hikes and insisting any increase in the debt ceiling is matched with equal or more spending cuts. jamie. >> jamie: molly, time is ticking. keep us posted if there are new developments today. thank you. >> kelly: jamie, certainly got that right. time is ticking and so is the
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finger pointing and reports of walkouts and dress downs. can washington really get together to reach a deal on the debt limit before the august 2nd he deadline? joining us now, california congressman john campbell and serves in the budget committee and new york congressman elliott ingle serves on the commercial committee. thank you for joining us this afternoon. an important time for you and your colleagues in congress and the republicans now pleading with you to get the job done, to find some common ground, some compromise and resolve this debt situation before it's too late. can you accomplish that by next week? >> welcome, i think we have to accomplish it by next week, we have no choice, i think the time for game of chicken is over. the american people want us to come to the middle, we've been spending too much and we have not closed tax loopholes and we need to do both. and i think that nothing less will be satisfying. it may be good to get elected
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to run on rhett recognizan-- rhetoric, but when you govern, you have to govern and make painful choices, it can't be my way or the highway on either side. we have to come to the middle and make our decisions and put this beside us and then we have to continue to work to reduce spending and also, to make share-- to make sure that the taxes are paying fair share by millionaires and billionaires, i don't think we can tax the middle class anymore and i don't think that working people need to be taxed, but when companies like ge pay no taxes and big oil have the tax breaks that they don't need, it's time to close some of those loopholes and i think we ought to stop the nonsense. >> kelly: let's hear from the other side. >> kelly, if i can jump in here, i agree with elliott in that we do have to resolve this. going over the cliff on this past august 2nd has some really negative consequences and we don't want to go there,
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don't want to do that so that's why we're trying another idea here, and on tuesday we'll pass the bill in congress which is cut cap and balance and we're proposing to cut spending, to have the spending limits, spending caps going forward, so an amount over which you, the government can't spend more money and have a balanced budget amendment. so, now, i would hope that the democratic colleagues will not just immediately reject this, but look at it. if you think we cut too much. propose a different number. if you think our spending caps are too low, tell us what kind of spending cap you might accept. do you like a balanced budget amendment? i would think that that would be popular in both parties, so, i think hopefully we can start to turn this debate a little bit with a bill that we're going to be introducing and passing, hopefully off the floor on tuesday. >> kelly: there's been a lot of talk of course of cut, cap and balance and gentlemen, turn your attention to what we just heard from the president today. even today as we're seeing between the two of you, the debate continues. president obama making it clear that he would like to big deal, some 4 trillion
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dollars or even 2 trillion dollars in deficit reduction, along with that he's calling on everyone to do their part in terms of taxes. on the other side, senator orrin hatch passing an amendment to the balanced budget to the constitution and solution to a spending crisis is not tax increases. so the stalemate remains. what will it take to break through this impasse. co congressman? >> i think frankly a balanced budget amendment is a diversion. when bill clinton left office, the last democratic president, we had largest surpluses in american history and under eight years of bush, red ink and deficits as far as the eye can see. we immediately cut taxes on millionaires and billionaires and we also started to spend like drunken sailors, so, i think that what we really need to do again is do a combination of both. the president is right when he says there ought to be shared pain, but we cannot even
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continue to play chicken. you know, when republicans controlled the house and the senate under the bush years for six years, they raised the debt ceiling six times. >> kelly: all right. >> without any spending cuts, so, i think na the campaign rhetoric should be over, let's put our heads together. >> kelly: very good, congressman campbell. what do you say about that? >> kelly, for the reasons elliott just described that's why we need a balanced budget amendment. we agree, democratic presidents, republicans presidents, democratic congressing, republicans congresses all spent too much and we need the controls so we don't spend too much again. you cannot solve this problem with tax increases, you cannot do it and when he talks about corporate jets and owe forth, that's, i say it's pennies on the dollars, but it's too much. tiny, tiny money. rhetorical argument to take away from the fact that we are in this problem because we've increased spending too much and we have to get out of it, and by reducing spending. and tax reform?
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we're open to tax reform, we're open to doing some things with it, with the tax code in general and generate more revenue and in terms of raising taxes, that's not going to help. >> congressman campbell. at the end of the day you and congressman elliott have to agree on something. time is of the essence and are you willing he at the ends of this deadline, august second, if congress has failed to do anything and the president as well, are you willing to say to the american people what they must do in the crisis moment, if america should default? >> well, i think the president, if no agreement needs to insoak the 14th amendment, which says that we shall pay our debt. and let me just say that, congressman campbell. >> quickly. >> reasonable and good member of congress, i wish that everyone in his aisle was as reasonable as him on his side of the aisle. >> congressman campbell real quickly, please. >> thank you, elliott, i really appreciate that. but first of all, we're not going into default. what you would have to do is
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reduce federal spending by 50% overnight and that's tough to do, we don't want to go there. and we do have to get together and we have to do something that improves, that starts to solve this situation, and we're going to have another debt crisis when people refuse to buy our debt and that will be a debt limit that we can't control. >> gentleman, i want to thank you both and my hats off to you, a herculean task ahead of you. i hope they can have a spirited debate as much as you are, have done today and still get us somewhere by next week. >> i hope so, too, thank you. >>. >> jamie: well, senate lawmakers are using every opportunity to make the case for their party's position. florida senator ben nelson using a ground breaking ceremony at the port of miami on the potential impact of missing the august 2nd deadline, take a listen. >> this deficit is serious, that we have to raise the debts ceiling so the country can pay its bills, otherwise, interest rates are going to go
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through the roof. and we won't even be able to fly our airplanes because we won't have anybody in the air control towers. that's how serious this is and they're playing like it's a bunch of political games up there. >> jamie: that was senator bill nelson, my apologies, senator nelson also saying he hopes the american people will eventually get behind president obama and his plan for a 4 trillion dollar deficit reduction deal. meanwhile, the debt ceiling negotiations are taking a toll on president obama's base. just getting this video into our news room. about a dozen protesters turning out at the president's national campaign headquarters that's in chicago voicing their concerns about potential cuts to medicare, medicaid and social security and the progressive change campaign committee also delivering what they said were 2000 pledges from people who will refuse to donate or volunteer for obama's reelection campaign if he cuts entitlement programs.
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kelly. >> kelly: new fallout in the news of the world phone hacking investigation. do you jones chief executive hinton stepping down after becoming a target of criticism and also a publisher of the wall street journal, once served as chairman of the u.k. parent. and this hours after chief executive brooks announced her resignation and allegations first emerged last week that reporters of news of the world hacked into private cell phone accounts for stories. news corporation's ceo rupert murdoch has issued a statement, running in britain's national newspapers, apologizing for any serious wrongdoing. british police say they've arrested at least seven people and have recovered at least 3700 names of potential victims, news of the world shuts-- shuts its door last week, shut its doors last week and it was owned by news corps, the parent company of fox news.
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>> there are protesters ratcheting the up the pressure on syrian president assad with a series of major rallies across that country. but the government is fighting back. activists claim security forces killed at least 28 people yesterday during the largest demonstrations since this uprising began. rina ninen is covering all of it live from jerusalem. tell us about the new protests. anything different? >> despite the government crackdown it's pretty amazing that people are still turning out, in fact, in the largest numbers we've seen so far. since the unrest and the protest began in march. some estimates touted that 1 million people took to the streets yesterday to try and bring down president assad's regime and they went specifically it areas with a crackdown has been the harshest, which is pretty surprising, some 28 people
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lost their lives yesterday according to human rights groups and those funerals, jamie, were held today. >> well, let me ask you, syrian opposition groups have gathered in turkey as well. tell us why. >> well, there was supposed to be a national dialog conference that assad was going to head in damascus. and that fell through and the opposition leaders gathered together in turkey to try and create some sort of a structure of regime for the opposition, for the day after assad leaves, what's interesting the location where this took place in turkey. turkey, probably second only to iran, was one of syria's strongest allies and the fact that they allowed this conference, opposition conference, to take place in turkey shows that turkey has clearly abandoned assad, jamie. >> that's significant. thank you so much, rina, for the latest from there. >> casey anthony spending her final few hours behind bars. the florida mother is getting
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out of jail tomorrow. after being acquitted of charges she killed her two-year-old daughter caylee. but experts say her freedom comes with a price tag. her personal safety. casey stegall is live outside the orange county corrections facility in orlando, florida and casey, how will this play out tomorrow? >> reporter: well, kelly, you know a lot of people would like the answer to that. at this point it really has been nothing, but speculation among media outlets and also, security experts because quite frankly, the officials here at the orange county jail are not releasing any information in terms of how this is going to go down and that is mainly to protect the safety of casey anthony because obviously, a lot of people were outraged by this verdict. they say that she got off for killing her young daughter caylee, in fact, her own civil attorney says just yesterday, his office received seven different threats of violence for casey anthony.
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so, again, the specifics are not being released. a lot of speculation. we know that it's going happen at some time tomorrow and here is what we also know. there are three journalists that have been selected to be witnesses and to also capture images of her release tomorrow. there is a news videoographer, a still photographer and a reporter with the associated press, but here is the deal, they are going to be sequestered in the hours leading up to the release. meaning they're not going to have access to blackberries, not going to have wi-fi, so they will not be able to broadcast the images live and they will not be able to even send out e-mails or text messages to their colleagues on when this is going to happen. they're going to document the release, and then they are going to go to the parking lot right here and then feed the images out to the world, the idea is so that no one will really know what exact moment it will happen so the
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paparazzi and other news photographers and the like will not be able to chase her down, where casey anthony is headed once she walks away a free woman is also anyone's guess at this point. nothing, but rumors and speculation on that end as well. >> kelly: what's happening with the civil case? >> well, you know, a lot of lawsuits are being thrown around. mainly defamation of character, because a lot of lies have been told throughout the last several years of this case, unfolding. the largest lawsuit, the defamation suit involving sanida gonzalez. a lot of people came to know her as zani the nanny during the criminal proceedings the one casey anthony alleged kidnapped caylee when she was missing in 2008. she's suing casey for defamation of character, she says that she lost her job because of this, she said that she never even know the anthonies and that caylee essentially pulled that name out of thin air. yesterday, the nanny's attorneys were in court trying
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to get a deposition of casey anthony to happen. today, while she is in incarcerated before she is released before they're afraid that she is going to flee, once she is released, but a judge decided yesterday that the deposition now will not happen until october. so, the drama continues, to be continued here from florida, kelly. we are he' covering it every step of the way. >> kelly: how right you are. casey stegall reporting live from the orange county correctional facilities in orlando, florida, thanks, casey. >> jamie: and casey being in orlando, avoiding los angeles where we usually assign him, avoiding carmageddon. a 53 hour construction road project that began last night and authorities had to shut down a ten mile stretch of one of the nation's busiest freeway, can you imagine the 405 is closed. removing a 50-year-old bridge as part after 1 billion dollar highway improvement project and drivers heeding warnings
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to stay off nearby roads and freeways to avoid major traffic jams they have every day of the week in that area. >> kelly: and international space station getting another hollywood wakeup call today as the historic mission enters the final days. pop star beyonce sending a good morning into space, with a special nod to the lone female on board and wrapping up items like clothes and food, expected to keep the space station stocked for a year and now, crews will have to start packing up the garbage that's been accumulating there, before making one last descent back to earth. >> jamie: some teachers learning a tough lessons in economics. one school districts firing more than 400 educators, why they're getting pink slips and how their union is trying to stop it. plus, there's a scathing new report raising a red flag uncovering tens of thousands of mistakes made by tsa agents
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>> and these are some of the top stories we're following right now. president obama meeting with spiritual leader, the dalai lama amidst a major backlash. and china is calling on the president to cancel the meeting. and calling him a splittist bent on dividing their nation. experts say casey anthony better watch her back, saying she should be in a safe house when she's released until the anger surrounding her trial
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dies down. dennis kucinich is considering a move out west. in washington. leaving ohio, where he's serving for decades. >> jamie: hundreds of teachers are laid off in the nation's capital and this time it's not because of budget cuts. educator found underperforming in their jobs and sometimes for years in a row. and the problem is not in washington alone. peter doocy, are you saying the bad teachers will go? >> reporter: i'm not saying that. they had to do a yeoman's job, moving them forward. 206 teachers were not up to the challenge. so they fired them as part of a mass layoff that had 413 public school employees looking for new jobs today. a majority. 288 as you just said were let
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go because they can't score well on the rating program called impact. the brainchild of michelle rerer read when she ran the program. 35 minute classroom visits to determine which teachers should stay and go and the teachers union says they don't like being judged like that. >> impact after the evaluation system is biased and most, if not all, evaluations systems run by other human beings have proven to be biased. >> reporter: but the d.c. school system defends impact, to ensure kids are learning a lot from the most qualified educators. >> impact is allowing us to do exactly what we set out to do. recognizing what or our highest performers and develop our people who are struggling and move out our low performers.
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>> the rewards that she is saying aren't a fantasy. >> 16% of teachers were rated highly effective and those teachers are now eligible for $25,000 in bonuses, jamie. >> jamie: that's significant, too. great, peter, great story. thanks for telling us about it. >> reporter: yep. >> kelly: a chilling new report about the safety of america's airports. the tsa letting tens of thousands of security breaches fall through the cracks since 9/11. raising the serious question, is it safe to fly? an aviation security expert weighs in next. [ wind howling ] [ engine idling [ male announcer ] talking a big game about yourngine is one thing. having the proven history that can back it up is a whole nother story. unsurpassed torque... best in class towing... legendary cummins eines. which engine do you want powering your truck? guts. glory. ram.
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>> welcome back, everybody. it's the bottom of the hour, time for the top of your news. president obama will decide today whether or not he'll summon lawmakers for a new round of debt talks, but for now, both democrats are republicans are sticking firmly to their positions on
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spending and taxes. >> and intense summer heat broiling the upper midwest. temperatures there well into the 90's, now hitting minnesota and wisconsin and could linger into next week. >> and the crew of the shuttle atlantis, continue the work on the international space station and they are he' fixing a computer that's needed for their final trip back to earth. >> full body scans in america's airports, you know them well and turns out they're here to stay. there's a federal court ruling that the invasive by many secured measures, for air travelers, can still be used by the tsa despite a shocking report that revealed 25,000 security breaches since september 11th even though we have the machines in our airports. what needs to be done to fix the system or is it just a matter of time, i hate to say it, before something goes terribly wrong.
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an aviation security analyst. thank you for joining us. >> the argument in the case, the court ruled they'll find and have them forever. if they don't work, why are they still there? >> because we have an incompetently managed transportation security administration. it's been that way since the start. there's been no accountability since 9/11, many of the people involved tsa were involved. and we don't know whether the body scanners work and whether or not they're safe. >> and the body bomb, surgically implanting bombs inside the person's body. would this pick it up. >> it wouldn't pick it up, but the subject brought up, why we need to change the transportation security administration. you don't make announcements like that to the public. if you know something, intel like that, you keep it quiet and try to do something about it. to make announcements like
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that or siltly announcements they found 13 knives if one bag, ray charles could have found that. this is all show, not a lot of go. >> jamie: well, stun guns in seat pacts and hearing more and more about the breaches of security. what would correct it? should the tsa not be in charge? should we privatize? what should we do? >> we have to have professional security not the pointy object patrol. the people in blue that go through your laundry, fine, keep them. we have people that don't want to do security, they want to find objects. back doors of our airports are wide open, no accountability for failure and people at the top are political appointees, not professionals. >> i see another concern. tell me how you feel about it, and that is that there are a lot of of workers at the airport, a million or more around the country that have clearance, but don't
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necessarily have to go through the types of screening procedures that we do. >> well, that's exactly what happened on 9/11. i mean, we had guns and all sorts of things on those airports. the passenger screening wasn't the problem. the back door of our airport is wide open and tsa is more concerned about what's in a baby's pampers than underneath the cement truck going out to fix the ramp. >> you've made us all owe concerned about it. can you spell out specifically what plan you'd like to see put in place? we're spending a lot of our tax dollars on this. >> what we have to have at the top are security professionals. just like we have defense or military professionals in afghanistan. we have to have security professionals and this whole thing is all about show. so, put somebody at the top of the list, security credentials all the way down and the people involved with security credentials and it's more than looking for toothpicks. >> jamie: i understand and shepard and i were talking about not being able to bring his shampoo on the plane and
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touching you in the patdowns and getting ridiculous, but are you saying when our military returns, they would be an option. do air marshals work? do we need more. >> no, we have professionals running our military. we need professionals in security running the security system. >> jamie: trained by who? >> trained by the government. number one we have to have people who understand security procedures. reality is putting somebody in charge who used to run a railroad like we had in the last tsa administration does not work. what we have to have, what are the objectives? what happens, how do you mitigate a threat when it happens? we have no mitigation plans. no idea what's going to happen if terminal a has a problem what do we do at terminal b and c. all we have is thousands of nice people making sure you don't walk on with a corkscrew. >> jamie: all right, mike, it's sobering. thank you for bringing it to our attention and hopefully to the attention of those who can make a difference for us so we can fly even safer. thank you. >> thank you.
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>>. >> kelly: the debt debate putting the markets on edge. moody's and s & p, credit agencies, both warning the country's triple-a credit rating could be in jeopardy, if the president and lawmakers, fail to reach a deal. so what could happen if the u.s. does default and more importantly, how can you protect your financial future? well, joining me now, the managing partner of chatwood capital investment management, and ed, good to see you. these are stark times here because of what's looming in the not too distant future if the congress fails, along with the president, fails to meet that august 2 deadline. if that happens, what's going to happen to our pocket books? >> well, kelly, what's happened, there's like a panic setting in around this country and let's put this in perspective. if the debt ceiling is not raised it's not synonymous with us defaulting on our debts. let' make that clear. we're not going to default on
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our debt even if the debt ceiling is not raised. okay? >> okay. >> having said that, i mean, it's very important to know that. having said that, if we don't raise it, that might mean that we have less revenue to pay into, you know, to our debt and as a result of of that our triple-a rating is on watch, and could be subject to coming down, which makes sense, just like a corporation, kelly. if a corporation's earnings aren't good their credit rating might drop a little bit and that's what's happening here, but we're not going to default on our debt. >> kelly: well, let me ask you, how would this affect our personal saving and spending? what should we do about our 401(k) and our future savings? >> and this is a good question. regardless if we default or not default, but we have a problem in this country with debt. and if our credit rating does go down or regardless if it goes down or not. people should stay fully invested. we're going to closer to the wire to that august 2nd deadline a lot more volatility, a lot more news stories and people are going to get unnerved.
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stay fully invested in your 401(k) plan because quite frankly there's no where else to go. what are you going put it in bonds paying zero, right. >> kelly: a well-known anchor sitting next to me asked me, should i put my money under my mattress? not a good place to put it, she was joking. >> jamie: was i? >> some people might be thinking that way because they might trust their institution of the mattress better than the government and the financial institutions. >> right, and that's why it's very important to have this discussion, because we are not going to default on our debt. people should stay fully invested. whatever they were doing six months ago, they should continue to do today. >> kelly: ed, you're always confident about the future of america in terms of what we do. do you think the country is going to move toward some sort of debt crisis that it can't meet or will congress do the right thing? >> well, if we continue down the path we are right now with the policies we have in place, down the road, it could get, you know, a little more ten use. right now we're not at that position. can it happen down the road,
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yes, and look, i've been very vocal about this time and time again. we want to fix the economy, drop taxes on everybody, stimulate the engine which is the economy, drop it down to 15, 20% across the board and won't have the discussion two years from now. >> kelly: see, i knew you'd say the right thing. ed, always a man of wisdom. i wish we could follow that on capitol hill and actually what your message is to american people keep on saving. don't worry about it. >> absolutely. >> kelly: jamie. >> jamie: ed knows his stuff so i guess i'll have to listen, not the mattress. >> kelly: not your mattress. >> jamie: you better save up if you want to buy this, but boy, is it sweet. a mercedes benz they've upped the four-door ante. a new vehicle with incredible power and guess what? it has a robot inside. i don't mean gary gastelu, but he did take the mer me benz cls 63 coupe for a test drive. >> it was the car that started the so-called four door coupe
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crazy. mercedes benz cls. now that it's copied from everyone from volkswagen to aston martin. the german auto maker introduces a new model with a buffed body of a banker on the way to mixed mar that will arts class. and 63 amg. the 63 means 5.5 liter twin turbocharged v-8. i'm lying this has a special performance imagine that bums up it over 500 horsepower. basically that means when this car accelerates it doesn't travel across the surface of the earth, it rotates the planet underneath it. putting the power to good use is 7 speed automatic transmission with a robotized clutch instead of inefficient torque converter. there's a robot in here. funny thing is when you come to a stop the engines turns off to save gasoline, pints if
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not quarters every year or press harder on the break and engage race start mode and do this. zero to 60 less than 4 seconds and top speed is limited to 33 h300 that's 160 faster than you're going to go. it has a timepiece and can be trimmed in carbon fiber, about twice what i paid for my first car. the price for all of that is steeper than the wind child 95,000 to start, a buck 15 dressed like this, probably worth every penny keeping in mind, people who can afford this, think that a penny is a stock. gary gastelu. >> jamie: i told kelly he would have to save 100,000 dollars, i was only 5,000 off.
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if you want to learn more go to fox car report.com. >> kelly: well, it turns out the fairer sex might be healthier, too. a brand new study showing men nearly twice as likely to die from a deadly disease. and wait until you see this larger than life tribute to a late hollywood legend. ♪ ♪ sweetie i think you need a little extra fiber in your diet. carol. fiber makes me sad. oh common. and how can you talk to me about fiber
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>> a marilyn monroe statue
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striking a famous pose in the windy city, get it? windy. the 26 foot sculpture on the magnificent mile, made famous in the seven year itch. catching her skirt as she walks over a subway great. i got distracted. the fans are literally standing under there, i wonder why. and the sculpture complete with, well, you can see for yourself. something, the film left to the imagination. boys were you wondering what was under there? now you know. >> kelly. >> i won't comment i almost made a comment and i won't do that. that. >> and dr. tisdale, president of classman university is a man of vision, believes he can help the predominantly black
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institutions, one of leading in the world. and achieving their goals beyond a dream. i was impressed when you gave your presentation the other day. >> for 17 years dr. henry tisdale has been paving the way for students in orangeberg, south carolina relentless in helping every student to achieve their goals. it covers really big programs such as the bioscience research lab which won award. undergraduates conduct research on aids, cancer and more. >> we believe that we'll have the capacity to solve some of the world's critical problems right here on our compass. >> tisdale believes the world needs visionary leaders which is what he encourages students to be. shares how his own life was a
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reflection of that. as a charles growing up in rural south carolina, working in the cotton field of the family farm. picking cotton sun up to sun down. >> even in the cotton fields, they would say, you can be the best. it helped me. when i came on to college, working hard, in mathematics, it was not a problem. going on to graduate school and having to work seven days a week, all night, all day, it all began on the farms. >> tisdale's ethic of hard work and faith fueled his passion for learning. the fruits of his labor enabled him to reap a harvest of many firsts. first of his family to leave the cotton fields and earn an agree in math a master degree in temple. the first african-american to earn a doctorate in mathematics at dartmouth. he's steered the college on
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pathway to excellence, inspiring students to be the best they can be. >> i was pleased to return to my alma mater, i thought i had much to offer to lead this university into the 21st century. i wanted a good university to become a great university that could compete, that could produce the best students in the world. >> i want to become a physician, so getting out there and getting experience and helping any way i can. >> i think i've been afforded all the opportunities that an opportunity at a majority institution would have had and anywhere you are, any institution you go to is all about making the most of that opportunity. >> i actually inspired my mom to go back to school as well. >> kelly: that's a really good thing right there and those students are showing what dr. tisdale calls the klafflin confident, showing yourself ready for any challenge and clafflin is recognized as one of the top colleges in the country. >> jamie: great to no about it, thanks, kell. a fox news health alert.
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a new report, shows a difference between a man and a woman. a difference that could be a matter of life or death when it comes to a potentially deadly disease, one of our med teamers, dr. mark segal joins us next to help us break it down. we'll be right back. you could save a bundle with geico's multi-policy discount. geico, saving people money on more than just car insurance. ♪ geico, saving people money on more than just car insurance.
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>> well, women are sometimes called the fairer he sex and now it looks like they might be healthier, too. a study shows that men diagnosed with cancer are twice as likely to die from the disease than females. anything men can do to change the odds? the author of inner pulse, a-team dr. mark segal. >> good to see you, hi, kelly. >> jamie: first of alls, diagnosis-wise, is there a difference between men and women, leading to the 2-1. >> that's the key point. if you have cancer your survival rate is about the same if you're a woman or a man. once you have cancer. the issue is that men are twice as likely to get cancer and therefore, twice as likely to die from it.
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that's what it is. nothing intrinsic to the kind of cancer except your tendency to get it and men are five times more likely to get lip cancer, four times more likely to get cancer of the throat. two times more likely to lung and liver cancer. why? men smoke more, drink more alcohol, men are exposed to more toxins at work and possibly genetic and as you were saying, definitely something hormonal. >> jamie: i was asking you after the break, i was reaching the research on it said that the hormones of men and women are different and could play a role. could you perhaps, administer hormone therapy to change the trends? >> jamie, you're not going to get me to take estrogen, but it's possible testosterone could play a role, but it could be going to the doctors. 27% of the men are not seeing
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doctors. women are delivering babies and seeing gynecologist from an early age and men are macho, by the time you get to see a guy, i find maybe they already have cancer and as we pointed out they're then more likely to die from it. >> jamie: if the women can convince the men to go and get checked. what's the one cancer you're the most concerned about about men not getting diagnosed in time? >> well, actually-- >> if we are he' going to nag. >> i think that lung cancer is the worse especially among smokers and tell you the reason. 180,000 of lung cancer a year, look at breast cancer, a lot of publicity and press, about 180,000 cases a year, 40,000 deaths. even though breast cancer is terrible, and deadly, many more women are living with it. young cancer is just so deadly and pancreatic, also, you've got to find it very early. which is in i'm one of the people that believes in screening smokers for lung cancer with cat scans. it's controversial, but i think if you don't get an early diagnosis with lung cancer, you don't have a chance. >> kelly: i hear you loud and
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clear, but as a man and knowing how we think, we're often very hard headed when it comes to medical concerns. how do we overcome that to get them to the doctor for those early screenings? >> you know, i think jamie just hit it. i think it's a matter of getting women to nag us. i think women are interested in their health and if they love us, our health and get on our backs and going to the doctor. going for screenings, psa, prostate and colonoscopy, you'll get a polyp before it develops into a cancer. >> there you go, that's your valentine. >> jamie: the study is interesting and you think it's valid as well. >> the first time it's been put together in this way and first time we found out that men get more cancer and therefore, they die more of cancer. >> jamie: thank you, doc so much. good to see you, dr. mark segal and that's going to do it for us, i'm jamie colby. >> kelly: i'm changing my behavior and i'm kelly wright.
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coming up the journal editorial report. have a great day everyone and stay cool out there. >> jamie: take care everybody. [ male announcer ] it's simple physics... a body at rest tends to stay at rest... while a body in motion tends to stay in motion. staying active can actually ease arthritis sympms. but if you have arthris, staying active can be difficult. prescription celebrex can help relieve arthritis pain so your body can stay in motion. because just one 200mg celebrex a day can provide 24 hour relief for many with arthritis pain and inflammation. plus, in clinical studies, celebrex is proven to improve daily physical function so moving is easier.
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and celebrex is not a narcotic. when it comes to relieving your arthritis pain, you and your doctor need to balance the benefits with the risks. all prescription nsaids, like celebrex, ibuprofen, naproxen, and meloxicam have the same cardiovascular warning. they all may increase the chance of heart attack or stroke, which can lead to death. this chance increases if you have heart disease or risk factors such as high blood pressure or when nsaids are taken for long periods nsaids, including celebrex, increase the chance of serious skin or allergic reactions or stomach and intestine problems, such as bleeding and ulcers, which can occur without warning and may cause death. patients also taking aspirin and the elderly are at increased risk for stomach bleeding and ulcers. do not take celebrex if you've had an asthma attack, hives, or other allergies to aspirin, nsaids or sulnamides. get help right away if you have swelling of the face or throat, or trouble breathing. tell your doctor your medical history anfind an arthritis treatment for you. visit celebrex.com and ask your doctor about celebrex. for a body in motion.
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