Vimarsana.com

Latest Breaking News On - Ronnie - Page 1 : vimarsana.com

Transcripts For MSNBCW The Rachel Maddow Show 20170211 05:00:00

of chicago and the south side cultural sent, thank you for having us. [ applause ] thanks for joining us tonight, happy friday. nice to have you with us. look at this awesome picture from 1968. i love every single thing about this picture. this is the central middle school band from orville, california. this is the majorettes part of the band and they are marching through downtown orville, california, on may 1, 1968. this picture is perfec and this picture the property of the california department of water resources. the reason the california department of water resources had a photographer on site taking pictures that day of the majorettes in orville is because that day the governor of california and his wife came too orville, california, to tour a really big awesome new piece of water structure the california governor at the time was ronald reagan. he and his wife nancy went to orville for the dedication of the brand new orville dam. it looks kind of fun. they got to go inside the dam, see in the white sneakers with the super cute hair cut? that's ron, jr., he got to go along with an unnamed friend. looks like they were having a good time. looks like a cool visit. ronald reagan made a speech. you can see next to him while he was giving the speech they had the big cooler of water. just in case. there had been a big parade downtown to welcome to governor and dignitaries. they had not just the majorettes from the middle school, they had the high school band, too. look how many people were there. look at that. thousands of people turned out for the dedication of the oroville dam. i think we have one picture of the crowd in color as well. look at that. who are the ladies in green? what was their role in the dedication? you look at photos like that it makes you realize being a governor has its ups and down. at the one hand you get to see stuff, take your family and go on cool behind-the-scenes tours, the local bands will come out to meet you when you do something. then there's the little indignities, right? this, for example, is what they gave ronald reagan as his soenirrom that day at the dedication. i know it kind of looks like a snow globe or a polished piece of granite or something. what that actually is is a ball of dirt. specifically it is dirt from this moment in history. ronald reagan was there in 1968 for the opening ceremony of the oroville dam but this was the moment they ceremonially broke ground on the construction. this was 1957. this was a previous governor of california, goodwin knight. everybody called him goodie knight, as in good night. he's got a shovel full of dirt there. somebody at the ground breaking had the foresight to save that exact shovelful of dirt they dumped it into a bag, saved it for the day the dam would be complete and up and running. they could have saved a little of it but they saved a lot of it. they saved a giant amount of dirt from that shovelful and gave it to ronald reagan. they sent ronald reagan back to the governor's mansion that day with a giant jar of a previous governor's dirt. thanks for visiting, mr. governor, give it pride of place somewhere. like if you moved into a new apartment and the landlord triumphantly handed you the vacuum bag from the old tenant. here's the original dirt from the former occupants of these rooms. congratulations. pride of place. but the oroville dam, they dedicated in the 1968. it's a big deal. it's huge, it's taller than hoover dam. it's the tallest dam in the united states. it's 770 feet tall. it was completed in 1968, took them almost a decade to build. it's one of those unimaginably large things we have made. you can see here the giant reservoir created when they built the dam, lake oroville one of the two biggest reservoirs in the state of california. and that reservoir, lake oroville, it's the central thing in the grand plan that made california work as a state with a huge population and big cities and tons of irrigated formland. this is the centerpiece of the whole system in california that moves water from the northern part of the state the sierra nevada into the central valley to irrigate the most productive farmland in the country and further down to the cities and population centers in southern california, lake oroville is massive. it is made possible because the oroville dam is massive, tallest dam in the country. now, in terms of sort of how it's situated, this gives you a good view, i think. you see below the dam is the feather river. the feather river, big river, flows into -- i think the sacramento river which ultimately flows into the san francisco bay at the end of the day. and what they do is they can release water from that giant reservoir into the feather river. they can do in the a few different ways. one of the things they've got is a power plant at the base of the dam so they release water at great force to fire that hydroelectric power plant. they can release water through tunnels at the base of the dam, they had a drama with that a couple years ago. they were trying to open up the tunnels to let water through to the feather river and something went wrong and there was a giant suction failure with the opening and closing of the valves and two workers almost got stucked downstream and they had to hold on to some broken piece of railing they were able to grab on to. it's a good reminder this is like a big piece of infrastructure, a lot of water, a very, very powerful thing. but in terms of the way it fits together, there's a couple ways they can get water from the reservoir to the feather river below. they can move it through power plant. if they want to move water out of the reservoir down into the river, they use this big gutter. they use this big concrete spillway. looks kind of like a luge track or something, right? like a cross between an onramp and a ski jump. but it's a big concrete spillway and it does exactly what it looks like it does. it takes water off the top of the reservoir and can shoot it down that gutter into the feather river and it's really big. it's about a mile long. it's maid of concrete, a key part of this huge piece of american infrastructure. this is what it looks like in normal times when it's dry, when they're not using the spillway. this is what it looks like in normal times when it's on, when they are putting water down that spillway, very dramatic, right? but on tuesday afternoon this week, this is what it looks like again, normal times, tuesday afternoon this week something went wrong at the oroville dam and instead of the spillway looking like this, like it always does, like it has since ronnie and nancy reagan opened that up in 1968, for the first time ever this tuesday it did not look like that. instead it looked like -- oh, wait, that's not right. that's not what that's supposed to look like. that was tuesday afternoon. see it shooting out the side there? yeah. tuesday afternoon they realized something was going very wrong on that spillway. water shooting out, scouring down that hillside, the water not confined to the gutter, what's going on? they shut it off to have a look and what they saw is -- oh, this is what it looked like. this was tuesday of this week. see the giant hole there? that's a problem, basically a giant sinkhole opened up in the middle of this that spillway. every second they're going to put more water down that sluice it will erode that sinkhole more and more so they shut off the water initially. here's the thing, though, they can't keep that water shut off because even though that giant hole has opened up in that spillway, they actually have to run water down that spillway right now. they can't stop. because like oroville at the top, it's full? as of today it was 98% capacity. california is not having a rainy season this year, they are having a monsoon season and, oh, yeah, let's see what that means for the drought. i know, big questions about overall climate and weather and california's drought and all that stuff. but for the immediate problem at hand, if they can no longer run water down that spillway because the spillway is busted, if they can no longer run water down that spillway to relieve the pressure in the lake, if the lake fills up and overfills and overtops that dam, if that happens, the water doesn't run down the tidy little purpose built concrete shute into the feather river below, if it overtops the dam, instead for the first time in the history of this dam, where the water goes is what they call down the emergency spillway which is not really a spillway at all, it just means the water just comes down the hill. and if all that water runs down the hill at force it will at some point bring the hillside down with it into the feather river and eventually into the sacramento river and into the delta and out to the san francisco bay. there's the possibility that an uncontrolled flow could flood downstream towns all along the way. so this is a heck of a choice, right? you either shut down the water down that spillway, let the dam get overtopped and run instead down the hillside all the way downstream and see what happens to california or you keep thundering water down that broken sinkhole concrete gutter and see how long it holds. it started off as a 300 foot long gash, it's kept on spreading and spreading, look. they say presumably it will split down to the bed rook. but what are you going to do? they have to keep running water down that thing. they don't have a choice so they're running the destroyed spillway. they're running it to complete failure. hope for the best, the best option. pray for dry days. this happened to be the drinking water source for more than 20 million people in the state of california. now, the dam itself, they say the dam itself is safe. the dam they say is built into bedrock, even if that whole hillside gets scoured out, continues to get blown apart, they say the dam will hold, they're confident of that, that's good, because it's almost an 800 foot tall dam, tallest dam in the country. but i feel like grasp ago story like this is almost a test of perspective, a test of whether or not you can appreciate the size of large objects in the news. my dad, my dear old dad, worked in the california water system for years in various capacities and he's been texting and e-mailing me about this all week so i've been looking at news coverage all week, looking at pictures on the california department of water resources web site all week and i could tell when i saw the pictures of the spillway something dramatic was wrong. i will confess to you, dad, i will confess to you right now, i do not truly appreciate what a literally big deal it was. what a large deal it was until i saw this one particular picture and at first glance it looks like the same old picture of that hole in the middle of the spillway until you realize that the tiny little yellow dot there is a full grown man and that shows you the scale of this thing. that's people inside there. that's how big that hole started out as. and that's -- okay, now i get it. that's the massive size of the undertaking it is going to be to fix this thing when it's over even if they somehow avoid catastrophic flooding or danger to the dam itself through this crisis. 's like in king kong where you know you're dealing with a big ape, you know he's big, that's the pl of the movie, then you see him on the empire state building and you're like, oh! that's how big he is! so we will keep an eye on this tallest dam in the country and its travails through tonight and into the weekend. i feel like that is not just a story, it's a bit of a news help. i feel like that lesson in watching the story about the dam in california, that story about is data that can make the difference between winning and losing. the microsoft cloud helps the pga tour turn countless points of data into insights that transform their business and will enhance the game for players and fans. the microsoft cloud turns information into insight. but when we brought our daughter home, that was it. now i have nicoderm cq. the nicoderm cq patch with unique extended release technology helps prevent your urge to smoke all day. it's the best thing that ever happened to me. every great why needs a great how. "washington post" story. at one level, i can appreciate this story looks like -- oh, i've heard something about this. the sinkhole is spreading a little further, right? seems like an incremental development and the ongoing concerning news about the new administration and its ties to russia. feels like an incremental little shift in something we've been watching for a long time. but if you can step back from this story, look at it fresh, array some news stories we understand for the purpose of gaining perspective on it, i think what this new development is about the national security advisor is basically like an 800 foot tall dam that's about to be overtopped. this is not a little marginal development in a medium-sized story. this is like an, oh, my god, you can't run water down this thing, what do you mean we have no choice, she's gonna blow. we have congressman adam schiff from the house intelligence committee joining us live to give us his perspective on this story. he said if this new development, if this new report is true, the national security advisor must be fired. so he obviously thinks it's a big deal. but let me break it down this way. basic revolution is sort of simple and stubbing when you boil it down. right after christmas this year when barack obama was still president the u.s. government announced sanctions against russia in retaliation for them interfering in our presidential election. you might remember they took back that waterfront compound that had been used by russian intelligence in maryland and they kicked a bunch of russian diplomats out of the country immediately with no notice. at the time we expected real -- retaliation, a tit for tat reaction between either the soviet union and us and russia and us. so the obama admistration did their sanctions, kicked the diplomats out on the 28th of december and we braced on the 28th of december to hear what russia was going to do in response. but they did nothing on the 28th. then on the 29th there was this entire day in which they also did nothing and then when they did announce their response on the 30th, their response was we're not going to respond the kremlin responded that it would be sad for the kids from the families of the diplomats to be in transit. he explained he wouldn't be doing it the forral retaliation, he would not expel american diplomats from russia. in fact, american diplomats and their families, their children in particular would be welcome at the kremlin to come to his vladimir putin christmas party. it was so weird. but here's where the "washington post" picks up the story "putin's muted response took white house officials by surprise. it triggered a search by u.s. spy agencies for clues. one former senior u.s. official tells the "pos," something happened in those 24 hours between obama's announcement and putin's response. officials began poring over intelligence reports, intercepted communications and diplomatic cables. they found evidence that trump national security adviser mike flynn and the russian ambassador to the united states had communicated by text and telephone around the time these sanctions were announced. now, one of the nice things about this reporting is we get this kind of blunt admission that "u.s. intelligence and law enforcement agencies routinely monitor communications with russian diplomats." okay. i mean, i guess we guessed that, but that's good to have bluntly in black and white. one of the other nice things about this reporting is this blunt force take it to the bank assertion by the "washington post" that their sources on this store "nine rrent and former officials." nine. nine. were in senior positions at multiple agencies at the time of the calls. the "new york times" similarly cites multiple federal officials who "have read transcripts of the call." so we've got u.s. intelligence and law enforcement agencies bugging the russians, right? listening in on this russian official's calls and what they hear, according to these multiple and multily corroborated reports is the man who's going to go on to be trump's national security advisor calling the russian government and essentially telling them "don't worry about these sanctions that the u.s. government is putting on you." he's calling russia to undermine the sanctions that president obama has put on russia for the attack on our presidential election. he told russia in essence don't bother reacting to these sanctions, don't worry about it, once trump is sworn in we'll take care of it. now, working secretly with a foreign power to undermine the actions of the u.s. government, that's kind of a big deal. even the trump folks recognize somebody doing that would be kind of a big deal. they recognized it enough that they took great pains to deny the heck out of this for weeks now. >> the subject matter of sanctions or the actions taken by the obama administration did not come up in the conversation. >> they exchanged logistical information on how to initiate and schedule that call. that was it. plain and simple. >> they did not discuss anything having to do with the united states' decision to expel diplomats or impose censure against russia. those elements were not part of that discussion. >> i can confirm, my credibility on the line. so this white house chief of staff, white house spokesman, vice president of the united states personally confirming ere's no way mike flynwould have crossed that line. there's no way he would have undermined the u.s. government with a foreign power. there's no way he would have talking about those sanctions and undermining the impact of those sanctions with the russians. no way. as of wednesday this week, mike flynn was still confirming to the "washington post" that he absolutely did not speak about those sanctions with russia. but then when the "post" went back to him with this nine-source reporting all but explicitly quoting what we now know, transcripts of the u.s. intelligence intercepts of that phone call, then, last night, mike flynn apparently changed his mind. now says i know that i previously said i definitely didn't talk about sanctions. now i don't remember if i talked about sanctions. bottom line, how big is this? is this a marginal development in this story we've all been watching? first thing to appreciate is the lying. either the white house spokesman, the white house chief of staff and the vice president all bluntly lied knowingly about mike flynn and what he was doing with russia or they lied inadvertently, unknowingly because they were saying something they thought was true because mike flynn told them a lie and they passed it on thinking it was true. either way, that can't stand, right? that seems like a big deal for the top people in a brand new administration. you're going to lie to me and have me take it to the american public and it makes it look like i'm lying or you're asking me to lie on your behalf and i do and get nailed for it? point one, the lying. second point to appreciate is the direct bottom line of this story which is that the senior national security advisor in this new administration personally interfered in u.s. government efforts to punish russia for interfering in our election. but in terms of assessing the size of this news, there's one last point that's starting to feel almost unappreciably big. and that's what i want to put to congressman adam schiff in just a moment because of his experience on the intelligence committee and it is this. buried in the seventh paragraph of the "washington post" story and in the fourth paragraph of the "new york times" story, buried well below the lead is the news that this discussion between mike flynn and the russian government undermining u.s. policy toward russia, undermining the u.s. effort to punish russia, undermining these sanctions, it wasn't stand alone thing. it was not the first of many conversations that have continued since the new administration was sworn in and he's become national security advisor. no, that wasn't the start of them talking. both papers are now reporting again with this sourcing that is deep, both papers where now reporting that mike flynn's contacts with the russian government started during the campaign. not since he's been national security advisor. not since the transition aftertrump was elected when the obama administration was still technically there but trump was on his way in but while trump was still running for president, during the campaign, while russia was interfering in the u.s. election to try to elect donald trump president, his top national security advisor on the campaign was in repeated contact with the russian government at that time. look, this is from the post. "the talks were part of a series of contacts between flynn and the russian official which began before the november 8 election." here's the "times," "current and former american officials says the conversation about sanctions was one in a series of contacts that began before the election." during the campaign while russia was interfering in the election, the trump campaign was in contact with the russian government. we're now confirming? really? okay. well, cnn reports tonight that american intelligence officials have corroborated some of the disputed dossier that was assembled about trump in russia by a former british spy who has now disappeared. if you recall this very controversial dossier which was published by buzzfeed news contained two main allegations -- one was that the russian government had allegedly collected damaging compromising personal information about donald trump that was of a salacious and personal nature. the other main allegation in that dossier was that the trump campaign colluded with the russian government while they interfered in our presidential election. cnn reports tonight intelligence officials, u.s. intelligence officials who have been investigating that dossier, they have now corroborated parts of it. again, the two parts are the salacious personal stuff or donald trump's campaign collaborated with the russian government while he interfered in our election. cnn reports tonight the part that has been corroborated by u.s. intelligence is not the salacious personal stuff. so that leaves -- we should note that the white house is indisputg cnn's reporting tonight. they're calling it fake news. but that's where we are. is part of the reason we got this new president not just because some foreign government tried to make that happen? is part of the reason we got this new president because his campaign worked with a foreign government to influence the outcome of our election, to make that outcome happen? if so, it feels to me like that's not a sinkhole. that's not a busted spillway or eroded hillside. to me that feels like blowing the dam. tell your doctor if you have an infection, experience frequent infections, or have flu-like symptoms, or sores. liver problems can occur with entyvio. if your uc or crohn's medication isn't working for you, ask your gastroenterologist about entyvio. entyvio. relief and remission within reach. at angie's list, we believe there are certain things you can count on, like what goes down doesn't always come back up. [ toilet flushes ] so when you need a plumber, you can count on us to help you find the right person for the job. discover all the ways we can help at angie's list. "best cracked pepper sauce" barbeque trophies: "most ribs eaten while calf roping". yep. greatness deserves recognition. you got any trophies, cowboy? uh, yea, well, uh... well, there's this one. "best insurance mobile app"? yep, three years in a row. well i'll be! does that thing just follow you around? like a little puppy. the award-winning geico app. download it today. we've learned in the last 24 hours ago by reporting from the "washington post," "new york times" and nbc news confirming that despite repeated denials from him and other administration official, national security advisor mike flynn spoke with the russian government about the u.s. sanctions on them for undermining our presidential election. he reportedly undermined the impact of those u.s. sanctions on russia by communicating secretly with the russian government before donald trump took office. the "times" and the "post" are reporting with multiple sources that general flynn was in contact with the russian government during the presidential campaign which raises questions as to whether or not the trump campaign may have been collaborating with a foreign government while that foreign government was making efforts to interfere with and influence the outcome of our election. asked about this blockbuster new reporting tonight, the president said -- well i'm paraphrasing here but he basically said "the what now?" >> i don't know about it. i haven't seen it. what report is that? >> reporter: the "washington post" is reporting that he talked to the ambassador from russia before you were grated about sanctions. >> i haven't seen that. i'll look at that. >> 2 question now is once the president looks at that, do we expect him to do anything about it? joining us now is congressman adam schiff, the ranking member of the house intelligence committee, congressman schiff, appreciate you being here on a friday night, thanks for your time. >> good to be with you, rachel. >> i'm grappling with the size of this report. i feel like it's easy to see this as another incremental story in a slowly growing thing that a lot of people are concerned about at the one level. on the other hand it feels like a very big bad story. what's your assessment of how damaging and worrying this is. >> it's enormously damaging and worrying. you set up the context so well and i have to say you do a marvelous job in putting it together and letting the american people just see how big this is. you know, from my perspective, the context is as simple as this -- the intelligence community found that russia interfered in our election with the purpose of helping elect donald trump and having achieved that objective you have one of trump campaign's foremost surrogates, general flynn, having a private conversation with the russian ambassador around and having achieved that objective you have one of trump campaign's foremost surrogates, general flynn, having a private conversation with the russian ambassador around the time that president obama announces sanctions to punish russia for that very interference and flynn reportedly says don't worry about the sanctions on you for helping us win. once we take office we'll take care of it. if that's true, it's absolutely staggering. it certainly ought to result in his immediate removal from office and if the further actions are true that this was a course of conduct throughout the campaign then you have very serious legal violations as well and that is something we are investigating on the intelligence committee and we have to get to the bottom of. >> in terms of the legal issues here, some people have been talking about the fact that general flynn, when these contacts happen during the transition he was a private citizen although it was clear he was about to be a public official, people are talking about whether that violated the logan act which is a prohibition on individual private citizens undermining the u.s. government with foreign contacts. that's a law that's never been prosecuted even though we'ad it on the books since the 1700s. when you say there may be legal issues here, is that what you're talking about or are there other potential difcult statute to prosecute. i think there would be heavy burden to make that kind of case. what may be more significant here in addition to the fact that the general flynn would be working against the u.s. national security interest is the fact that he misled the country about it afterwards. in that case, the coverup may be the worst element but the illegality i'm talking about is if the trump campaign during the course of the campaign, including michael flynn, was collaborating with russia to interfere in our election, all kinds of laws were violated and that will have very serious repercussions. that is among the most serious allegations we're investigating. >> is that espionage? is that treason? is that -- are those the kinds of categories of laws we're talking about then? >> it's possible that it comes out to that. there frankly will be a number of statutes that would be implicated that would be far eastier to prove than those exceptional ones but if effectively the trump campaign was colluding in the illegal hacking of information, the illegal publication of information, the theft of data, was receiving essentially in-kind support from a foreign adversarial power there are any number of laws violated so if those allegations prove to be true, stepping down from office will be the least of worries from trump administration officials. >> congressman adam schiff of california. this is serious stuff. thank you for being so clear and straightforward and calm in your discussion about it. i get my hair on fire about this stuff but i feel like you are a beacon here, thanks, sir. very busy night, stay with us. i'm all the techy stuff you got crammed into your brand-new car. i'm so sexy, you can't keep your hands off me. do it again. there you go... i can do whatever you want. except keep your eyes on the road. now would be a good time to have new car replacement. so get allstate and be better protected from mayhem, like me. it's good to be in good hands. ♪ they keep telling me "drink more water." "exercise more." i know that. "try laxatives..." i know. believe me. it's like i've. tried. everything! my chronic constipation keeps coming back. i know that. tell me something i don't know. (vo) linzess works differently from laxatives. linzess treats adults with ibs with constipation, or chronic constipation. it can help relieve your belly pain, and lets you have more frequent and complete bowel movements that are easier to pass. do not give linzess to children under 6 and it should not be given to children 6 to 17. it may harm them. don't take linzess if you have a bowel blockage. get immediate help if you develop unusual or severe stomach pain, especially with bloody or black stools. the most common side effect is diarrhea, sometimes severe. if it's severe stop taking linzess and call your doctor right away. other side effects include gas, stomach-area pain and swelling. talk to your doctor about managing your symptoms proactively with linzess. you won't see these folks they have businesses to run. they have passions to pursue. how do they avoid trips to the post office? stamps.com mail letters, ship packages, all the services of the post office right on your computer. get a 4 week trial, plus $100 in extras including postage and a digital scale. go to stamps.com/tv and never go to the post office again. dobecause you've got ams lot of cheering to do! get fast sinus relief...with vicks sinex. and get your head back in the game. sinex. the congestion, pressure, pain to clear your head, medicine. late wednesday night this week there was very dramatic, very emotional news out of phoenix, arizona. it was late that night, people putting themselves physically in the way of this van, they're trying to stop it from moving,s they're trying to prevent a local mother who was inside that van from being taken to mexico. her name is guadalupe garcia derios. she's 36 years old, she came here from mexico when she was 14 years old. she has two teenaged kids who were both american born, american citizens. she herself has not been to mexico since she was a kid. she has lived here her whole adult life. but after 22 years of living here she was deported yesterday to nogales, mexico. she's being described as the first person reported as a result of president trump's orders, his executive order that ice should priorities deportations for anyone with any kind of criminal record, no matter what it is. in her case, her crime was using a made up social security number so she could work at a local water park -- a decade ago. she's been following the rules since then, checking in with ice every year, every six months, wherever they tell her to, she checks in. on wednesday when she checked in as she always has they arrested her and these protests erupted while her husband and kids waited outside. now it seems like her arrest and deportation may be the start of something bigger. after we saw that really emotional footage on wednesday night, all day thursday we started hearing rumors and reports that ice officers, that immigration and customs enforcement officers, started rounding people up that they rounded up over 100 people in southern california. that prompted big protests in southern california. all day yesterday, people watching raids play out said this appeared to be something new, it appeared to be a big coordinated action by immigration and customs. ice pushed back saying these were false reports, this was business as usual they said it was an exaggeration to say they picked up 100 people in southern california. tonight we're learning it was more like 160 people in southern california. the "washington post" is reporting there were immigration raids not just in southern california but in at least a half dozen states. home sweeps, officers going into people's homes, workplace raids in places as far flung as atlanta, chicago, north carolina, south carolina, the los angeles area, we're getting reports of checkpoints set up in north carolina and austin texas. the difference between the government's description of what it's doing and what's apparent this is not a screensaver. this is the destruction of a cancer cell by the body's own immune system, thanks to medicine that didn't exist until now. and today can save your life. ♪ ♪ you foundi'm a robot! cars.com rawr yeti and found a place to service it, too. ♪ jingle bells now when you're ready, you can sell your old car and find your new one all on cars.com you know us for shopping, and now we're there for every turn. cars.com that goes beyond assuming beingredients are safe...ood to knowing they are. going beyond expectations... because our pets deserve it. beyond. natural pet food. confirming what activists have been saying and what ice, what the trump administration has been officially denying. the leader of the california state senate late tonight responded this way. "appreciate that ice finally disclosed details about their disclosed details about their recent raids but stunned to learn that ice's public comments made yesterday were blatantly recent raids but stunned to learn that ice's public comments made yesterday were blatantly false. when news first broke of raids happening across southern california i didn't do ice told the media that reports of 100 immigrants being arrested were grossly exaggerated yet today they admit they arrested 160 people. ice told numerous media outlets that yesterday was a routine day, which it most clearly was not, and they have yet to disclose the crimes each person was convicted of to support their arrests. the disconnect out of what was publicly disclosed today is deeply troubling and needs to be fully explained by the trump administration." joining us now is kevin de leone, the california senate leader who issued that statement following these not just unannounce bud officially denied raids across his state. senator de leone, thank you for joining us. appreciate your time. >> thank you, rachel. we turn the federal government for an explain nation about the scale, the motivation and the results of sudden actions like this. in this case it feels like we can't trust what the government is telling us about their actions, what do you understand of the facts of what have happened in the last 48 hours or so. >> rachel, it's been difficult to get information out from ice authorities. historically under the obama administration they have been forth come and transparent with who they are detaining, who they're deporting and the reasons why. with the trump administration it's a new attitude, it's overly aggressive, a new tone and tenor and we're concerned because we tried incessantly last night to get the facts, to get the the fa in fact, i believe even worse, that they were misleading the public. i find it quite agalling that they attempted to lecture the public when it came to a sense of public misleading of what was actually happening yesterday. but it's been very difficult given a new trump administration. they're very overly aggressive with what they're doing and they said they did not arrest 100 individuals. in fact, we find out today it was actually 160 iividuals. >> onef the things that we saw -- we're showing footage while you're speaking about the spontaneous protests that happened last night in los angeles, people reacting in anger and clearly in surprise to what had happened. one of the other things that we're seeing is there's, for example, a pledge that people are taking called here to stay, where people are basically pledging to bodily put themselves on the line to try to stop people from being deported, to try to block arrests, to try to help people evade the authorities or to put themselves in the way while these arrests are happening. do you have any reaction to that? do you understand the impetus for that? do you feel like that might drive confrontation here? >> well, i can tell you this, rachel, that there is a lot of fear, there's a lot of panic throughout the community, not just in los angeles, but throughout california and throughout the nation. there's a lot of consternation. the anxiety is extremely high, especially among children who are fearful that they may not, no longer see their mothers or their fathers. children are being dropped off at school and are fearful that come in the afternoon that standing at the curbside waiting for their mother or father, they may not actually appear. panic and anger is so high that there has been talk about human shields, about ordinary u.s. citizens actually protecting nannies, gardeners, people who clean our homes and take care of our children and creating this sort of human chain to protect them. i don't condone this type of comportment, but i understand why the anxiety, the consternation is so high here in california. >> state senator kevin de leon, the california state senate president, thanks for your time tonight, sir. keep in touch with us about this. >> absolutely, thank you. >> we need good sources of information as this and i am as troubled as you are that we can't get it from the federal government. thank you. >> thank you, rachel. the weekend has not officially arrived yet, and already i can tell you next week is going to be jam-packed. i can tell you some of what's going to be jam-packed into it. stay with us. there's no party like a lobster party, and this is the lobster party. red lobster's lobsterfest is back with 9 irresistible lobster dishes. yeah, it's a lot. try tender lobster lover's dream and see how sweet a lobster dream can be. or pick two delicious lobster tails with new lobster mix and match. the only thing more tempting than one succulent lobster tail, is two. is your mouth watering yet? good. because there's something for everyone, and everyone's invited. so come in today. the first rule of is that teamwork is important. remember to do the little things. help each other out. and the second rule of being a viking. there's more than one way to win. vikings: war of clans play free now. okay, the guy behind the camera here, who you don't see, the guy holding the camera, is the constituent. the guy in fnt of the camera, the unhappy person right in the center of the frame, that's the congressional staffer. >> are you authorized to speak for representative zeldin? >> i am speaking for him right now, letting you know -- >> okay. so, the affordable care act, one of the provisions is that insurance companies have to dedicate 85% of your premium to actually delivering health care. does representative zeldin support or oppose that part of the affordable care act? >> i can get that information. >> okay. the affordable care act guarantees that women cannot be charged more for their premiums than men. does representative zeldin support or oppose that part of the affordable care act? >> again, i can get you that information. >> okay. the affordable care act guarantees that children can stay on their parents' health care until they're 26. does representative zeldin support or oppose that part of the affordable care act? >> all i can say is that -- >> you know where i'm going with this. >> we do see where you're going with this, staffer trapped in front of the ladies' room there. that's what it's been like with constituents expressing themselves toward, in this case, new york republican congressman lee zeldin. today, the congressman canceled a town hall two months in advance of when it was supposed to happen in april because i think he is not particularly liking what it means for him and his staff to hear from his constituents these days. but you know what, i wanted to show you that clip of that confrontation over the affordable care act. i think it shows that people in general are getting very good at being very articulate about obamacare all of a sudden, right? whatever the fights in past had been about, right? with the people on the right saying, oh, it's socialized medicine and death panels and stuff, and people in support of it not necessarily being able to be that snappy. people all of a sudden are really good about articulating what's good about the affordable care act when they're talking to their member of congress, when they're talking to congressional staffers. this, for example, was last night in tennessee. >> my name is jessie, and i'm in your district. it's from my understanding the aca mandate requires everybody to have insurance because the healthy people pull up the sick people, right? and as a christian, my whole philosophy in life is pull up the unfortunate, okay? so, the individual mandate, that's what it does. the healthy people pull up the sick. if we take those people and we put them in high-risk insurance pools, they're costlier and there's less coverage for them. that's the way it's been in the past and that's the way it will be again. so, we are effectively punishing our sickest people. >> that was at a meeting last night in tennessee with republican congresswoman diane black. people are getting very good at putting their member of congress on the spot about health care right now. and for people who want to save the affordable care act, that skill is about to become important, way more important than it's even been thus far, because last night at 2:15 in the morning, the senate confirmed tom price to be the new health secretary. zero democratic votes. 2:15 a.m. seems about right for that vote. i'm sure it helps to have zero attention, zero audience on a vote like that, particularly thanks to tom price's ethics problems, his lots and lots and lots of ethics problems. but if republicans in congress have had a hard time sort of getting it together to start taking away health care yet -- they haven't even come up with a way to explain it to their constituents yet -- swearing in tom price today is expected to put some steam in that republican engine. so, tom price has been sworn in. in terms of what happens next in the cabinet, republicans could be voting tomorrow on treasury secretary steve mnuchin, if they wanted to, but they're taking the day off instead. they said they would work through the weekend. they're not working through the weekend, so expect a steve mnuchin vote on monday. that's also when we expect protests nationwide over the president's pick of labor secretary, the man whose pick of carl's jr. and hardee's, larry puzner. it will begin with protests in two dozen cities, protesters highlighting labor violations and discrimination cases at puzner's only company while he's been ceo. their contention is he's unfit to be in charge of labor laws for the country when he's been breaking them as a businessman. the following day on tuesday, a court in missouri will decide whether or not to unseal his divorce records from back in the day. the government watchdog is asking that those records should be unsealed because they reportedly include claims of domestic violence made by mr. pudzner's ex-wife towards him. he's denied the allegations and

Reason
California-department-of-water-resources
Governor
Southern-california
Piece
Photographer
Majorettes
Wife
Site
Water-structure
Downtown-orville
Dam

Transcripts For FOXNEWSW Red Eye With Tom Shillue 20170203 08:00:00

because australia is the one, they don't want those. that's why they made the deal with obama. >> obviously they are being hypocrites, okay. but when i heard tough phone call, let me tell you about some tough phone calls i've made. if you had to call a girl and say it's burning down there. look, at the end of the day, i think that trump is hilarious, watching him every time he speaks, it's a very entertaining endeavor. but to be honest with you, i feel like he is the only guy who has a prank answering machine on his cell phone. you call and you get his answering machine and he does that hello, hello, hello. just kidding, you got the president. that's all it got say about tha that. >> tom: kristin, what do you think, do you think we should have to honor every deal, this thing was assigned just before trump took office. most politicians say we have to honor all of our agreements. >> these people are not our problem. australia doesn't want them, the days are over of us being pushovers and allowing everyone to take advantage of us. america was the big kid that just sat there getting poked over and over, everyone kept poking us and we never poked them back. now guess what, we're standing up and we are saying enough. >> tom: even if he honors the deal, whatever, at least he pushed back a little. president trump is feuding with australia and an austrian. on thursday while speaking at the national prayer breakfast, the president took a jab at the ratings of the new "celebrity apprentice." the show's creator, mark burnett was sitting just a few feet away. >> we had a tremendous success on the apprentice, and when i ran for president, had to leave the show. that's when i knew for sure i was doing it. they hired a big movie star, arnold schwarzenegger to take my place. we know how that turned out. the ratings went right down the tubes. it's been a total disaster. mark will never, ever bet against trump again. i want to just pray for arnold if we can. >> he's president. >> tom: it's a nice sentiment, he wanted to pray for him. arnold schwarzenegger responded with a twitter video. >> hey donald, i have a great idea. why don't we switch jobs. you take over tv, since you're such an expert in ratings, i take over your job, because people can finally speak comfortably again. >> tom: luis, trump keeps slamming arnold, but do you think this is all a plot to raise the ratings, he still a producer on the show. >> very smart move, we are all talking about it. i like arnold schwarzenegger's idea. how about i come the president and you can be a terminator. it's unbelievable. >> dave and i are outraged. >> jimmy, look, don't tell me you haven't done the voice on stage. >> when things got rough and i need an emergency brake laugh, i don't have arnold in me. >> we should all just to this whole in arnold voice. >> who isn't sleeping comfortably if arnold isn't president. a woman on a date with bill cosby still isn't sleeping comfortably with arnold as no one, is he out of his mind? shut up! >> tom: the guy had to go terms as governor of the governor of california. i did a little arnold there. >> if trump gets in a fight with christopher walking, you're in. >> jimmy nailed it on the head, you see the lack of self-awareness of arnold schwarzenegger. >> agro aggressions, by the way. it >> that one wasn't bad. that was ronnie. >> tom: kristin, let's hear your arnold schwarzenegger impression. >> i am arnold schwarzenegger. >> that's what it's like to be a hot woman. well done. >> we all said it was awesome. >> tom: kristin. that is a problem with comedy. look what happens here. everyone is acting like trump, look, he's the reality show president. everybody else does the same thing. he's got his twitter video, they all answer him quickly, right? >> trump is better at both the things, he is better at politics and he's better at tv and he went into that with zero experience. i'm sure it arnold schwarzenegger wants to be president, but nobody wants him and technically you can't be president in this country if you weren't born here. besides barack obama. >> jimmy, i don't even remember, did i go to you yet in this segment customer >> who even knows if he did. people say trump is so thin-skinned, always has to acknowledge the stuff, i don't think that's what it is. i think he's competitive. i think he is a relentlessly competitive guy who can't let any slight go. he isn't thin-skinned, he's michael jordan and that if you knew michael jordan, you beat him in something he would insist on a rematch. >> what trump can't do is not hit back. we see mr. the entire campaign. if usace and the about his hands he has to respond. he has to hit back. >> he has a sense of humor, too. he was laughing, that's why everyone loves him. >> arnold should stick to what he's doing best, which is knocking up maids. >> what was that end? >> tom: moving on. violent protests directed at uc berkeley after a planned event featuring milo yiannopoulos. they were at least willing to debate a trump supporter who shows up. >> our cbs station spoke with a trump supporter who was drowned out by protesters on live tv. [sirens] >> tom: the next morning, trump tweeted -- what could have given the president of that idea? maybe he was watching fox and friends first and saw a conservative hero todd starnes state this. >> president trump should immediately issue an executive order blocking berkeley students from getting federal funding. free speech for all or no federal money, not a single taxpayer penny, period. did he get the president to take action quester mark i'm not surprised, because that's the power -- ♪ dave? >> it seemed like a bit of a stretch to me, the power of starnes. >> tom: he watches it every day and he practically quoted him. >> i meant to the gimmick in the song. >> tom: we wrote it. we've got to use it if we've got it. this is, you are totally into, this is your thing. >> i believe in free speech, i really don't using the power of federal money to influence speech, necessarily. it's kind of weird. it's like fighting communism with fascism, which always works out well for the people. >> tom: why cut these people a check? >> they never should have been cutting them a check to begin with, probably. what is happening is the left is being exposed. what really bums me about this is the most privileged thing you could possibly do. who do you think is cleaning up this mess, billionaires? it's literally some poor person who has to come along and clean this up. >> tom: good point. kristin, i say they're not fulfilling their duty. they have a charter, they're supposed to be about open minds and ideas, they're not doing it. cut off the money. >> exactly, i'm so glad that trump is coming in there and slaying this political correctness that's just disgusting. if these universities will not protect free speech, and if they're going to tolerate violence against conservatives, then yes, take away their funding. if they don't like it they can go to the supreme court and they can decide whether they get the funding. >> she smells amazing, she can do whatever she wants. >> tom: they're out of control control. he wants to give a speech, they started with him. >> a homosexual, can you believe it? i thought of a solution. who's going to clean up that mess, right? not the privilege, not the billionaires. those refugees from australia. them over. >> tom: i see what you did there. >> have them clean up the mess. >> tom: give a job, right? >> it's funny, it works. >> tom: i'm trying to keep this show on the air, here. whose side are you on? >> this is where my two big issues are. they made my lowe's speech and his web content and his archival content, probably not necessarily more appealing but more visible to the rest of the country by doing this. before they burned down berkeley nobody knew he was speaking there. they just ample fight his impressed. this is where i do have a spec for them, though. that's an almost impossible protests to organize, because there's no way you can get his last name past your spell check. they started sending that text a month and a half ago. a >> yogurt and such? >> tom: it's all coming, this is a boon for milo, they've got a book coming out. they said they were going to boycott the publisher. it's going to be a bestseller. >> if you were his publicist you could not have paid for better publicity than he's gotten. this is unintentional, but the craziest thing to me about milo is that he's not even that radical. milo supports people like rudy giuliani, if you get down to it he's kind of a middle-of-the-road republican. he just completely unapologetic about it. it's a conservative who's not coming in and saying he knows his narrative has been over presented. he's unapologetic, like an anarchist libertarian. if you're offended by this guy, you don't want to know what i believe. >> tom: a black conservative, a gay conservative messes with them. >> anybody who's a remember of a protected class. caitlyn jenner was a sacred deity of america on the "vanity fair" cover and now it nobody will acknowledge her. is there was a point where she was so sacred that she could kill someone with her suv, but now she's a republican so she's done. >> tom: the conservative politics. coming up, does this look like a man you can trust with your secrets western ? find out what trumps former doctor revealed about the president next. ♪ ♪ >> live it from "america's news headquarters," i'm jackie ibanez in new york. the trump administration may be striking an upper line with israel. now warning the prime minister that settling may not be helpful to middle east peace efforts. until now he has appeared sympathetic to their cost. the administration is claiming they have not taken an official position yet, in response israel's ambassador says it's too early or to tell how it might affect future building. there's also word out of washington, the white house is preparing to chiron after it testfired a ballistic missile. as many as two dozen around the individuals, companies, and possibly government agencies could be penalized. another night of violence at an american college campus. new york city, police are out in forces. gavin mcginnis was invited to attend a seminar by campus or publicans, protesters showed up to voice their displeasure. on wednesday night you may remember uc berkeley was protested following a planned a speech by milo yiannopoulos, breitbart editor. the school was forced to cancel. secretary of education, public and lawmakers say they are fed up with democratic delays. republicans are confident they have the 51 votes needed to end the debate, if so she could win confirmation by monday. i'm jackie ibanez, now back to "red eye." for all of your headlines, log on to foxnewstv.com. music him ♪ >> tom: the doctor is in capable of keeping secrets. president trump's longtime physician told all to "the new york times" ," revealig medical secrets of our new president. the doctor says trump takes three different medications. an antibiotic to treat rosacea, something to lower his cholesterol, and something to treat male pattern baldness. he has all his hair, i have all my hair. other fun facts revealed by the physician, some called dr. jekyll well probably high. come on guys, that was a good one. he hates the fun made of him. and he says, "i am probably the only person who has every phone number for him and all the wives" ." this disclosure could come back to haunt dr. bornstein. reporter tweeted -- >> tom: a lot of old guys take all these drugs, no big secrets. >> you can go out and give people's medical history. >> tom: they were begging for more of it. >> i don't pay attention to the laws, i have no idea what hippos do and why they have laws. i'm not going to sit here and always bash trump. they shouldn't be giving his medical information out. he takes stuffer his hair, right that says it's on the his confident. i'm bald, women like this. am i wrong or am i right, kristin? thank you very much. just let it go and show the world he's a confident man, now that we know this little tidbit about him i'm questioning his confidence. >> tom: a lot of his personality comes from the hair. there's nothing wrong with taking, a lot of guys take this drug, what the stuff you rub on your head, rogaine. >> people are obsessed with his hair, i don't know what's on his head and i don't care. people are just jealous. they are jealous of his money, there jealous of his hair. frankly, i don't care what's on his head as long as he secures the border, brings jobs back and blows isis the hell up. >> i care about was on his hair. i don't care what the borders so much. >> tom: what about the doctor? is this unethical? the thing that strikes me is that before they were saying look at this crazy doctor, he's not revealing anything, he sent out that one sheet that that is really healthy, and now -- >> he's in tremendous health. he's dr. trump, trump found his own trump. you would think a doctor, even when i saw the article, i thought he told all the prescriptions that he was on, he might get in trouble for this. doctors can't just do that, it literally is such a trump thing, he was making a point about how great both of their hair was. he got lost on the fact that oh, yeah, i'm a medical doctor. >> tom: they don't care, these doctors, they don't think there's anything embarrassing when taking a few drugs, right? >> you know i deduce from watching this, this is a guy that's definitely sold a few prescription pads on the side. e with the right and wrong in terms of divulging that information, could you look at a picture of that guy and tell me he hasn't moved some adderall on craigslist? all i did was skim to the bottom of the article for a phone number or email. >> a call from a girl on roller blades. >> tom: just because he has a laid-back look, he doesn't look with a manhattan doctor, he looked like he should be in long beach or something. i think he's an upstanding guy, a good doctor, but the thing is, they always make people reveal everything. they want to see all the taxes, they want to see the medical reports, we were calling for hillary's medical stuff, right? did we ever get them? >> we got her taxes. boring taxes. >> i think we had a bigger write to her medical reports than we did it trumps taxes? >> sheep fainted on 868-degree day. >> they come in the form of youtube videos. >> i get them for my dad. >> she respects hippo law. >> tom: coming up, have "halft" with tv's andy levy. a brand-new episode of the "red eye" podcast is a babel, subscribe on to be 27. hose placp changing every few months. the quicksilver card from capital one doesn't do any of that. with quicksilver you earn unlimited 1.5% cash back on every purchase, everywhere. leave complicated behind. what's in your wallet? so we sent that sample i doff to ancestry. i was from ethnically. my ancestry dna results are that i am 26% nigerian. i am just trying to learn as much as i can about my culture. i put the gele on my head and i looked into the mirror and i was trying not to cry. because it's a hat, but it's like the most important hat i've ever owned. discover the story only your dna can tell. order your kit now at ancestrydna.com. calls. jimmy, you said he is doing it grandpa stuff. i think tough phone calls are totally fine, but being a [bleep] to one of our staunchest military allies doesn't strike me as a good idea. >> i like of a lot of what he's done, but i didn't like the execution. i thought the hysteria of the muslim a band, 40 countries are still allowed to come. they could've better emac done a better job of clarifying the green card situation. this is what i do like, it's cool to have some but he this competitive fighting on behalf of us. i hated roger clemens, but i like having that tough s ob throwing chin music on everybody else. >> andy: my problem is that i hate the red sox and the yankee yankees. dave, you said this is a good chance for trump to prove he doesn't just take brown immigrants and kristin pointed out that these are mostly muslims. the ones in australia, she is correct, they are from entries like iran, afghanistan, pakistan, iraq, some only a period on the other hand, kristin, like trump, you refer to these people as illegal immigrants, they are not, they are refugees. >> andy, i would expect fake news from cnn but not from you. put your pink hat and your vagina costume on and go protest with the other snowflakes. there is >> andy: they are still refugees. not illegal immigrants. >> tom: that's your call. >> andy: that's not my call. >> they came to australia -- >> andy: i don't want to go through this but we did the other night, all you need to do is go look it up. they are actually refugees. >> tom: they came in many different ways to australia. >> andy: they are in a refugee camp. >> tom: they are banning them. >> andy: they are refusing to take them as refugees. >> i looked it up on breitbart. >> tom: they are illegally coming to the country. >> australia won't even let them to the country, they're keeping them in a detention center on an island. >> andy: i understand that, they are refugees. >> keep saying that word. >> andy: i will, it's accurate. if were going to talk about fake news, let's not call people illegal immigrants who aren't illegal immigrants. trump and arnold schwarzenegger. tom, you said arnold had to go terms as governor of california. i don't recall him at being all that popular when he left. >> tom: he wasn't. he wasn't popular in the first term. i don't how he won reelection. >> he was the most popular refugee to ever be governor. >> that's why they need to shut up, how can you do that, how can you elect trump, you elected kindergarten cop twice. >> andy: i voted for gary coleman. i'm not even kidding. >> he should have stayed in, you would have one. >> andy: did you say it arnold schwarzenegger impressions are hack and follow it up with a bill cosby joke? >> that's not how it went down. we were trashing before we went on the air and then a luis went big. he did clarify. >> andy: kristin, your arnold schwarzenegger impressions onto the little bit like young frankenstein. >> thank you. >> andy: dave, how dare you suggest the power of starnes is a stretch. >> i was clearly beaten for that. >> andy: just rude. tom and kristin, you both applauded trump for his tweet. berkeley didn't stop milo from speaking or say he didn't speak there, he was supposed to be speaking there. the school condemned the violence that cause the cancellation of the speech. it trump's tweet made no sense. now explain to me why i am wrong. fake news! >> they canceled the event, is that what he's is speaking to. >> andy: they canceled the event because of violence. >> andy, did you read a -- >> andy: they didn't say milo can't speak here, they scheduled him to speak. >> if you read this statement of the university put out, before all this happen, it said we don't agree with milo. we're going to allow him to speak. they basically said we don't agree with him, which fueled this hatred, and kind of gave a path to these people to burn it down the campus. they aligned themselves with these protesters, they shouldn't be taking a political stance. that is the problem, these education institutions are becoming political. >> anybody who has extreme views, wouldn't they kind of come and say this is the view of the school. >> the school shouldn't have the view, period. it's getting federal tax dollars. >> they're dissociating themselves from of you, they're doing what you're saying. >> they shouldn't be disassociating or associating with any of you, it should be an open campus. >> andy: jimmy, you pointed out that the protesters who made him more visible. the people who peacefully protested, but the people who turned violent suck for turning in violent, and for giving him free p.r., and most importantly getting me bumped from tucker ♪ carlson's show one night. >> that's a blow to me. >> andy: trump's doctor. [laughter] >> andy: i don't have anything here, i just love this picture. >> i love that he shops from the boss hog collection. >> andy: i could literally stare at that all day. luis, that you said they shouldn't be giving trump's medical information out, tom you keep saying he they yelled at the doctor for not giving out enough information in the past. luis is right, without trump's permission, they shouldn't be giving this out. >> tom: what is "the new york times" doing visiting this guy? they shouldn't let him in. >> you're probably right about that. >> andy: kristin, i enjoyed your reaction to luis here. do we have the video? >> i'm bald, women like this, , and i write kristin? >> you're right. >> andy: the side i was fantastic. [laughter] >> andy: i do have to say, i'm quoting from the piece, at times in the interview dr. bornstein was moody, saying it was none of their business to later volunteering facts. i love this guy. but then if you read the whole piece to the end, it's really sad, he said he was invited to the inaugural but it wasn't as pleasant an experience to demand as he expected, he had to walk a long way to his spot and he thought there would be a chair, but he thought there would be no chair, he stood behind a tree" never heard anyone speak because i was so on come double from my back" ." >> he really got the hook up. >> andy: it's so sad. >> oppose your heartstrings. >> andy: it really does. i'm dumb. >> tom: thank you, andy. coming up, could hate be that key to finding love? i bet you'd hate-love to know. when a cold calls... achoo! ...answer it. with zicam cold remedy. it shortens colds, so you get better, faster. colds are gonna call. answer them with zicam! zicam. get your better back. now in great tasting crystals. >> any attack on the united states or on our allies will be defeated with any use of nuclear weapons. >> the united nations security council now looking into reports increasing violence in eastern ukraine. russia's ambassador to the u.n. claims ukraine is provoking the latest surge of violence, the u.s. and ukraine blame russia. >> the sudden increase in fighting in eastern ukraine has trapped thousands of civilians and are destroyed vital infrastructure. of the crisis is spreading, endangering messy thousands more. this escalation of violence must stop. >> to avoid further civilian sufferings is rather simple. the international community needs to step up pressure on the aggressor and urge russia to get out of ukraine. >> the u.n. is calling on the international community to get piece documents to the ukraine and yet russian separatist back on track. u.n. monitors report more than 10,000 explosions in a recent 24-hour period, the highest ever. >> nordstrom says it will no longer sell ivanka trump's clothing and accessories. they would not say that it was a permanent decision, only that decisions were made each season. >> the statehouse has designated a stretch of interstate 55. i am jackie ibanez, back to "red eye." ♪ >> tom: can hate to bring people together? a new dating app is launching next week that launches people based on their mutual dislikes, it's called hater. it's a swipe-based apps, i think the first one ever. there are over 100 topics right now. users swipe down for hate come up for love, right for like and left for a dislikes, or opt out for neutral. while the idea started as a joke, it's actually backed up by science. studies have found that people bond moreover shared and negative attitudes than a shared positive ones, jimmy does that make sense to you? >> every shopping experience you've ever had, you have 899% chance of making friends over a slow cashier or a woman paying by check, as opposed to hate, that guy is really begging these groceries. my first thought when i saw this app is wow, now will finally find some use of that ashley judd speech from the women's march, i think everyone will agree that's a low point from humanity. >> i kind of like it, to be honest. i think you could really help racist as well. if you're in the kkk, just swipe left on black people. it's a simple way to connect with other racist people. >> tom: i'm sure they have their own app for that. called okkkcupid. >> the guy who runs a company, he's watching the show and luis says it's great, great publicity, and then luis says "hey if you're in the kkk" ." nobody is posting positive things, i hate this, i hate that, this is a tone of this country that fits perfectly and with the way everybody handles social media. >> even before the age of social media, the long marriages, the long-lasting relationships always built on hate. isn't that what always kept them together? >> this makes complete sense, because there is nothing more satisfying than sitting with someone and bashing something you both hate. like obama. i could listen to someone to bash obama for hours, if you hate the same things it's probably likely that you both love the same things, for example i hate obama and hillary clinton, so i find that i enjoy being around people who also hate them because they love trump. >> tom: wouldn't you rather, i think you want to find someone, you want to look for positive qualities first and then get together and complain with them. you don't want to start there, kristin, am i right question work >> no. >> tom: you want to start with the negative? >> yes. >> tom: guys don't care about any of the stuff, they only want to look at looks. >> weather were telling you we love stuff or hate stuff, we're just yapping until we get to see you naked. >> tom: so no at least one side it doesn't care. people will say they hate anybody. >> guys want to get laid, there's no app that can cure that problem. >> this is a marketing tool, people are talking about it, there's really no difference, nobody reads the little profiles anyway. have you ever swept up to go read the profile? is she hot, yeah. is she hot, yeah. >> i just skim for the word transgender and if i don't find that -- >> tom: get ready for lonely orangutans, a new tender like app is coming just for you. ♪ mating. things don't always go well. research are struggling to find a tablet that the orangutan can break. to be fair to her, it must be infuriating when all your potential matches keep sending you nudes. of course, before the internet chimps use to meet their mates on dating hotlines. >> good boy, hang that phone up. [laughter] >> hang it up. >> always funny to me. [laughter] >> tom: i guess that wasn't a match made in heaven. thanks to america's funniest home videos for that clip, i wanted to give them credit. >> the sad thing is that monkey went on to rip that woman's face off. >> tom: that was a different video. dave, do you think this is going to work? >> america's funniest home videos, yeah, it's been going on for decades. >> tom: for the orangutan. >> you know, i have high hopes. i've always wondered what it is in their minds when the mating doesn't work out. and they bring them back in there like nothing happened, no, he's totally racist. apes are picky. >> tom: they need a match, too. it works for humans, they have to let them choose. it's just technology letting the apes choose. >> this is an innovative, out-of-the-box idea and i love it. what is the worst that could happen, you put the two monkeys in a cage, they don't like each other, they throw, that's the end of it, it's a win-win. either we get baby orangutans or we learn a valuable lesson which is that tinder does not work for monkeys. >> tom: we may learn. >> i'm not going to lie, i just read the headline to this article. it's very important when her trying to match orangutans with human beings. i think the plot of outbreak. i thought it was a terrible idea when i wrote my notes, why would we do this, i believe were going to spread some sort of communicable diseases. turns out i was wrong. >> tom: we've got to go. instead of curious george, we now have by curious george. >> tom: that's it, good night, everybody. i'm glad i waited. next.

Deal
Australia-s
Phone-call
Barack-obama
Hypocrites
One
Donald-trump
Phone-calls
Girl
Endeavor
Guy
Cell-phone

Transcripts For DW Drive It - The Motor Magazine 20180703 23:30:00

a clash between those who believe in arranged marriage and those who want to marry for love. a clash that's shaking families and society to the core. of my thought it would be angry sometimes i think i'm already dead. commandoes starts july a d w. hello and welcome to drive with an e w motor make a scene and this edition a sporty skoda the young t.v. arias two forty five station wagon i know fordable s.u.v. the new dad she had duster. and practical luxury the wall will be sixty. the station wagons have been a tradition with global for decades now the swedish car makers ready to roll out its new v sixty after the x e sixty it's the second of a sixty lineup to be based on the new scalable product architecture on top of the benefits it offers for designs waiting configuration it's ready to go all electric and a sense that heralds a new era. one tab i will contest you newspaper you see some major changes coming under while those who could this be sixty will be the last model powered by conventional internal combustion engines and at first it will offer a choice of two days in one gasoline engine but the diesels in general are soon to be phased out all models coming out in twenty one thousand after will have gasoline engines with electrical components either is mild. bridge plug in hybrids all that will be an all electric. the v. six d. will also be soon equipped with the new twin engine seven but the gasoline powered trains will be available until the next facelift we tested the t. six gasoline engine with a full two hundred twenty eight kilowatts a power and a whopping four hundred meters of maximum torque. about lena's points out that the most powerful gasoline engine always comes with all wheel drive and an eight speed automatic transmission and there's no reason to complain about a lack of pickup it leaves from zero to one hundred kilometers an hour in just five point eight seconds. perhaps the most striking figure after the power output is the lowest price the t. six has the highest trim labeled inscription and it lists for at least fifty three thousand euros in germany adding a few extras will quickly bump up the price by another twenty thousand euro. here and i need to switch over the many displays in our test car no vertical display in the center console then they did settle cockpit and in this version the optional head up display which includes traffic sign recognition so if you get a little too far ahead of yourself the indicator starts blinking a warning that the car is moving faster than it illegally should be and i'm on form of them back if i flop on target for the last. go go city safe emergency brake system is standard and now it's been refined to make city driving even safer as expected it stops the car when for example a pedestrian steps in front now it also supports the driver when it's necessary to swerve to avoid an obstacle and then helps to stabilize the car again afterwards. and front are the classic long haul hood and bold grill trim. with plenty of chrome short overhangs and a long wheelbase make for well balanced proportions the nuvi sixty has added twelve point six centimeters in length. turning heads as the v. sixteen passes by are the tail lights with their high and long book shade reaching up to the roof spoiler in keeping with volvo's design tradition. on nuclear weapons even as no this is that with the roofline five point seven seven meters lowered the nuvi sixty looks even sleeker is warning here how much she doesn't notice any loss in headroom in the back seat she still has plenty of space over her head of what i'm cup. she's got enough room for legs to the interior passes muster with high quality materials and state of the art instruments . the screw wheel drive mode selector in the center console it shows the optional adaptive suspension to settings ranging from comfortable to sporty. eunice notes a few more features that are in the v. sixty the designation premium weygand a wave of her foot and the hatch opens automatically. that can be very convenient when her arms are loaded up and find the money and my heart and if she wants to fold the rear seats down she doesn't have to go running around the car she just presses the buttons down to one side that and the seeds for themselves down no hands need it so much. as if one thousand four hundred forty one liters of luggage space were not enough there's more space for us in and under the loading floor than up the thin i mean as was discovered another flap that can be used to divide the luggage space into two compartments that has a lasting bands and two hooks to help secure objects. and as a penis while it's another premium feature this intelligent door handle it's keyless pressing your hand against the outside causes the side view mirrors to retract and it locks the car taking hold of the handle on the inside unlocks the car and opens the door at the stuff. the rear door handles respond in exactly the same way. that amos is won over by the nuvi sixties whole concept from its smart design its generous space and is continuously refined and develops safety features to its future oriented power train concepts or she doesn't quite like that is the price the smartest world will on earth doesn't help much if you can afford one. that duster has been a huge success for romanian carmaker dacha is known for its robust low price cars and the duster was meant to make a modern s.u.v. affordable to everyone now dutchie is launching the second generation with the same goal. no i want to contest irani let's take points out the dusters new materials and design it's the cheapest s.u.v. in germany and allows buyers to enter the world of s.u.v.s for just eleven thousand four hundred ninety year olds today we're driving the more. upscale trimline the pristine shuttle now let's get a closer look at what it has to offer. and keeping with the new dutchy a brand designed this second generation duster features a radiator grille with distinctive inserts and a chrome look the pattern continues into the headlamps separating them into three segments for high and low beams and the turn signal. to redecide roof railing adds to the overall harmonious picture but the silver appearance is exclusive to the pristine streamline. the rear is just as impressive where horizontal lines and widely spaced taillights emphasize the dusters broad shouldered look. it doesn't run he says the one point two leader and she were testing produces ninety two kilowatts and is the best selling choice for the duster a turbo charger gives the car a lot of pep making for smooth accelerations without a lot of racket and a relatively quiet interior and even at highway speeds. buyers can choose between five different engines as well as front for all wheel drive our test model has all wheel drive and is powered by that one point two meter gasoline engine with a top speed of one hundred seventy one kilometers per hour and can sprint from zero to one hundred kilometers per hour and eleven seconds dodgy it says fuel consumption is six point four liters per one hundred kilometers prices for the prestige model with all wheel drive we're testing started eighteen thousand one hundred fifty euros in germany. running finds the duster comfortable at moderate speeds and in every day driving it's soft suspension can deal with bumpy roads better than many expensive dynamic systems but it also means the duster tends to pitch forward when braking hard and on the outside front wheel when taking a tight curve. too fast the duster might not be too dynamic but it sure is comfortable. a little less comfortable but still perfect for the duster our off road trails here it's really and it's element thanks to all wheel drive a ground clearance of twenty one centimeters and the ability to tackle slopes of thirty degrees going up and thirty three degrees coming down. but back to the road . question if you would find any frills like suspension modes hirani explains the shock absorbers are always said to maximum comfort. but dusters interior also has a completely new look the center console faces the driver slightly and the multimedia system is higher up than in its predecessor making it more user friendly. for greater traveling comfort that tester has also been given new seats with a longer seating surface and denser from padding. some ronnie finds the down chip duster offers a watch but the low price means there are some cutbacks such as with the quality of the inferior drivers wanting to spend a lot of time in their s.u.v.s off road about four in the fast lane on the highway they couldn't be consoled with a duster even well as low price if i defy cults but i suppose. that for most buyers the selling price is the most convincing argument that does theory is by far the cheapest way to get an s.u.v. in germany. b.m.w. has rolled out its new series car buyers looking for a snappy coupe a boosting luxury and high performance have always tended the thing. the mercedes or porsche first so b.m.w. combine the personality of a sports car together with the elegance of an executive car the new series gets the german market in november with a base price upwards of one hundred thousand euros. audi has followed up its q seven with an s.u.v. coupe a bbq eight fuses the elegance of a four door luxury coupe a with practical versatility of a good sized as you beat by any quick went through connectivity and robust handling off road make it an optimal choice for both business and pleasure the audi q a is due in european showroom floors in the autumn. kiya has put the third generation of a seat on the road at three point thirty one metre compact as good and wider and lower making its contours a bit sportier the new seat is once again a bonafide european it was created in key is frankfurt design center developed in its research center in russell's time germany and build in the key of plant and silliness will walk into a mild hybrid version will be available next year. and if it's in our car tester undulates the moment says the skoda octavia are as it is a jack of all trades and the station wagon certainly is both spacious and sporty now we're going to see what else we can do as long as i'm an effort in a few plants. i just cannot focus group kept that's been reduced by how it's for an . s.u.v. boom has not of course cut school to sitting on the sidelines but the octavia remains for the czech car makers best seller just slightly surpassing its s.u.v. why the most popular model is the artist to forty fine. and just under thirty seven thousand euros in germany it ranks about the same as a goal in terms of price in technology but offers the roominess of up a sign that's a combination worth a closer look. like a hungry like so comfortable being we are as makes long trips to test its adaptive dynamic chassis control system d.c.c. has three settings and the comfort settings with virtually constraints nasty bumps in the road to oblivion and in addition they are as version as you know they've got to get off to a fast start sliding. b.r.s. puts its power to the people with front wheel drive all the d.c.c. system adapts the shock absorbers to the current driving situation what's more electronic differential lock x p s plus improves dynamic cornering by slowing the inside wheels when needed. andre points out that it's not just the engine performance that makes the octavia are as sporty but more importantly it's handling the direction hearing works like a charm and the q. a limited slip differential limits understeering wanted celebrating to finish to do a curve and helps keep the car in the lane even at high speed. but the octavia is also up early boy who will hardly shows his athletic worships one clue is the two toned rims available for the extreme line and the black exhaust tips let everyone know they were just overtaken by an artist who forty five. inside but longer passenger cabin is a definite plus. t.v. andrea explains has always been known for spaciousness and bad even. when the friend seats are pushed way back there's plenty of leg room left and when he adjusts the driver's seat to his exact needs there is even more room although not no matter how long or short the drive to the back seat is definitely a comfortable place to be conceived when he got the ports just like what i like to hear him frequent is different for. the bucket seats come with an integrated head rest and are a slow go and are an ideal compromise between lateral support and long distance comfort the steering wheel flattens out towards the bottom. there caught onto a fine side trunk spacious and handy if you fold down the back seats you can load up to one thousand seven hundred forty leaders and if that's not enough the octavius roof can carry another seventy five kilos you could even have a trailer hitch to haul another one thousand six hundred kilos not all sporty station wagon for a back i don't load bearing capability. really has a heavy lifter been able to round corners as easily as the octavia are in his wagon and if you're not in a rush you can travel quite a few only fish and lake with an average consumption of six point four leaders were hundred kilometers. but nobody's perfect as andre points out not even the on t.v. are initially at a length of four point seven meters it's not ideal for a narrow city road looking for a parking space i would take some time once you found one though an optional parking assistant can help you get into it i thought i had a big car comes well equipped well one thing i'm great someone misses is an additional u.s.b. port for all the way good sizing capability just one court seems too few nowadays. right now the. octavia arias is the only scotto qualified to carry the arias badging in the future and skoda is planning are as versions of its s.u.v. until then the octavia remains of a sporty a skoda on sherman street. but summing up andre finds that although the octavia are as is it a true all round earth and hardly any other car balance is comfort in supporting this with a spacious interior and decent price as well there are lots of octavius driving around on the streets but personally i'm really doesn't appreciate its recent face with one octavia approaches at night he says and looks as if the daytime running lights were broken in terms of appearances hockey likes the older model a lot better with one item but the funny stuff i want to avoid has shown up. we're taking a trip back in time to the first volume production for sure with a mid engine the leave it be a porsche nine fourteen after launching the nine eleven to cater to the luxury market portion desperately needed a lower priced entry level model meanwhile volkswagen wanted to jazz up its range with an affordable sports car boss while on the outside christophe wonders what it must have been like when v.w. c.e.o. i know you know it off and porsche patriarchy very porsche made a gentleman's agreement in one nine hundred sixty five they were to jointly develop a sports car for beginners and in one thousand nine hundred fifty nine the first porsche nine fourteen emerged it was soon nicknames not the folks porsche or worse . the same as the abbreviation for the east german police think that it came into engine editions the four cylinder v.w. and. and the six cylinder unit from the porsche nine eleven which christophe confirms is a lot more fun. than mine for team concept promises a highly enjoyable time at the wheel. those sure can also follow. the detachable target top was solid rule bar recently debuted in the porsche nine eleven introduced a bit of fresh air the doors of the sci fi oriented convertible still open even after a head on collision at fifty kilometers per hour the body and final assembly were executed by the specialists at carmen and austin aboard the body shell most of the nine fourteen six were made in poor shape orders and stood guard and it was there the heart of the porsche nine eleven was implanted. with a boxer engine is fitted in right behind the seats as christo's ears can confirm it's a glorious duet of raucous roar and the high frequency scream from the cooling system of. its princeton one hundred kilometers per hour in eight and a half seconds a second faster than the nine eleven team which had fifteen more horsepower. top speed is some two hundred seven kilometers per hour again outperforming the weakest model in the nine eleven range and likewise when it comes to handling the nine fourteen to match his big brother. i think it's in what the real triumph of the mid engine concept explains christophe comes around and spends more shows suspension guru and. even claimed the ninth. fourteen six was more a driver's car than the porsche nine eleven due to its faster response than one by one and it really does take bends like it's on rails a bit although when you do reach the limit you'll know about it that a bit annoyed but it then swings out abruptly and uncontrollably so you do need your wits about you and all that some of it. as i'm feeling it is divided on the design of the nine fourteen and some absolutely love the minimalist contouring form follows function but others can't deal with it at all the design of google a bit tone is said at the front of the ninth ward that looked like a car driving in reverse with that in visual terms the nine hundred twenty six is no different to a smaller for a cylinder rather really. on except for the little six there are discriminating porsche fans that's not enough differentiation so it is more sheer marketing so you've got to push the fun hunched i said back then he might this is an object for people who love understatement and chris dodd says picked he's right jeff and a statement even walk up. for the design of the body porsche designer. largely had a free hand. in the late one nine hundred sixty s. the slick slender in straight line no frills sports car was light years ahead of its time. porsche traditionalist like the dashboard the instruments familiar from the nine eleven including the central rev counter made them feel at home otherwise the less is more credo continued on the interior. and here it is between the seats and rear axle it's the two hundred leader boxer in should i . until one thousand nine hundred seventy it was also fitted in the mine eleven teeth with it when a transmission behind the engine had to be rotated one hundred eighty degrees presenting a big headache for mechanics student boric says ability but it's worth it what's it . to prototypes of a mine fourteen were made for ferry porsche and r. and d. had ferdinand ph with eight cylinder engines packing up to three hundred horsepower back them that fast his road going porsches. i think about what's the only drawback for kristoff is the shifting it has a modern five speed box but the mid engine way in the back made a long distance between stick and gears plus a complicated linkage so getting the right gear is a lottery would think years the porsche nine eleven definitely has its nose ahead of you by the other side that much if that and i have a process for you to keep the nozzle fodder. as from those family ties between the two car makers between one nine hundred seventy and one nine hundred seventy two a total of just three thousand three hundred thirty two nine fourteen's were made with four she engines the lower price four cylinder versions with v.w. engines sold far better. to buy them at that together with its little brother the four cylinder engine the v.w. porsche nine fourteen six is the first large scale production mid-size sports car in the world around one hundred twenty thousand units were built in six years making the made engine mainstream as opposed to being reserved for racing cars so the v.w. a porsche nine fourteen six is definitely a milestone an automotive history. in one nine hundred ninety six the first porsche for regular car buyers got a legitimate. successor and the now established porsche boxster roadster as staying true to the mid engine concept of. the book. next time i'm driving the toyota i go gets a new look we see what's changed for the city car. and it hardly gets more powerful than this the new porsche g t three r.s. . a. lifestyle you're a. thirty minute strong. land be our fighters want to start families to become farmers or engineers every one of them has a plan for your children. so nothing is just on the children who have already been there all day and that's you and those that will follow are part of a new process. they could be the future of. granting opportunities for global news that matters d. w. made from minds. it's all happening good job it. sure link to news from africa and the world. your link to exceptional stories and discussions continue and welcome to the new suffocating program and from for an example from the news of easy now i would say d w to close the traffic up and join us on facebook d w africa. they live to surf. danger lurks in the water we were the. surf. waist and. basically this is his goal as well as his back up a little haitian goal. is really nice it's sad to go somewhere every day and see more and more probably change time in the scene here's me everything the way the wind might have to give something back i feel obliged to assume. white waves surfers

Car-makers
Tradition
Swedish
Second
Designs
Lineup
Top
Benefits
Configuration
Product-architecture
Sixty
Model

Transcripts For FOXNEWSW Fox And Friends First 20180801 09:00:00

A precursor to Fox News's morning show, featuring the news and first looks at the other stories of the day. A precursor to Fox News's morning show, featuring the news and first looks at the other stories of the day. rally, 2016, i covered the rally here, 2000 people, same size crowd, the president hitting all the popular topics, economy, trade with china, he mentioned north korean transfer and what that means to veterans of america and immigration. >> we want maximum border security and respect for our heroes, ice, border patrol and law enforcement and we are going to have tremendous border security that will include the wall, that will include the wall. >> reporter: the president also mentioning he would be willing to shut the government down to get funding for the wall. supporters certainly want that wall and many told me they wanted it before the midterms. the other reason the president -- a run for governor significant because the president had quite a hand in media hours after facebook center 32 fake accounts and pages, the social media giant sounding the alarm claiming the pages paid for 150 ads, $11,000, 300,000 people targeting the midterms. it is unclear who is responsible for those. heather: a crowded field of republicans running to fill the seat left open by the retiring jeff flake. among candidates are kelly who tried and seating john mccain two years ago, former sheriff joe arpaio and martha mc sally. todd: a story we have been following. you are looking live at the remains of american heroes and heroes from other countries killed in the korean war have begun their journey home. jillian: heather: making good on a ♪ insurance. that's kind of what we do here. >> the remains of us and other servicemembers missing since the korean war. >> a positive step, >> there working on their missile program. a foreign-policy panel here to weigh in. rebecca heinrich a fellow at the hudson institute, and gordon chang, thanks to you both for being here. it was a very somber, moving ceremony but what does it mean for us north korea relations going forward? >> it continues momentum. this was one of the promises of kim jong un in the june 12th summit and that is important. we have a long way to go not only a nuclear missile issues and the rest of it but this is a positive step because it reminds the world the american military depends not only territory but values. this is an important message for the united states not only to south korea but everybody else. jillian: we had gordon chang on earlier to watch the ceremony, a very moving tribute to the fact that we still have just nearly 7700 american servicemembers unaccounted for from the korean war, what else does the united states need to do to further this? >> secretary of defense mattis said this might be the beginning for the united states to have a joint team to go into north korea but for the remains of more of america's precious war dead. it could be the beginning. we have these remains checked and verified because the north koreans have a history of not sending back the remains they are sending back but certainly it is precious to the united states and individual families and is a big deal. one of those things the north koreans can do things like this and not get to the heart of the manner which is dismantling the nuclear program. that is the number one priority for the united states. todd: the repatriation ceremony for the next 45 minutes, i want to get to the missiles. on its surface this missile revelation is concerning. i get the impression from your previous history that this is all about sanctions and does get too fired up about the missiles yet because there is nothing different with regard to sanctions yet. >> the important thing about the trump administration's approach is the pressure has remains. we haven't given money or any sort of financial reward as a down payment in exchange for anything from the north koreans. in that regard nothing has changed. the north koreans are continuing missile development, there have been media reports about nuclear work. it is incredibly disappointing at this stage of diplomacy but not shocking and the trump administration will continue their approach of pressure and engagement but time is running out for the trump administration because they have got to get in, take an inventory of what north koreans have, serious about timelines for dismantling. jillian: what do you make of it? the fact that we are hearing a report that north korea is continuing to build missiles? rebecca used the word disappointing. a lot of people hoped that would have ended. >> the trump administration relieved pressure on north koreans. we are not sanctioning new companies. north korea changes its front companies all the time, if you don't go after the new ones you allow kim jong un to hollow out the rules. and imposing costs on the chinese and russians for blatant sanctions busting and donald trump referred to the chinese that a rally in tampa. the administration needs to put more pressure on beijing and moscow. if we do that we can see them ending their missile construction and many other things we don't want them to do. todd: let's pivot now to iran. donald trump expressed a willingness to meet with irani and president ronnie without preconditions. are you a fan of this move? >> i don't think it will do any good. it doesn't look like rouhano wants to accept. he does not see engagement as a reward. he sees it as a reward for the adversary and a first step to see if there's any way to come to an agreement. he is the supreme leader, the one that holds the cards in the country so my advice would be if the president will meet with anybody he should push for that meeting but if he stakes the same approach toward iran as north korea which is keep pressure, perhaps as we increase pressure with north korea, as long as we do that with iran, with this president's unconventional ideas it might not be any loss if it doesn't work out. jillian: if this meeting comes to fruition what would you hope to get out of it for the united states? >> at the end of the process the united states put pressure on banks and businesses that are doing business with iran. if we do that the irani and will be in a place where they have no choice but to do with the united states and the international community wants. i would like to see this pressure campaign to continue before the president talks to the iranians. todd: don't discount that what we do with iran impact north korea and vice versa and all that impact russia and china. it is an interconnected world, thank you for breaking it down for us. 18 minutes after the hour. violence is so bad in chicago people are hiding their children. some say democratic mayor rahm emanuel is part of the problem. jillian: a liberal lawmaker who took a knee during the pledge of allegiance is at it again. how her own town turns the tables against her. ♪ so you have, your headphones, chair, new laptop with 24/7 tech support. yep, thanks guys. i think he might need some support. yes start them off right. with the school supplies they need at low prices all summer long. save $200 on this dell laptop at office depot officemax. jillian: state police will respond to emergencies in a town of 1200 people. gun violence in chicago is so bad parents are resorting to hiding their children after a recent shooting at a basketball court that left three children hurt. >> the mayor needs to come here and keep our kids safe to have a street like this. jillian: activists plan a march against violence tomorrow and are not inviting democratic mayor rahm emanuel. >> we the people are not asking and do not want your backing or sanction. the chant of the people is resigned, rom. heather: the city has seen 1200 shooting so far this year. todd: starting today, new york city no longer arresting anyone for smoking pot. they can be arrested or prosecuted if they pose a threat to public safety. policy is expected to reduce marijuana prosecutions 96%. marijuana is not yet legalized in new york with 30 states allow medical marijuana including legalize recreational use making the city smell even more. sour situation got a little sweeter. new york governor andrew cuomo helping a boy when a lemonade stand was shut down over lack of a permit, vowing to personally pay for any fees or permits he needs. the 7-year-old business shut down by the health department at the saratoga county fairgrounds, claiming it was undercutting their business. brandon is only charging $.75. some of those vendors upwards of $7 for a lemonade. jillian: foxbusiness alert, paying with a visa, no grocery for you. todd: the credit card back lash for the largest grocery chain. >> reporter: this is a subsidiary of kroger which is the largest grocery chain in the country but they are now fighting to stop taking customers visa credit cards because of the high flight fees these it charges its merchants when any customer uses the corresponding credit card. this does not apply to debit cards. it will take effect on august 14th at 21 stores in california. todd: southwest, no more peanuts. >> reporter: it will be a peanut free airline, they will only surf rentals and other snacks but this change was announced last month because they are concerned about people with peanut allergies and wants to make sure everyone is safe on board but this follows other airlines that have recently done away with peanuts as well. todd: i am obsessed with junk food. i did read your notes, fritos will be handed out. time now 26 after the hour, 3-d printed guns posted online but shot down in court. the man behind the blueprint is firing back. jillian: the remains of servicemembers set to return to the us, decades in the making and live coverage continues next. ♪ (man) managing my type 2 diabetes wasn't my top priority. until i held her. i found my tresiba® reason. now i'm doing more to lower my a1c. i take tresiba® once a day. tresiba® controls blood sugar for 24 hours for powerful a1c reduction. (woman) we'd been counting down to his retirement. it was our tresiba® reason. he needs insulin to control his high blood sugar and, at his age, he's at greater risk for low blood sugar. tresiba® releases slow and steady and works all day and night like the body's insulin. (vo) tresiba® is a long-acting insulin used to control high blood sugar in adults with diabetes. don't use tresiba® to treat diabetic ketoacidosis, during episodes of low blood sugar, or if you are allergic to any of its ingredients. don't share needles or insulin pens. don't reuse needles. the most common side effect is low blood sugar, which may cause dizziness, sweating, confusion, and headache. check your blood sugar. low blood sugar can be serious and may be life-threatening. injection site reactions may occur. tell your prescriber about all medicines you take and all your medical conditions. taking tzds with insulins like tresiba® may cause serious side effects like heart failure. your insulin dose shouldn't be changed without asking your prescriber. get medical help right away if you have trouble breathing, fast heartbeat, extreme drowsiness, swelling of your face, tongue or throat, dizziness or confusion. (man) i found my tresiba® reason. find yours. (vo) ask your health care provider about tresiba®. covered by most commercial health insurance and medicare part d plans. >> 55 cases of remains of servicemembers being loaded into planes in south korea to be flown to hawaii for identification. jillian: labor he honored in a repatriation ceremony, the work to get our fallen soldiers home is far from over. >> for all in attendance this is a solemn reminder that our work is not complete until all have been accounted for no matter how long it takes to do so. todd: the remains handed over by north korea just days ago, more than 60 years after the korean war. designs for untraceable 3-d printed guns put on hold after a judge temporarily halted their release. jillian: the nra is firing back at antigovernment activists, jackie ibanez joins us with more on that. >> reporter: the seattle judge ruling in favor of several states arguing posting the guns blueprints on board would aid criminals and possibly terrorists. it started when cody wilson, founder of defense distributed posted plans for working 3-d printed pistol online in 2013 when the state department told him to take it down, wilson sued. the case was settled this june allowing the blueprints to go back up before the judge stepped in. donald trump weighing in on the issue, i'm looking into 3-d plastic guns they sold in public, spoke to nra, doesn't seem to make much sense, washington state attorney general who led the lawsuit agrees. >> i would make it stronger, makes no sense at all to make this available. >> he is the president, he can tell his administration what to do. it is in his hands. jillian: antigovernment activists reminding them these types of weapons have been outlawed since 1988. regardless what a person may be able to publish on the internet, and detectable plastic guns have been illegal for 30 years. the man behind 3-d printed guns promises to keep fighting until every gun on earth is available for download. >> i believe i am championing the second amendment in the 21st century. access to firearms is fundamental to human dignity, human rights. jillian: he will stop posting plans online until the september hearing, despite the promise, 2500 people have downloaded blueprints to ar 15 rifles. jillian: i'm sure mixed opinions on this one, a hot topic of conversation. >> a lot of you are speaking out, ron tweets never make them illegal, the only purpose of guns like these is we can make it on a fancy 3-d printer and illegal use of the weapon. let them stay illegal, enough problems with legal weapons available to everyone today, david and instagram rights technology needs to advance in the manner of making them not so and detectable, nearly impossible to stop them in the process. marvin posts on facebook comes a time in which common sense should be used. todd: can't wait to talk about second amendment ramifications. donald trump may soon crackdown even harder on china, the white house considering higher tariffs on $200 million worth of chinese imports, the trump administration threatened 10% tariffs but slapped 25% tariffs, these measures could bring chinese negotiators back to the table. donald trump will make a decision on the proposed tariffs at the end of the month and is considering another big tax cut for all americans, the white house either capital gains tax cut to boost the economy even more, aiming to reduce taxes on profits resulting in other assets. the trump administration may attempt to lower the tax unilaterally if congress refuses to act. jillian: the group in favor of the eastern half of the state to native americans, supporters say this would right some wrongs of the past and the autonomous native nation would create a buffer zone between what they call donald trump's america and the new independent california republic. the latest attempt in a decade-long push that resulted in the progress. the rnc and dnc won't be swearing on a softball deal this year, democrats of food out of their annual game. the dnc says all their players are working and it may be able to play in the decades-old tradition. it is a chance to have a friendly match. todd: other parts of the country need rain, we have a lot of it. it goes back and forth as janice dean breaks it all down for us. >> reporter: a lot on one coast and not enough on the west coast. current temperatures very warm across the west and cooler across the upper midwest and northern plains. there is the moisture streaming in from the gulf of mexico and atlantic, flash flood watches and warnings will be posted through the day from the gulf coast to the northeast and we could have a thread for severe storms, large hail, damaging winds, isolated tornadoes across the northeast later this afternoon. there are your flood advisories for millions from florida towards new york and future radar, a lot of moisture today and the next couple days looking at the west, just not getting that moisture to areas that need it where we have 88 large wildfires burning and that means 100 acres or more. a devastating situation, pictures are terrible, firefighters are depleted and i wish we could get some help from mother nature. jillian: no signs of slowing down. >> we could get moisture from the southwest but the coastline across the west, not anything. jillian: 36 after the hour. down like dominoes, shocking moments a parking garage collapses with dozens of cars underneath. the search to find people possibly buried in the rubble. todd: crossing the swamp. carly shimkus is not crossing the swamp, just the video area. a picture of the scene that has gone viral. ♪ a lot of times, i tend to play the tough guy. but i wasn't tough enough to quit on my own. not until i tried chantix. chantix, along with support, helps you quit smoking. it reduced my urge to smoke to the point that i could stop. when you try to quit smoking, with or without chantix, you may have nicotine withdrawal symptoms. some people had changes in behavior or thinking, aggression, hostility, agitation, depressed mood, or suicidal thoughts or actions with chantix. serious side effects may include seizures, new or worse heart or blood vessel problems, sleepwalking or allergic and skin reactions which can be life-threatening. stop chantix and get help right away if you have any of these. tell your healthcare provider if you've had depression or other mental health problems. decrease alcohol use while taking chantix. use caution when driving or operating machinery. the most common side effect is nausea. my favorite role so far? being a non-smoker. no question about it. talk to your doctor about chantix. >> local official who started a firestorm kneeling for the pledge of allegiance for meeting is at it again. [shouting] jillian: you can see the people who were there were booming melissa, she made headlines last month kneeling in protest of donald trump and dividing the small-town. >> i am a combat veteran. and one day, my platoon with 24 marines, i lost 18 in a suicide bombing. what you did was urinate on their graves. >> i thought to defend your right. you want to take it from her? makes me sick. jillian: she says she will keep kneeling, some are calling for her resignation. todd: netflix will not stream a documentary on the life of nation of islam leader louis farrakhan. >> they don't know the soul of a man. todd: they won't stream a film called my life's journey through music. they say in terms communication made it appear it was scheduled for release today. he came under fire for his hateful news blaming jews for the 9/11 terror attacks. jillian: new attempt election meddling before the midterms. todd: facebook removed dozens of fake accounts in a, quote, coordinated campaign. virginia senator mark war and says russia is back at it. >> i have a high level of confidence that these accounts tied to my accounts come many of them modeling the techniques that were used by the russians in the past. jillian: carly shimkus with serious xm 115 with what everyone is saying online. >> it appears to be 2016 all over again because social media companies removed 32 accounts from facebook and instagram that appeared to be promoting divisive political issues, nearly 300,000 accounts, the accounts read 150 ads over the course of the year but this may have had some real-world side effects as well because one of the pages was promoting a counter protest to a white nationalist rally, this sparking a flood of reaction on social media. terry on twitter says about time they get their act together. julie saying i suspect there are a lot more than that out there. facebook says it is too early to say with certainty that russia is behind this. whoever is responsible did a good job in trying to cover their tracks. >> just picking up. november of this year. sometimes twitter is funny, social media gets funny responses and that is the case for the swamp crossing picture. >> a 2018 version of washington crossing the delaware. the utah-based artist is responsible for this painting showing donald trump crossing the swamp of washington dc, the first lady right here, sarah sanders, john bolton, this creating a lot of reaction on social media as you can imagine after he posted it to twitter, great pacing with great president leading the way, he likes the painting. another called a beautiful painting and the last two putting aside everything else, ben carson appears to be rowing backwards. a little controversy over ben carson's rowing position. jillian: a family gets a pizza delivery and get beautiful music. >> this is really cool. she went to deliver a pizza but gave the family so much more. a pizza delivery guy saw one of his customers had a piano in his house so asked to play it. watch what happens. ♪ >> i'm sure they are glad they let that kid in. he is playing the third movement of beethoven's moonlight sonata from memory. he is going to college in the fall on a baseball scholarship. he could go for music of course. jillian: very trusting family. you wouldn't get that in new york city. todd: just raise the question you would ask, to go in the house was what do you think, america? what i asked to go in the house? we are going to let this guy in. brian to lead will it is know what is coming up on "fox and friends". >> 2018, the midterm elections, healthcare, that is going to change today. alex a czar live with us, michelle melton talking about the big rally last night and tommy laren. and part of the world's big ceremony for 55 remains of american soldiers to 1953, they will be sitting down with the vice president shortly to talk about what north korea is doing like continuing the nuclear program, how long we will continue this deal with them before rocket man gets big-time sanctions. a little of what is going on over the next 3 hours, janice with the weather going out into the elements. the summer can be really rough. jillian: someone else does your headlines. todd: jillian will be standing right over there. jillian: yes i will, looking forward to it. when we come back sparks flying from both sides as a one of paul manafort's trial, just hours from now. is it going to be a fair trial? ♪ [stomach gurgles] ♪when you have nausea, heartburn, indigestion, upset stomach, diarrhea... girl, pepto ultra coating will treat your stomach right. nausea, heartburn, indigestion, upset stomach, diarrhea.♪ try new pepto with ultra coating. where we're changing withs? contemporary make-overs. then, use the ultimate power handshake, the upper hander with a double palm grab. who has the upper hand now? start winning today. book now at lq.com. they have businesses to run. they have passions to pursue. how to they avoid trips to the post office? stamps.com mail letters. ship packages. all the amazing services of the post office, right on your computer. get a 4 week trial plus $100 in extras including postage and a digital scale go to stamps.com/now and never go to the post office again. high profile? todd: senior judicial analyst judge andrew napolitano. good to see you. with regard to the neutrality of the jurors, is the concern that we are in a virginia district that doesn't like the president? judge napolitano: we are not district the government loves because they made convictions where they like to try cases because the jurors who side with the federal government, i was surprised at the speed with which the jury was chosen. i picked 175 juries in my life in the federal system and most state systems, the judge picks the jury, we had 3 or 400 people from which i had to extract 12, no bias, no prejudice, no interest in the outcome, no overriding idea of what the end should be in this judge succeeded in doing this in a single day. you have very good trial lawyers. used to be on the other side, they all know each other, the bag of tricks everybody has, just a case of who can present their case in a more compelling way. >> is it possible to be fair when everybody has an opinion what is going on politically? judge napolitano: you are asked under oath can you be fair, can you judge this case on the fact of the law? jillian: i could say i could. judge napolitano: certainly i will excuse you. on the record we have 12 people who said under oath they can be fair. the judge is not asking to forget who he is, everybody knows who he is. a lot of people know why he is there. two theories, one, because the government found out about serious financial misdeeds or the government wants to squeeze him, solitary confinement, damaging information, the government's opening argument, something i have never seen before, prosecutor was saying a lavish lifestyle with all this money. counselor, nothing wrong with having a lot of money. a brush back pitch from the bench to the prosecutor the likes of which if you see it once in your lifetime you have seen it enough. >> we asked how much the president would influence this case, the judge gave an ammunition, you can think about trump, i find that particular. >> we will all be watching paul manafort's former business partner when the shenanigans for which he is on trial occurred and the number 2 person in the trump campaign at the time of the meeting and trump tower with the russians. todd: i'm thinking of the founders of our great land imagining 3-d printed guns when they came up with the second amendment. judge napolitano: they couldn't envision that but they did envision the first amendment which prohibits prior restraint, not punishing speech after he came out of someone's mouth but prevent them from uttering a truth. we have this young engineer in texas who discovered this thing, the feds investigating, a bit of a head scratcher, the fed said post this, it is a truthful statement. can the court restrain him from posting a technologically accurate and true statement because if people put this in their 3-d printers they might kill somebody. the court said yes. i don't thinkable last but the first amendment, we don't stop speech before it comes out, you address the consequences after it is spoken. that is the theory of the first amendment. first and second. more on this coming. jillian: 5 until the top of the hour, he brings fire in the kitchen and helping fuel those who fuel out the flames. what the masterchef is doing to help those in california. todd: town workers who wish they paid more attention, look at that. ♪ ♪ we are all here and got cold beer ♪ show me the carfax? now the car you want and the history you need are easy to find. show me used minivans with no reported accidents. . . at customink.com. ♪ jillian: welcome back, time for the good, the bad and the ugly. first up the good. celebrity chef guy berry proves he is one of the good guys. helping the salvation army feed victims of the california wildfire. the fires have destroyed 900 homes and forced 14,000 people to evacuate. rob: good stuff there. not good stuff here. watch this. the bad. a parking garage swallows 21 cars when the top level collapses. take a look. see part of the concrete platform had already given way hours earlier when another section crashes. incredibly nobody was hurt. some say it shook as they drove by. finally, the ugly, a massachusetts city is shamed into fixing the road. officials in gardner correcting a misspelled yield sign. you can see there the e was incorrectly painted before the i. the city sharing this photo

Mike-pence
War-veteran
Result
Korean
Reward
Assault
Molly-tibbetts
House
Police
Boyfriend
Jog
Jogger

Transcripts For DW DW News - News 20180808 06:00:00

biala guest. managed by for. this is deja vu news live from berlin europe's scorching summer continues is this the beginning of hothouse earth new research warns high temperatures and drought could become the new normal in the years ahead some parts of the world might become completely inhabitable also coming up. ten years after the bloody fighting between georgia and russia over breakaway provinces we find out what life is like on the borders of this frozen conflict. and heroes to some criminals to others pussy riot talk exclusively to dub you about their recent world cup protest and their latest event in jail. i'm brian thomas great to have you with us as europe's walters' through its hottest summer in decades a new international study paints a very bleak future and says that even if global warming is limited to a maximum of two degrees celsius that might not be enough to prevent widespread drought it adds that entire regions could become uninhabitable. central europe from space too hot and too dry business commander of the international space station alexander guest just had melting once they're gone the sun's heat stops getting reflected and starts getting absorbed speeding up global warming. the potsdam institute which specializes in climate research argues that without putting in place this afic human made climate protections the seas could rise by up to sixty meters. that's you know this is something long term but of course in the next few decades and by the end of the century these effects will have significantly negative impacts on cities which are often on the coastlines on. climate scientists say we need to address gly cut industrial greenhouse gas emissions traveling less by plane or by car and eating less meat as well. in the short term however both humans and animals are finding more immediate ways to cool down. well weeks of drought here in germany created tinder like conditions for a brush fire those burns numerous homes and injured at least thirty two people in the west of the country hundreds of firefighters were deployed to fight this blaze which broke out right next to that key rail line between cologne and frankfurt which was shut down it quickly spread into a residential neighborhood in the city of zeke blog we have this report. dry undergrowth burning like tinder what began as a small fire near train tracks in the western town of the book soon developed into a major blaze at least eight houses caught fire somewhere in the gulf by the flames emergency services evacuated an entire residential area with hundreds of residents affected dozens were injured the most of them were suffering from shock due to what's happened and the fires in the homes and gardens many were treated for circulate three problems we also have a few people who suffered burns some of them severe they had to be brought to local hospitals. and the cause of the fire hasn't yet been determined authorities and a look at some of the other stories making the news at this hour in peru at least ten people have died after eating contaminated food at a funeral at a remote village in the andes dozens more who fell ill need to be airlifted to hospital health officials say the six orders may have consumed food poisoned by a pesticide. venezuelan president nicolas maduro has blamed an opposition leader for an apparent drone attack over the weekend and its televised address in the dora said investigation pointed to the involvement of julio borgia's an exiled lawmaker boars as call the attack a farce that was staged to allow a girl to crack down on the opposition. archaeologists in mexico have discovered human remains from the ancient mayan civilization that could be up to seven thousand years old the bones were on earth in a cave in talk a tall boat in the south of the country down display in mexico city the maya were one of central america's most dominant civilizations before mysteriously abandoning their cities around nine hundred a day well mine guatemalan children separated from their parents at the u.s. border have been flown home and reunited with their deported families they were rejected under president zero tolerance immigration policy now despite the dangers and uncertainty many guatemalans continue to try to reach the u.s. border in our next report we follow a guatemalan woman and her child trying to get to the united states with little hope of entering. miriam and karyn don't have much luggage they have little apart from their children they don't know what to expect but are well aware of all the possible perils. so much i'm a little furtive i'm putting her in danger in so many ways her health her life so much could happen on the journey. where she could be the she'll ever see him again. the best felt that he received. what is going. it's very difficult to make such decisions. you know how but no woman deserves to go through got out about where to. put up the obvious everyone i have to be strong and fight for a better future for both my children. even if it hurts to walk is that what gets hard but i have to fight but aussie there are going to chat felt a little. better life in the us a life without violence a life with work. trying to get on freight trains in mexico then they travel thousands of kilometers. miriam and collect some money in order to buy a warm breakfast before the train arrives if they manage to get on they'll have to survive for hours without food miriam is worried that she might be separated from violet at the u.s. border like thousands of other parents and children. she thinks u.s. president donald trump is unfair. our children are very precious to us and then someone comes and says only because he has power in his country. but he's going to separate me from my daughter. and he has no right. finally the train arrives. this is the area where people get on the train and train. fifty mph one step aside it can mean the difference between. now miriam will hand over her daughter temporarily. miriam managed to get on the train and so. with violet. they will soon disappear from view bound for the u.s. full of fears and hopes at the same time. ten years ago today europe's first twenty. century war started between russia and georgia erupted over the russian backed breakaway provinces of south ossetia and concepts which most of the international community don't recognize as independent states the short lived conflict killed several hundred people displaced thousands of others the war lasted just a few days but ten years on locals on the boundary line still live in uncertainty our reporter emily sure went to the closer look in the georgian town of d.c. just over the administrative boundary line from south ossetia. better vashti's land falls on the fault lines of a frozen conflict some maps show the boundary line to the russian backed breakaway region of south a set running straight through his farm. signs in the distance reads state border a line most of the international community doesn't recognize says russian border guards patrol the end of his cornfield better shot them or. if you cross the line they can seize you find your put you in prison. they're here for animals across they take them. they walk around here and belongs where they walk around with dogs with weapons and they all go in a certain psychological state all the time. during the war several bombs fell on you know he has land his eighty four year old mother vonetta says she lost one of her three sons. in. that night i sometimes long sleep because i'm afraid for my son but tonight you still seemed afraid that they will come back. in august two thousand and eight tensions between russia and georgia escalated into a war over the breakaway regions of. georgia moved to take back control of. russia responded with tanks and air strikes it said it was defending russian citizens in the region. today there are russian bases in both breakaways including in south a city is de facto capital tskhinvali the e.u. monitoring mission acts as a mediator and it patrols the de facto border but the e.u. calls the administrative boundary line. the. big number of. relatively close to each other and the culture is something that you have to monitor closely especially where there's no common agreement on where the a.b.l. is running. carefully and that's why we are on the ground with two hundred monitors twenty four seven for russia and . this is a state border while for georgia this is a temporary occupation line but for the people who live here this is a source of uncertainty even ten years after the war here in many places the border simply. moving boundary line has swallowed some of the property in the past now he's determined to stand his ground this farm has been in his family for generations. i have nowhere else to go this is my part of georgia this is my. country i want to. draw one. for the younger generation living on the border the war is a distant memory but with the conflict still unresolved the threat of tensions boiling over again is an ever present reality. and staying in the region the russian protest group made an appearance during the football world cup last month one that got them through in jail. members of their group ran onto the pitch dressed as police officers interrupting the mass at their nemesis president vladimir putin was said to be watching the w. correspondent near drugs that the recently released political activists and sent us this exclusive report. they are heroes to some to others just criminals pussy riot or russia's most divisive group we meet in a traditional cold moscow apartment. in the police chief. on tuesday can political collective we don't have a fixed number of members of the different people come together from various factions you were just two actions like the recent protests at the football world cup final in moscow games to highlight police violence play stopped as pussy riot activists stormed the pitch wearing police uniforms they were arrested and sentenced to fifteen days in jail the protesters were freed only a few days ago. but. most people don't understand what we're about we have to explain it to them that's part of our job and we've seen day the system at the it's quite normal for people not to understand our artistic approach but they do get our political engagement. when pat you serve a joint pussy riot she lost her job as a bar manager for ronnie can because in a does modeling and wants to be an actress p.r. to fast enough is involved with independent websites together a breath of fresh air in russian politics even if not everyone approves of. most people don't like what we do. but that doesn't make any difference to us what you think it all starts texting radiator next to my daily papers claim that i'm not a model. they imply that i'm a prostitute but i don't care i know what i'm doing and. happy with it yes no stage oh yeah that there are states yelling at the russian pussy riot are aware of police surveillance and they don't expect fair treatment by the state controlled media i mean about the nasty attack us because they have to because pussy riot don't do what they want to me that's just the way it is the state media has always attack opposition groups and i think that by itself. i'm. pushing right won't let that spoil the party for them to struggle to resign. we have some sports now and at the european athletics championships tuesday was a big night for britain one hundred meters sprinters as they picked up two gold medals as arnold hughes came in first in the men's race this time of nine point nine five second set a new record for the european championships fellow brit rhys preston took silver and the golden girl of the night was the national smith she hurdle home in ten point eight five seconds that's was ahead of germany's gina look income for motor sports though and debt stricken formula one team force india has announced it will come out of administration after a group of investors agreed to rescue package the team went into administration in july with former co-owners v.j. malya under investigation for fraud in india now the deal means force india will be able to take to the greater the next grand prix of the season that's in belgian later this month. or controversial tesla chief mosque has sent the e-car maker stocks soaring again hard another unconventional idea for an oscar yes there are loads of those in this trading on tesla's stock was halted tuesday following a tweet by its c.e.o. you know musk wrote he plans to take the electric company private and has secured the funds to do it tesla served by eleven percent before trading was halted. it would be the largest leveraged buyout in history. musk tweeted on tuesday that he was considering taking tesla private at four hundred twenty dollars a share saying that he'd secured funding ideal at that price would represent a price tag of about seventy two billion dollars he didn't say where the funding was coming from shortly after his tweet musk published a letter to tesla employees on the company's blog where he said that going private would be the best path forward and would allow tesla to operate at its best free from distraction and short term thinking going private would also be one way to avoid close scrutiny by the public market has feuded publicly with regulators critics of short sellers and reporters some analysts believe he would prefer to have less transparency the company is still trying to overcome production challenges which have held up its new model three sedan on which just less profitability rests that hasn't stopped musk from announcing major projects like a multibillion dollar facilities in china and europe analysts have expressed skepticism at those plans must statements about taking the company private are facing similar doubts but if followed through this could be a make or break moment for the silicon valley company as competition from european automakers is poised to intensify with new electric vehicles from our d. and jag us with more rivals to follow suit next year. this coming friday ryanair will cancel one hundred forty six flights to destinations all over europe affecting more than twenty five thousand travelers the reason a strike by pilots from sweden belgium and ireland germany's four hundred ryanair pilots will announce today whether they'll join their colleagues for a europe wide strike on friday the pilots want a higher base salary there are other ways components are determined by aspects such as sick days and number of flight hours ryanair says pilot salaries are not. pilots old fighting the base transfers promotions annually. the trade war between the u.s. and china is set to enter a new round washington has announced further tariffs on of twenty five percent on sixteen billion dollars worth of chinese products that take effect in two weeks the new duties target industrial products like metals chemicals and electronics the trump administration already imposed tariffs on chinese imports last month but china's foreign trade has so far shrugged off the dispute exports showed a surprising growth in july more than twelve percent compared to the same period last year. doing business with iran just got tricky due to washington's new sanctions many multinationals do business with both the u.s. and iran but president donald trump says it's now either or that's something that has left european companies concerned and brussels isn't happy either it has responded with legislation. as european companies are in a tough bind washington says firms that do business with iran will be excluded from the u.s. market the e.u. has responded with legislation that bans european companies from complying with the sanctions brussels sent a clear signal. we believe that it is and it has to be to. be europeans in this case to the side with home to trade with major corporations like air bus. decided to quit operations in iran instead of risking sanctions themselves but medium sized companies cannot afford to give up the market and brussels is still hoping that washington won't proceed with sanctions on e.u. companies. money the hope is that americans want to sanction european companies or otherwise disadvantage them but the more they do that the more we have to protect our business with credit or investment guarantees of which. could it govern t.n.t. in its own scott and t.n. . provides recourse to any european companies hit by u.s. sanctions but even if they can claim compensation for any losses incurred many of them are still stuck between a rock and a hard place fans watching. she's like the eye can see the bees just given the subtle a facelift. packing a punch. clenching the fat chick compact and still be. driving sixty minutes long daughter. told. him a. little. simple little contemptuous of the church you know the evil feeling that you feel when you fight your past lives of his music car bomb stop will come

Biala-guest
Pussy-riot
Protest
World-cup
Us-
Brian-thomas
Event
Jail
Europes-walters
Study
Maximum
Summer

Transcripts For DW Drive It - The Motor Magazine 20180811 11:30:00

topics: The C-Class gets a Make-Over; The first All-Electric SUV; Apps Could Make Driving in Barcelona Easier; Rally-Style Excitement: the Yaris GRMN; The... you could end up paying a lot more. if that's how you managed to miss points out that the nine speed on a matic transmission combines with a one hundred ninety kilowatt engine to provide a memorable driving experience and when you shift into dynamic mode either sport or sport plus the c three hundred really takes off. the adaptive suspension with an automatic shock absorber system for each wheel makes for an exceptionally smooth ride and in a says you can also adjust the suspension yourself using this switch on the steering wheel. the new c. class gasoline engines are more fuel efficient thanks to its an electric belt driven starter generator. and lightweight materials in order to leave your engine help make the car lighter overall. the interior offers options for upholstery and trim made of leather or genuine wood plus all the latest technology. this is the a.t.m. she line of luxury extras. there are two small touch sensitive controls on the steering wheel you can easily navigate through the menu for the fully digital instrument displays away. feature from as class cars. for example under the heading design you can display and configure the format layouts and adjust the various driver assistance systems and that in this day misses of all this is a bit too modern for you choose the standard version which has analog displays. to day may actually become a trendsetter with the kona electric so far e.v.a.'s haven't succeeded in getting much of germany on board for the electric future maybe this first all electric sub compact s.u.v. will do the trick. contest i'm glad some moment points out the driving modes have won over buyers in recent years and he's found ways to modify the conus driving characteristics as well these driving modes don't just save energy the sport mode for instance is geared toward driving fun especially when accelerating you to make . the kona electric is based on the conventional kona except that it doesn't have all wheel drive from the side the electric version looks just like it's gasoline powered siblings. but at the front the corner has been thoroughly made over for electric power there's no large grill full l.e.d. headlights only come standard after the midterm level. the flared fenders and plastic cladding when the cone of the robust off roader look that most s.u.v. buyers are looking for. him in the hobby to take on. he sees that the kona electrics interior has everything drivers and passengers have come to appreciate like a digital instrument cluster it has a smart design and the information the driver needs to u.s.b. ports in front provide all the connectivity required nowadays and allow for a cordless recharging of smart phones. electric is available with two power trains we tested the strongest one with one hundred fifty kilowatts performance with a top trim level in the list for about forty five thousand six hundred euros in germany top speed exceeds one hundred sixty kilometers per hour. that's respective ice under the nose range is a crucial factor with e.v.a.'s as long as the owner can recharge the kona at home or at work this shouldn't be a problem but for journeys of four hundred kilometers and a stretch for example it's advisable for drivers to stop and recharge the car's batteries as well as their own light so it's the smoothest type for boy to come. along or trip shouldn't really be any problem for the kona electric based on the new w l t p test cycle the version we tested achieved a range of four hundred eighty two kilometers the batteries can be recharged to eighty percent capacity at a fast charging station in just one hour exact state of the charge data that can be called up on the infotainment system. as it exonerates thinks it's a good idea that an eco mode the instruments will show how much the range can be extended through recuperation at least that helps to relieve some of the worries about running out of range. that's fifty five bissinger i survived i just saw many of. their recuperating can be said to three intensity this affects how much energy is regenerated while it's in motion and from the braking behavior when the driver. lets up on the pedal the maximum intensity brings the cone almost to a stop as soon as the driver's foot leaves the pedal so forward looking drivers can go easy on both their brakes and their wallets. finds the idea of the kona electric rather clever instead of coming out with a futuristic e.-v. or sticking an electric drive into some random model and day has taken the electric drive to where the demand is then what good is an electric drive in a segment as it isn't selling anyway the kona electric is the first subcompact s.u.v. with electric drive so hyundai chances of starting a trend here aren't bad so i don't tempt fate and so does. the kona electric is a fresh idea for the evy segment not many car makers with electric cars and their range offer them and different performance versions or ranges a car buyer who is satisfied with one hundred kilowatts about ford and a three hundred twelve kilometer range can drive home a kona electric with a trimline appropriately named trent for thirty four thousand six hundred euros. b.m.w. has rolled out a special model m. to competition with an all new engine the twenty two board charged six cylinders put out three hundred two kilowatts with five hundred fifty newton meters maximum torque and as sound like no other it goes from zero to one hundred kilometers an hour in four point two seconds prices started nearly sixty two thousand euros in germany. germany's best selling electric vehicle is starting its second run the upgraded renault zoe is getting a new engine with an extra twelve kilowatts of power but no extra weight or no is also. promising a three hundred kilometer range for it measured on the new and more realistic a w l t p ten cycle. marcello is spain second largest city it's a teeming metropolis with a population over five million in the greater metro area that means lots of cars and lots of traffic. from the supply of parking spots fall short of the demand and stop and go traffic during rush hour fills the air with exhaust. my goal with the bicycle i have to. put a shiny toilet. it's a part of big city life but doesn't have to be a fact of it barcelona is open to new mobility concepts. the peers are a one building houses a lot of startups among them is the say at metropolis lab barcelona part of say it's a bid to become a mobility service provider of fifteen employees develop software and apps to make life a little easier for residents and commuters alike transportation has to be fast comfortable and fuel efficient so at the moment we have we are working on two projects one is a right charity project which. they've always make life easier for us they've always to be able to match people drivers and passengers so that rather than everybody taking their cause. to their working place they can share it. this project is a project that we call the boss on the men project which is similar but not all you are talking about the small ball is that. where you can book a boss to pick you up. and drop you at home if you are. in the waiting for a boss. it was actually you were going through at the bus stop and calling the boss they're going to come pick you up and drop you at your home or smaller buses run more flexible routes stopping where they're actually needed and damping to the existing demand in real time barcelona already records masses of data on traffic movements and makes them available to the developers. the size of the law so long as one that is very quick and tries themes like them will parse every novosti every writes every because there's not a message in the top and is as big as one of your it but at the same time is not a very small column so it's a mid sized surrounded by small columns so things like the commuting problem that i was describing before it resonates here because a lot of people leave on the seat and have to commute from the city every day and if we can make that better if it is very attractive to. another a sequence pilot projects is underway in the pirs or a one building's underground garage the metropolis lab has made five c. at emu car sharing vehicles available they can be booked by apps for business appointments and other business trips that cars are unlocked by immobile app especially set up for them. is that we receive feedback from the zero zero zero s. . using the car showing they buy the. whole he's better to improve this type of service. with batteries fully charged the. enemy has a range of about one hundred sixty kilometers the choice of this particular vehicle for the car sharing project no action it. with our electrical car because a car is having. all the shouting forms of which are the fruit of his soul to the. it's also before for real. because inside the suit there. is something about this wait for us order if we select this type of car. this spanish car maker has branched out into mobility services the ride sharing app developed by seattle lab is set for a market launch in september the bus on demand will be starting its test phase in october and will spur in germany. toyota is famous for building reliable and environmentally friendly cars but they also know how to build race cars the jaros w.r.c. regularly competes in international rally events and now you can have that driving experience for yourself with the you are is g r m in. the car testimony live stick describes this car is a combination of a yacht and a lotus elise the g r m n stands for a good master of nerve regrowing this car looks nothing like a lotus elise but it runs like one with a one point eight leader one hundred fifty six kilowatt compressor engine. a taurus and limited slip differential evens out the traction when you step on the gas there's no spinning or wobbling in the front wheels the other is g r m n goes from zero to one hundred kilometers per hour in just six point four seconds and as a top speed of two hundred thirty kilometers per hour sacks performance shock absorbers make for a smooth ride and provide for a much better spring rate than you'll find in a normal you are as. you say out of the ground he says this. car wasn't built for driving around the city you can feel the engines power even in the lower reverie but for a real driving experience you have to take it out on the road and open it up the fun really starts at five thousand raf's he does a lot of. about seventy five he says the i.r.s. has done well in this test so far but he says the steering is way too smooth and a car like this you want more direct feedback from the road but it's not just there . in my vision of what i'd like to thank what i dasn't all about he made a mistake if. you can tell just by looking at his special edition jarosz that it's a powerful vehicle the front facia come down low. and the side near roof and rear spoiler are all painted black you won't find that on the production version. the interior design is simple and functional with lots of rounded contours otherwise it makes pretty much like a normal jarosz. the highlights include sporty but could seats that really lock you in. if you got catapult ronnie says that any high performance car with a powerful engine should also have an effective braking system and this one does up front for part fixed caliper brakes and floating calipers in the rear. and if you really have to slam on the brakes they'll do the job i was talking about. ronnie can't find much to complain about with his car except maybe that it comes only and a three door version or rather came past tense. doesn't resonate with he says that because who recently created a great car with a young man it's got a powerful engine but they made only four hundred for the european market in two hundred for japan still was some luck you might be able to find a used one for sale at this and often involve. the don't know classy ground we took place in june for the thirteenth time there's lots of excitement here an average two hundred entries makes it one of germany's biggest vintage car rallies included in the starting lineup are classics like this prime rose yellow jaguar eat type or x k e. t a shills points out that this is his home region and it's the eleventh or twelfth time he's taken part to him the weather's like a dream said the album and. it's the right weather for convertibles of all makes once again the range of models competing in this year's doing now classic rally is pretty amazing. the starting point is english dot site of outings headquarters the entries will be touring in style around six hundred fifty kilometers have been various picturesque countryside and car maker country. hard time finnish cars also look great the horns and audi classics feel right at home here among them this rare audi one hundred two p.s. . on the phone in the hall just found that thomas graham takes planes that for a vintage car his audi is very enjoyable to draw. if it even has an automatic transmission it's like it dries in sophos specially when compared to pre-war machines those drivers had to work hard but thomas can look forward to our relaxing day. in the early one nine hundred seventy s. this smart coupe a boasted about its eighty two horsepower and the even bigger one hundred twelve horsepower version. but engine performance is not a major factor in the upcoming special stage. this is one of the first or early quatro from one thousand maybe one originally it belonged to me show motos chief mechanic a freshman with the surname. he drove the car until six or seven years ago before on. his four sixty. maybe even rally sport legend michelle moton or some of took the wheel we may never know even harder to drive was another legendary pre-war model the horse eight fifty three a. rather begin the other driver get up and king explains that the special stage is about even pacing and orientation he has to regularly check the road book and let the driver know which way to turn and there are special pacing laps where they have to drive at a constant speed and cover a certain stretch right down to the sac and that's not easy in such a big heavy car it's so big but the moment the shadow hold all the such they're going to. they pass through towns and villages in the countryside around a ghost at the route is different every year even for the special stages and locations of the checkpoints. some drivers kick back and have fun just taking part is enough for them other drivers take a more serious competitive approach. the drivers cab at the cry. i would suspect taters distract them they keep their eyes on the road and their ears tuned to their co-driver just like in a real rally he keeps track of the route and the road book and monitors the car. the horse swears through the narrow streets the rules are just the same for all the entries you know ranking and his driver managed the morning stage very well the first special stage went fine on the last one they missed an exit and probably picked up some penalty points but they're not here to win they just want to have fun you're fond yonaguni when you feel caught in the hole that's a little nugget of on. doubt it's eight fifty three sport convertible a nine hundred thirty five it's still regarded as one of the most beautiful automobiles of the one nine hundred thirty s. algos torsion founded his company in eight hundred ninety nine in cologne and later moved it eastwood swick out in one thousand nine the supervisory board forced torsion out of the company and he founded a new car company he couldn't read his own name for legal reasons. and started kalman thomas funk of audi explains that hornish was discussing names with his engineer funds vic and pickens her son was studying latin nearby at the boyd suggested translating course or park into the latin imperative audi and that's how the company got its name. at the first day's end their route leads back to him go stunt where the teams can do so minor maintenance nobody's been knocked out not even the audi or quatro whether it's impressive history to. this driver founded quite a challenge with some interesting test of endurance along the way the special stages could be fairly complicated and a bit tricky but otherwise things went quite well for him. spoke to him in the convertible drivers were happy that they can drive the whole day with the top down now they can all start getting ready for the next no no clash the ground. and next time i'm driving an s.u.v. with hybrid driver well test drive the mercedes g.o.c. . and out east t.t.'s turn twenty we took this sporty s. version for spin. make your support t.v. the smarter the d.w. force more to. what you want when you want to up to date extraordinary in-depth decide what's on sunday more than dot com smart t.v. . is creations one fifth of this brand new state of ca left office icon of the fashion. look what do we really know about the man behind the dark shades what motivates him how does he think and feel private moments in the life of a great fashion designer who's going to some smash and cut off and start september not w. rock n. roll up. close since old school condemned by the church. had no evil feeling that you feel when you fight. your past so. stop the old no one is more popular than jesus come with religious morality preachers subversive. battling with sound marketing potential by placing a warning label on music products. rock and religion a clash that brings many coulombs to life. for the two really so irreconcilable upcoming. long unrolled stories aug nineteenth two w. . good

C-class-convertible
Car-test
C-class-model
Proceedings
Facelift
Class-a
Three
Three-hundred
Lot
Speed
Points
More

Transcripts For FOXNEWSW Americas Newsroom With Bill Hemmer And Sandra Smith 20180925 13:00:00

>> and there is a lot of support for that within the ranks of republican senators, because many of them still have a big problem with the way the high school era accusation of dr. christine blasey ford, and the college era accusation of deborah ramirez, were brought to their attention. >> it's amazing to me that these allegations come out of nowhere at the last minute, and that they weren't brought up earlier in this process. it's not on the-typical for our friends on the other side to pull that kind of crap. >> don't forget, his stripper, who escorted him throughout those meetings in the summer, is now the newest g.o.p. senator, john kyle. he was asked if he ever picked up on a character flaw, and he said he did not. sandra? >> sandra: peter, any undecided democrats hinting that they might support his confirmation? >> not yet, but there are some democrats who say they still want to hear more. >> that has to be something more than just an allegation, okay? i think it's very serious. the second one seems to be very serious. we will just see. i believe that any woman who believes, and basically bring something as hard as that would be up, for them to do it, they ought to have a right to be heard. he has a right to be heard, als also. >> all the democrats on the judiciary committee already said they are going to vote no, but some are still mad that there will be more witnesses at their seat hearing. >> both of these women are bravely coming forward with allegations that i think the judiciary committee should hear, and here fully. >> but it doesn't seem they will agree with that request. >> it seems unlikely at that point. the chairman grassley on the republican majority is going to allow us to hear from anyone other than dr. ford and judge kavanaugh. >> so, this is where it will all be happening on thursday. a much smaller room than the one after his meeting yesterday said this about the kavanaugh latest. >> this is a fine man, and we certainly hope he's going to be confirmed, and quickly. his family has suffered. his family has suffered. what's going on is not something that should happen. brett kavanaugh is an absolute outstanding person. hopefully, he will be confirmed quickly. speak to kevin mccarthy is watching all this back at his post on capitol hill. sir, welcome back. what happens with the matter this week? >> i think the american public want to see a fair process. it will be listening to this hearing. they will be listening to justice kavanaugh, and also dr. ford. but i think they're going to wait yet, as those before were weighted. "the new york times" never had the story. they would have written it if they had found anybody you said this was true when they look back through. i think people need to see what is going forward, and not to prejudge, but listen to the facts and then make their decision. >> bill: what is your sense about how this affects the vote in 40 days? >> i think it intensifies both sides, because people want to make sure that people do not get mistreated, sexually or any other way. but they also want a fair process. i was just speaking to a number of women recently who said "i have sons, i have fathers, and i want to make sure that my daughters are safe, but at the same time, that children don't get accused of something that's not true." >> bill: and on the matter of rote mike rod rosenstein. everybody was chasing their tail on this yesterday. does he stay or does he go? >> ethic is going to depend on the president. i would say let's let the president have a meeting first. let them have a one on one. there's lots of concerns about him. why he hasn't provided the information that the house has asked for. why can his involvement in fisa and others -- he has a lot of answers, but i think the first person he needs the answer to is the president. they disenfranchise the citizens of america. so many times, when i go to a naturalization and people registered to vote, they come to me and they say that the proudest moment to becoming a u.s. citizen is the right to vote. that first time they cast the ballot. it disenfranchises all of us. what's most concerned about this -- think about this, this is san francisco. think about the movement that this house switched. abolishing ice, and now wanting illegals to vote in our elections? what is the core basis of this country? i think that is just wrong, and that's why i put a resolution. and let's hear people stand on this. these are coming from democratic-controlled cities. this is the movement of where they want to go across the nation. >> bill: we will see where the resolution goes from here. kevin mccarthy, thank you for your time. i mentioned thursday, at the hearing was kavanaugh and his accuser, and we've got this meeting with rod rosenstein. big news day. thank you, we will talk very soon. from the hill. >> thank you. >> sandra: we are about one hour away from president trump's speech at the event. his address to world leaders is expected not only to reinforce his america-first agenda, but also to confront iran. chief white house correspondent john roberts is live at the u.n. with more. john, good morning. >> sandra, good morning to you. kind of like covering a hurricane today, as opposed to the u.n. general simply. whether or not the best that we have ever seen. one thing you can take off the table this week is a meeting between president trump and president assad ronnie of iran. he tweeted that despite requests, he had no plans to meet the iranian president. maybe someday in the future. i'm sure he's an absolutely lovely man. a meeting between of the two of them probably wouldn't go very well either, because he's going to use strong linkage to call out around today. one of the central themes of his speech at the u.n. and the nexw hours. it will be about nonproliferation. he calls out iran about being the world's where state sponsor of terror, and the fact that they are really jeopardizing peace in the middle east. on a daily basis. listen to what the secretary of state mike pompeo said yesterday. >> you can bet the president will have well-deserved strong words for the iranian regime, which is one of the worst of violators of the u.n. secure to council resolutions, if not the absolute worse than the world. he will call in every country to join our pressure campion in order to stop their destructive activity. >> he's applying the same tactic with the iran initiative as he applied to north korea last year, and that's a put together a campaign of maximum pressure involving sanctions and pressure from other countries around the world to try and get them to change their behavior. on the topic of north korea, even though kim jong un has not done what he promised he would do in terms of need denuclearization, he says another summit is in the offing. we will see what he says with a moon jae-in of south korea. >> a second summit with chairman kim in the future. the secretary of state will be dealing with that subject. of course, mike pompeo has been in touch with them, and in touch with the staff. i think that will be announced. there will be locations to be determined, but we are both very much looking forward to having it. >> the overarching today of today's u.n. general assembly will be sovereignty and an america-first perspective. the president saying that america first doesn't mean america alone. he wants other countries to be strong. strong enough that they can take care of problems in their own region without the u.s. having to come to the rescue. sandra? >> sandra: john roberts at the u.n. for us as we await the president. thank you. >> it's going to be a big mom and exar. meanwhile, breaking news. deaf >> obviously, the president has been disappointed by a number of actions that have taken place at the department of justice. he wants some answers to some of the questions that he has. some of them have to do with rod rosenstein, some of them have nothing to do with him. beachy was so wet assist fate after his meeting on thursday because mark the latest that we are learning about that coming up in a moment. >> sandra: president trump says he will not be meeting with the iranian president today. what to expect when he does address world leaders. one hour from now. >> regime change in iran is not the administrations policy. what we expect from iran's massive changes in their behavior. and until that happens, we will continue to exert what the president has called "maximum pressure." >> tech: don't wait for a chip like this to crack your whole windshield. hydrating better than $100, $200 even $400 creams. with our b3 complex, beautiful skin doesn't have to cost a fortune. olay. if you're waiting patiently for a liver transplant, it could cost you your life. it's time to get out of line with upmc. at upmc, living-donor transplants put you first. so you don't die waiting. upmc does more living-donor liver transplants than any other center in the nation. find out more and get out of line today. north korea. rocket man is on a suicide mission for himself, and for his regime. >> bill: that is one year ago, and how things have perhaps changed since then. in that same speech, the president's lemming iran, what happens when our for now, we will be with our analyst. good morning to you. we can scan the globe in this conversation. start with korea. how significant do you think things truly are 12 months later? >> well, very much, bill, because what we have done is to change the behavior of north korea. it's not just the speech of the president and his tweets, but it's also the massive military deployment that the pentagon has done around to north korea, in addition, of course. there was a whole infrastructure of activity that forced the north korean regime to change behavior. it's very, very clear that they did. of course, there are many things that need to be addressed. it's a long project, but change has happened. >> bill: he speaking to a body that supports, by and large, there iran nuclear deal, as wel well. the sanctions kick in about a month from now, a month and a half from now. i don't believe they will be any meeting with the iranian leader. do you think there should be? >> no. i would be opposed to this idea. i would advise otherwise, exactly what the president has said. unless the iranian leadership will start showing indications that they are changing, exactly as for north korea. that will be very clear. for example, withdrawing, beginning to withdraw from syria, iraq, yemen. saying that they are willing to withdraw, stopping the threat against the united states. stopping the maneuvers in the gulf area against arab neighbors. the u.s. needs to have indications that the leaders in tehran are changing behavior. otherwise, the president has a good handle on this. >> bill: what about syria? what about isis? what would be our expectation on that? >> i think on isis is 85% job done. now, to do it completely efficient, we need to make sure that, in syria, those who are going to be replacing ices are not going to be the iranian militia or hezbollah or the other assad-backed militia. the end of isis is linked to our ability to contain iran. they are both linked. with regard to the assad regime and the russians, they russians aren't operational in western syria. we are in eastern syria. john bolton has said something important. we are withdrawing from syria before the iranian start to withdraw back to iran. we are going in the right direction. of course, it makes a lot of effort. >> bill: in the middle of that as well. the president talked about his america-first policy. what he freely admits is that every country's leadership looks out for its own people at its own country, as it should be. that's the point he makes. what is the message regarding america first today? that you would expect to hear, perhaps? >> look, since 2016, since the campaign, this slogan of "america first" isn't just that. it's america first, but we are within the international community on many grounds. as you said, it's absolutely true that every country is putting itself per first. the french comfort sample, always say that francis first. they should do the same. at this important time, what president trump and has the administration tried do is stop being for others without being for ourselves, in terms of national security, in terms of deals like the iran deal, so on and so forth. i think the change has become a reality at this point in time. not with just one admits region, may be the next three to complete. speech you think you. watch along with us, we will talk to you next hour, right here on "america's newsroom" ." 19 past the hour. more to come. >> sandra: a lot at stake. fox news alert, the director of the cia with a strong warning on the nuclear program in north korea. why they believe that they will not give up their weapons so easily. also, president trump set to meet with rod rosenstein in two days. what will happen to the deputy ag on thursday? >> we will be meeting at the white house, and we will be determining what's going on. we want to have transparency, openness, and i look forward to meeting with him at that time. your insurance rates skyrocket after a scratch so small you could fix it with a pen. how about using that pen to sign up for new insurance instead? for drivers with accident forgiveness, liberty mutual won't raise their rates because of their first accident. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ let's do an ad of a man eating free waffles at comfort inn. they taste like victory because he always gets the lowest price on our rooms, guaranteed, when he books direct at choicehotels.com. or just say badda book, badda boom. book now at choicehotels.com. congress. >> if, indeed, rod rosenstein said these things -- which many believe that he did -- many believe that he said in a nonjoking manner. he needs to explain that, not only to the president of the united states, but the american people. we are pushing very hard to make sure that he comes in under oath, to congress. and let the american people judge for themselves. >> sandra: the correspondent katherine harris is live in washington. what a day it was yesterday, catherine. was he going to resign, fired? where we this morning? >> good morning. the white house press secretary confirmed this morning, on fox, that a big part of thursday's conversation it will be allegations that rosenstein considered wearing a wire or recruiting cabinet secretaries to record the president. he indicated that the allegations are so serious they can only be resolved in parents. person. >> that's part of the conversation that will take place on thursday. i won't get it ahead of a conversation that hasn't happened yet. the president and rod rosenstein had a beginning of that conversation by phone yesterday. both agreed that it was best to sit down and have that further and longer, and the more of a conversation in person. >> the allegation is that rosenstein tabled the idea of invoking the 25th amendment to remove the president based on events surrounding his decision to fired james comey in may of 2017. at the u.n. yesterday, cabinet secretary said the idea was never raised with them. >> literally, i have never once been in the white house where that conversation has happened. i'm not aware of any cabinet members who are even talking about that. it is completely and totally absurd. no one is questioning the president at all. if anything, we are trying to keep up the pace with him and the fact that he's got a what he wants to compass very quickly, and we are going to continue to support him in the way he does that. >> white house weekend discussions, they focused on whether rosenstein was "compromise." based on what the sources described, including his route to micro on firing comay, a surveillance warrant for carter page, and rosenstein's decision to have hire robert mueller shy after his meeting with the president to be the next fbi director, sandra. >> sandra: the president's lawyer wants a timeout if rosenstein goes? >> that's right. one of the president's personal attorney said on his radio show that there should be a pause in the russia special counsel case if rosenstein resigns or is fired. this morning, he said the probe should be shut down. it's rico i would go a step further, i think it should and, because they did a year and a half and found nothing. there was no collusion. i think the american people, frankly, ready for this to wrap up. we have seen absolutely no shred of evidence that the president or anybody had any wrongdoing in the campaign. i think it's time to wrap this up and move forward. >> democrats are speaking with one voice, and they point to the fact that a handful of trump campaign aides have pled guilty to lying to the special counsel investigators. they are urging the deputy attorney general to hold on. >> he shouldn't take a step affirmatively and essentially love the president off the hook. this looks to me like a slow moving saturday night massacre. it seems like the only question is whether the steps take place now where they take place after the midterms when the president believes he will pay less of a critical price for it. >> as you mentioned, at the top, two house republicans are planning to call an impeachment vote if he does not poke the testify. we have asked the justice department whether the attorney general has an indication and if he's willing to come on a voluntary basis before the midterms. as we get an update, we will bring that to you, sandra. >> sandra: catherine herridge, thank you very much. >> bill: minutes from now, and arrival from the president come arriving at the u.n. mike pence walked in the door moments ago. it's a rainy day here in the northeast. the first lady will be there as well as we get ready for the address before the world leaders. stay tuned. sandra, and events like this, you never know quite what the president is going to have to say. there has been no advanced speech that has been given to us or others. as of now, we understand that to be the case. hang on. it's about 30 minutes away. >> sandra: we know it's going to be a white-ranging speech, and he will be talking tough on iran. we will wait for reports from the u.n. meanwhile, judge kavanaugh defending his name and a fox news exclusive last night. democrats continuing to call for a delay. in a moment, we will speak to democratic congresswoman sherry bustos and get her reaction. >> for them to complain about the process is like and arnet, carson is complaining about the fire. the allegations judge kavanaugh are collapsing. this is been the worst low point and the senate for me, and that's saying a lot. >> bill: nine: 31, fox news alert watching the cameras along the east river here in manhattan. we are about 30 minutes away from president trump's second address before the united nations. if you remember the one from a year ago, it was something else. headlines galore. north korea now, rising tensions on iran, global trade, his america-first view of foreign policy all topping the agenda. we'll see the president inside the u.n. in a matter of minutes. when the speech begins, you are going to see it live right here. inside of america's newsroom. sergey lavrov from russia, he was passing to the left us there. we are watching the doors, the comings and goings. this will be the scene you will see from this day. tomorrow, when the president heads of the u.n. secure to counsel, that will be something else, too. that's at 10:30 eastern time on wednesday. we will have live coverage of that event as well. for now we are on standby for the president's arrival with the first lady at the united nation united nations. >> sandra: supreme court nominee brett kavanaugh telling fox news he is not going anywhere, despite a growing number of democrats calling for him to withdraw his name from consideration. in a fox news exclusive interview, cavanagh says he has always treated women with dignity. >> i want a fair process where i can defend my integrity. i know i'm telling the truth. i know my lifelong record. and i'm not going to let false accusations drive me out of this process. i have faith in god, and i have faith in the fairness of the american people. america is about fairness, and hearing from both sides. >> sandra: congresswoman sherry bustos, cochair of the democratic policy and communications committee. she joins us now in studio. great to have you here. >> thank you, sandra. >> sandra: and illinois girl, and so am i. good to catch up with you on that. a lot of state, and you heard him in the interview with martha last night hades asking for a fair process. are democrats willing to give him one? >> i think the american public wants a fair process. you are a journalist. i'm a former journalist. the guiding star on this should be getting to the truth. how do we best get to the truth? i happen to think that involves the fbi investigating this. having people who are trained investigators. that's what they do for living, getting to the bottom of this. >> you want the further background checks than the six that have been already conducted? >> there hasn't been an fbi investigation on this allegation that came up. right now we are dealing with a he said, she said. you've got many people who are saying to believe the survivor, you have many people on the other side saying that this is a credible judge. i don't know how you get to the truth without having a thorough investigation on this. i understand that it is 30 something years old. there are people who the professor says were at this party. i don't think there is any problem, in my opinion, to do a thorough investigation and get to the bottom of it. >> sandra: what about the prisms and of guilt, though? from many in your party? do you stand with those that not only are presuming him guilty, but saying he should step away from the process? >> i think, again, the truth should be the guiding light. whether you are a democrat or republican, whether you believe kavanaugh, or whether you believe professor blasey ford. how we will get to the truth is to have those who are trained investigators getting to the truth. >> sandra: certainly they will be an open public hearing that will be taking place on thursday. we will hear from both sides. let me tell you how they he'll put all of this, and they wrote this piece. his faith rests with senator collins. she's the one who's going to count when it comes to the confirmation process. they write "if collins were to vote to confirm kavanaugh, her reputation as an independent voice would likely suffer a blow, as that decision would be met with a barrage of criticism from democrats and advocates of the me too movement." do you agree with that? >> i hope with senator collins or senator grassley or any of the senator sitting around the table, i hope that they just want to ask -- -- >> sandra: i think i said moderate democrat, i meant moderate republican. >> you did. i hope that her goal, and again, all the other senators on the judiciary, that they ask questions where brett kavanaugh can answer them, with a attempt to answer them without being cut off or overly criticized. same thing with professor blasi blasey ford. i think what everybody's calling with is emma how do we get to the truth? it's difficult when you are talking about something that is alleged to have happened 30 something years ago. where you have alcohol involved. a question around, why did a 15-year-old not go to authorities? why did she not go to her parents if she happen? you airy women, i and a woman. i don't know too many women who have had something like a traumatic experience happen to that, and they are 15 years old, who would have gone to authorities. there was alcohol involved. >> sandra: these details are likely to be asked about when thursday comes up. we will see how the responses from both side. they both do deserve a fair process to play out, here. you are unique voice in this. i guess i slipped saying it moderate democrat when talking about susan collins because she is a republican, but you are a moderate democrat. would you call yourself one? >> yeah, i mean, i'm from the heartland. donald trump one my congressional district. by 20 points. you talking about having one in five voters go to the polls in november of 2016 who voted for donald trump and for me. i think the reason for that is people have felt in the past that democrats haven't shown up in small towns. >> sandra: politico did a piece back in i believe may 2017, and they called you a rising star in your party. they titled the piece "the secret weapon democrats don't know how to use." and that was you. it's about pictures of you in manufacturing plants, with welders, you are playing baseball, you are in supermarkets talking to people. what do you think is the secret for your party? and you continue to win interim country. i don't think it's a secret, i think you show up and use your ears and your mouth. from the perspective of a democrat, i think you look pretty good. we have moderates and democrats running all of these moderate districts. when you come from a district like mine, if you are too far left, or you are too far right, people don't want that. they want somebody who's going to go to washington, work across the aisle, no matter what party you come from. get something done. i think the expectation is that you work hard, get results, and fight for people when you have a fight on your hands. >> sandra: is going to be quite a week to watch. thank you, it's nice to meet you. good to have year. i appreciate it. >> bill: about 20 minutes before the hour, fox news alert. ray remarks from the director of the cia, gina haskell accessing concerns over the nuclear program in north korea. coming up when a meeting between the president and north korea on monday. >> we are talking about north korea making tremendous progress. german cam has been really very open and terrific, frankly. i think he wants to see something happen. >> bill: we pick up the story from the pentagon, and lucas come over your comments. going on here? >> those are the first public remarks from his cia director back in may. gina haskell warning that north korea views its nukes central to its survival because president trumps dialogues have reduced tensions. >> the north koreans view their capability as leverage. i don't think that they want to give it up easily. certainly we are in a better place than we were in 2017 because of the dialogue we have established between our two leaders. >> haskell spoke at her alma mater. the republican majority leader was on hand to see the woman he helped confirmed as the first see a doctor. she also talked about china seemed to dominate the pacific region, and said that beijing is "working to diminish u.s. influence." this comes admit a growing trade dispute between the united states and china. beijing recently denied a request for a u.s. navy warship to visit hong kong and cancel the visit by the vice admiral. china erupted over the announced sale about american spare parts in taiwan for its fighter jets and cargo planes. total value, $330 million. this morning on capitol hill, a confirmation hearing is under way for trump's next commander to leave the 28 troops in south korea. our colleague bret baier will interview south korea's president tonight on "special report" at 6:00 p.m. eastern. >> bill: thank you, lucas. they will be headlines again then, too. >> sandra: president trump returning to the world stage to deliver his eye can adjust to the united nations. that will happen about 30 minutes now. what he plans to say to iran. another world leaders today, as were back to the u.n. danny is on deck. >> you can bet the president will have a well-deserved strong words for the iranian regime. he will call on every country to join our pressure campaign in order to thwart iran's torrent of destructive activity. you might take something for your heart... or joints. but do you take something for your brain. with an ingredient originally discovered in jellyfish, prevagen has been shown in clinical trials to improve short-term memory. prevagen. healthier brain. better life. because i know so many of you to address my fellow veterans, have served our country honorably. one of the benefits that we as a country give you as a veteran is the eligibility for a va loan for up to 100% of your home's value. if you need cash for your family, call newday usa. with automatic authority from the va, we can say yes when banks say no. give us a call. call 1-877-423-5732. if you're a veteran, own a home, and need money for your family, call newday usa to use your valuable va home loan benefit. thank you, admiral. it lets you borrow up to 100% of your home's value. thank you, admiral. with today's rising home values, that could mean more money for you and your family. thank you, admiral. money to pay down debts and get financial peace of mind. thank you, admiral. we'll do everything we possibly can to get you approved. call 1-877-423-5732. >> we have engaged in significant activity that has begun to counter the iranian threat. today they remain the world's largest state-sponsored terrorists we want to make sure that's not the case. a foot a number of restrictions in place. we have imposed another set of sanctions come november. are actions show that we will not accept their behavior. >> bill: tough rhetoric on iran. president trump and the first lady will be at the u.n. about 30 meds for now. they will be there in a couple minutes, but the speech begins around ten: 15 trying to persuade other nations do the same. mr. ambassador, nice to see you. thank you for your time. a lot of people in europe and around the world did not want to see the iran nuclear deal go bye-bye. the u.s. and present trump pulled the united states on that deal. what has been the effect of that? since then? >> good morning, bill. the u.n. general assembly, waiting to hear present trump. as you mentioned, to see what will happen with iran. what will be the future with iran. the sanctions are working. you can see the frustration in iran. look at their economy. in november, there will be a new set of sanctions. then you will see more frustration. i believe president trump will make the distinction between the iranian people at the iranian regime. the regime is taking advantage of the iranian people. they use their money to sponsor terrorism in yemen, and lebanon, in syria, in iraq. you name it, bill. wherever you see terrorists in the middle east, you will find iranian money. i believe the president will be very clear today and make a call to join him, especially your the europeans who try to bypass is anxious, but it won't work. they have to work with the american economy, or with the iranian economy. they know they should work with the american economy. >> bill: so you believe that the president will bifurcate this message, then? one is directed to the leadership, went to the people? >> i believe the president will be very clear. it will be interesting to see what the leaders will say after that. the leader from france, germany, the u.k. because they are not happy with the u.s. today. but when you take a leadership role, people are not happy in the beginning, but then they join you. that's what president trump did when he decided to cancel this bad agreement. now i believe you will hear more and more countries joining his leadership. >> bill: i think that's a critical point, here. how would you characterize the level of support that message has at the u.n.? you are not among a lot of friends over there. >> no, not at all. but today is a new era. we have the ambassador nikki haley, the u.s. ambassador. she's a great friend of israel. we are not alone. we fight and stand tall, and we believe that when you stand and stick with it, people will follow you. today you will see more appreciation for the u.s. once president trump decided to move the embassy to jerusalem and to stand with israel, many other countries appreciated that. especially from the arab world. the moderate countries appreciate what the president is supporting its allies. >> bill: you mention these additional sanctions. round two goes into effect, as you rightly point out, in early november. what does that due to the iranian leadership? how does that change or calculation, if at all, so far? >> you can see the pressure. when you follow the twitter, they talk about whether they meet with the president or not. they are under pressure, because the economy is shrieking. many of the companies are constantly in agreement. today you cannot walk without the american system. they worried about that. i think they should put more pressure and force them to amend this bad agreement. >> bill: it does look like any kind of sit down conversation is going to happen. i don't know if you would even support that or not. would that be productive? >> i don't think it will happen this time. the president tweeted this morning, he said it will not happen. i think the amount of pressure you would put on the iranians will force them to change their behavior. that's we want to do. don't just have a meeting for them. you want them to stop sponsoring terrorism, you want them to stop building ballistic arsenals that they are building. i think if we apply more pressure, we will see more results. >> bill: thank you, sir. the or israeli investor of the u.n., there. there are a few moments away. thank you, sir. sandra? >> sandra: we are looking alive at the united nations where the president and the first lady are expected to arrive any moment. this, head of the big speech plan to start less than half an hour from now. the president is expected to push a hard line against iran. he will direct a message toward the leaders of other nations, as well. we awaits the president at the u.n. we will be right back. alright, i brought in new max protein that decision came down in april. today, he faces up to ten years in prison. we are doing now lie from the courthouse in morristown, pennsylvania. rick? >> sandra, you watch bill cosby walk in at about 8:30 this morning. possibly his last walk outside as a free man. he ignored questions including whether he was ready to go to jail. he will find that out sometime today. the d.a. yesterday requested a sentence of five to ten years, the defense asked for house arrest. it will be up to judge stephen o'neill to decide if the elderly comedian winds up behind bars after his conviction in april on three counts of aggravated indecent assault for drugging and taking advantage in his home in 2004. before sentencing, he will have to decide if cosby should be designated a sexually violent predator. a board testified that he had an uncontrollable urge to violate young woman and would likely do it again if given the opportunity. today, his attorneys will call their own psychologist to refute that claim preeti will be given a chance to speak in his own defense. we don't know if you will. the guidelines call for a sentence somewhere between two to three years. important to find point out that they are getting jail time with no prior record. it's more likely than not that bill cosby will walk out of this courthouse later today in handcuffs. >> sandra: it will be decided today. thank you very much, rick leventhal. >> bill: we are on watch for that in the philadelphia area. meanwhile, back here in new york city, the president and the first lady have not left trump tower yet. it's not a long drive in all of the streets are blocked off the side of manhattan anyway for the u.n. general simply. it's been neighbor a moment, sandra, since going to back to6 since he got his home at the trump tower. that is his place of residence this week, at least for these few nights in new york city. it's on the schedule for about 15 minutes from now. the brazilian leader right now is at the podium. >> sandra: it's very clear that every single new yorker, every single street or shut off. [laughs] >> bill: it is a good week to walk. john bolton gave us a very good preview as to what america first means to the people of u.s. and the people around the world. we are going to get to this address in a matter of moments. don't go, we will have it for you as we continue at the top of the right hear, hear on "america's newsroom" ." or, badda book. badda boom. book now at choicehotels.com bounty, the quicker picker upper. >> sandra: this is a fox news alert. just moments from president trump as he addresses the 73rd session of the u.n. general assembly. welcome to a brand-new hour of america's newsroom, i'm sandra smith. >> bill: how you doing, week k? rainey new york city say. i'm bill hemmer. president trump at at the podi. he will be not meeting with the iranian president while he is in manhattan. >> sandra: despite request, i have no plans to meet iranian president hassan rouhani. maybe someday in the future. i'm sure he is an absolutely lovely man." benjamin hall has more on the story. he's live with us in london. already refused to meet with president trump a few times, has he not? >> sandra, good mind. yes, he has. going back quite a few months now. president trump and mike pompeo have reached out saying that they would be willing to meet either president hassan rouhani or ayatollah khomeini. he said in july he would meet with no preconditions. now it would have been a the perfect time for them to eat. president ronnie is in new york for the general simply. will be perfect to start the dialogue. but he's been meeting with other world leaders instead, and he has decided not to meet with president trump. ever since present trump pulled out of the real deal, which he said did nothing to curb iran's sponsoring of terrorism, rather than seeking change in the relationship, there has been a barrage of insults out of iran. earlier today, the revolutionary guards called president trump evil. they blamed president trump and the u.s. for recent attacks in the country. then, in an interview, president ronnie claims that the u.s. is full of empty promises and threats toward iran are toothless. despite these big words, it does feel as if iran is suffering. in november, new sanctions hit, and it feels at that point that iran really will have to come to the table or things in that country will get significant way worse. >> sandra: benjamin, iran is seeming to get help from the europeans now? >> yes, and all along, the europeans have tried to keep the iran deal on track, despite this high pressure. forcing them to come to the table. europeans are trying to help them. the europeans are looking for ways to help iran evade u.s. sanctions. meeting on the sidelines of the u.n. just yesterday, the e.u.'s foreign minister and iran's foreign minister and also they were trying to set up a new finance get us some to enable illegal trade with them without encountering u.s. sanctions. for president trump, that will be a sticking point to see european allies tried to find a way around the sanctions. i think many people are expecting to hear in the speech coming up, strong words against iran. a rallying cry to allies to come on board, help isolate iran so that they can move together in a united front on this. >> sandra: thank you. >> bill: also, the director of the margaret thatcher center for freedom. back with us, for an affair and analysis. and marie harf, cohost of benson and arif on fox news radio. do you all. we have a bit of a pregame here. the present in the first lady not with the u.n. just yet. i would start with you, there was so much uncertainty as to the message of the present. he really was the man of the moment for all world leaders. is it still that way a year later? >> absolutely, bill. everybody is waiting with great aunt's mission to hear what the present has to say. this isn't just the president speaking to his constituency, this is the president addressing the world. so all the tvs tumbles all the internet, websites, everybody's going to turn into this to see e has to say. there is tremendous anticipation prayed one of the things that benjamin hall brought up is what is he going to say about what's going on with attempts to try and shore up iran financially? so they can withstand whatever sanctions are going hit them on november 4th. it's going to be painful for the iranians, but it's the european union in this new deal. along with russians and the chinese, who signed onto the nuclear deal, they are going support iran. where does this lead us? it's going to be some confrontation in the months and weeks ahead. >> bill: it appears that there someone in the cross hairs of year. north korea was last year, that was the big quote about rocket man, it made its debut during the speech. what john bolton said the other day, is of the president's speech it will eliminate for the american people what america's place in the world is. what is that place now? >> yes. i think that's absolute right. america's place in the world today is leading from the front. it's a rejection of the obama administration leading from behind. i think it's good to be a very confident assertion of american leadership on the world stage. it's going to be a very robust speech, which will strongly defend american leadership, american national sovereignty, and it will demonstrate clearly that america is a great force for good on the world stage. confronting the enemies of freedom. i think you're going to see a very different kind of speech today than the speech we saw before on president obama. when president obama used to really downplay, i think, the role of american leadership, and this will be a very, very powerful defense of american identity, american leadership, and the need for the free world. i think this is going to be a very tough, strong speech, especially with a very tough message for the iranian regime. they are very much looking forward to the president's remarks this morning. >> sandra: we are waiting to president any moment now. as we await his arrival, marie harf, spokesperson for the state department joins us. what is that you are looking for here, marie? what are you with deer from the present? >> i think the question will be whether he articulates a vision for multilateralism. the u.s. and u.n. is about cous working together, sovereignty, which is a word he loves to use. in the year since he last spoke to the event, the united states has withdrawn from numerous u.n. agencies. they have denounced the lowest refugee numbers we will take sie refugee programs are founded. we really pulled back in many ways and take a leading role. yes, i'm sure the speech will be tough, but the u.n. is isn't jt about strength. it's about working together as an international community to confront and solve global child is. that multilateral message is something that donald trump is not comfortable with. it's something that i think people in the audience of the u.n. today will be listening to. you can't just threaten iran -- you have to talk about how we can solve these challenges together. >> bill: in so many significant ways, he inserted himself in the korean peninsula in a way that hasn't happened before. although we are waiting for the ultimate result from north korea, things have moved toward a place of calm, marie. >> i always say talking is better than shooting. last year, the u.n. was very concerned. people at the u.n. were very concerned about the rhetoric coming from the president about north korea. they are glad people are talking right now. but the proof will be in the pudding. north korea has not gotten rid of one muscle. they haven't gotten rid of one nuclear weapon yet. right? they are talking, which is better than fighting, but we have to actually get results, here. that is still very much an open question about whether they will be any resolution here. >> bill: process. >> sandra: jonathan, as we do so often we are awaiting a speech like this, the president speaking at the u.n. a few moments from now, you wonder what the tone will be from the president. what do you expect? >> the tone will probably be ready similar in terms of last year. of course, we saw so much rhetoric as marie was talking about. "little rocket man" and all the competition of last year. but the president will likely stay within the parameters of the prompter, and speak to the speech that he has before him. rather than go go outside those guidelines. he has a lot of ground to cover here. it's not just about iran and north korea. we have still a horrible situation in syria that needs to get resolved. there is a horror show in yemen with a crisis so big involving so many countries and the region with wider invocations pray there are a lot of problems, a whole range of issues. indeed, we will be looking very closely at what he says about iran and north korea. those are two fundamental problems before us. one thing that is important here is that we don't have a scenario in which we had icbms being fired, and this whole range of other tests that the north koreans were conducting leading up to the president's speech. in many ways, we are in calmer waters, at least. calm minds can look at the situation and try to guide us through. this is a different scenario altogether. but, deftly, the president will be very strong in terms of the u.s. decision, in terms of sovereignty, in terms of america trying to navigate through these problems without, as niall gardner said, pulling to the multilateral, multinational sensibilities that other presidents have played to, in which america will look strong. the rest of the world, of course, still looks at the united states for leadership. the united states pays 22% of the budget of the united nations. about a quarter percent of u.n. peacekeeping. the united states 'has role within the united nations, within the world, remain strong, important, and significant. we will have to hear what the tone will be. it will be strong, though. >> bill: you laid out very well, jonathan. thank you. the leader of ecuador is of the podium now. the brazilian leader has concluded. we wait for the president of austria's arrival in a matter of moments. when you talk about iran being the focus. for a world body like this, and european leadership, that's not on board with the iran nuclear deal, can you change many minds at a meeting like this in new york? >> let me begin by the point of multilateral approach of the trump administration. we need to understand it from a different angle. there is a good multilateral approach, and there is the unsuccessful -- i do want to say bad -- multilateral approach. the way the trump administration is operating is withdrawing from these operations and not giving any results, such as in north korea. such is the iran deal. and then coming back and proposing a new multilateral approach, which has been successful with north korea. yes, of course, we cannot eliminate the icbm and one day, and six months. this is a long process. at least we came out of this where the north koreans were leveling against united states. with regard to iran, there's another way to look at it. look at, for example, the struggle between the brussels bureaucracy. they are committed. how many companies, how many european companies, french, german, italian, others -- that's what counts. look at the arab world. it shifted completely against iran, or 80% against iran. the most important here, look at the iranian people. the iranian process. if you look at the whole situation, yes, we got out of a situation, it was not productive, and it's going to take some time. the replacement will be another multilateral more successful equation. >> sandra: clearly, marie, we expect the present to tout his america first message and try to urge other leaders to play along and do their fair share. we expect him to push this hard-line approach when it comes to iran. we expect a strong language, strong words from the president. this is a message that he will be sending to the world in a few moments. >> that's right. the administration has worked very hard to say that america first does not equal america alone. to many of our allies and partners around the world, that is often what it sounds like. that is a challenge the president will have today. when you talk about the paris climate accord, or the iran deal, these deals are the u.n. has supported, has been very strongly behind -- president trump has been very good at withdrawing for them. tearing them up, ' we are getting out of them." the trans-pacific partnership. there is a whole host of these. he hasn't been so successful yet i renegotiate them or billing something in her place. to do that, you need allies, he need partners. i think that the world community today will be looking to the president to see that there is a proactive agenda, not just for how the u.s. withdraws from deals, but for how they rebuild them back up. >> bill: a lot of these european countries have a decision to make, too. about the u.s. economy. i want to bring you back here in the topic of linkage. the president is set to arrive at the u.n. a year ago, when he said about the strong words that came out against north korea, that was the birth of "rocket man." that was when the president said north korea would be totally destroyed if they do not stop threatening the united states. that is the wild card of the speech that president trump brings to every room he enters. >> i think that's right. i would expect that you're going to see some similarly harsh language this time directed at the iranian regime. but, also, i think an appeal to america's allies to stand with united states in confronting iran, especially america's european allies. as he pointed out earlier, there is a divide in europe on this issue. you have the european union and, in particular. the u.n. commission. there are some leaders within europe who believe that the united states has made the right decision, here, in withdrawing from the iran nuclear agreement. i think there will be a very strong appeal to america's allies. it's wrong to argue, i think, about -- >> bill: hang on one second. >> president trump: iran has acted very badly. we are doing many things right now, including sanctions, that are very massive. one of the highest levels we have ever done. iran has to change its tune before i meet with them. they wanted me. i'm not meeting with them until they change their tune. it will happen. i believe they have no choice. we look forward to having a great relationship with iran. but it won't happen now. [reporters yelling] >> president trump: it is a process of setting up a meeting with north korea. chairman kim has been dealing with us, he has made dramatic progress. far greater than people would understand or know. it has been really a very good relationship. as you know, there have been no tests. no nuclear tests, no rockets, no missile launches, and we got our hostages back. we are getting the remains of our great heroes back. that has already started that process. many more are coming in at the very short future. we are doing very well with north korea. again, far greater than anybody would know. i have much personal correspondence with chairman ki kim, and we will -- i think we will do something that will work. that it's good for north korea, good for chairman kim, and also good for the rest of us. report i meeting with rod rosenn thursday. today i'm doing other things, as you probably have -- [reporters yelling] we want to see it fixed. what's happening there is a human tragedy. okay? [reporters yelling] >> reporter: where are they going to be out? >> bill: right there from the president, iran has got to change its tune with regard to north korea setting up a meeting with chairman kemper that's been talked about for a couple of days. rod rosenstein, thursday, "i'm here to do other things." and then the brett kavanaugh hearing was called a "human tragedy." >> sandra: he will be speaking a short time from now. he entered the u.n. with the first lady, melania trump. and, ambassadors to the u.n., nikki haley. also at his side. he saw his daughter and advisor, ivanka trump, shortly behind him there. just arriving at the u.n. as you saw, the photographers and the tv cameras were positioned at the entrance, there. the president seemed to walk in, not hesitate, and answer the questions. >> bill: it looks like president emmanuel macron, afternoon as well. i want to bring back niall gardner. you were on a train of thought there with regard to iran. when you hear the president say "iran has to change its tune," how do you go about changing the minds of leaders in that room to support your position? is that even possible? at this meeting? >> i think you can. i think the first message is the message of strength and resolve. you don't want to send the kind of mixed messaging that president obama did on the iran front, which really undermines the united states. i think you have to be very clear cut in the message that you sent about the iranian regime. i think the president will outline today how iran is the world's biggest supporter of international terrorism. it's regime is developing a highly dangerous missile program. it's a regime that is interfering across the middle east, and threatening the free world. i think you're going to see a very clear-cut signal. certainly for european leaders, they will be listening very closely to the speech today. they have to make a very clear decision whether they decide to stand with the united states, or whether they will stand with the iranian regime. so, the president will be making a very clear appealed to the leaders of great britain, france, germany, and the leaders of europe. to stand with america, against the iranian regime, which is a deadly threat to the free world, including to europe in the long term. if iran eventually becomes a nuclear weapon power. iran has to be stopped. i think that will be at the very heart of the president's message today. he won't see the kind of wishy-washy equivocation that you saw from barack obama at the united states united nations. i think it will be a direct message and a direct appeal for america's allies to stand with the leader of the free world. >> bill: think you come on niall marie harf in new york. we will continue our discussion, the speech will start in a matter of moments. >> sandra: he followed up with a tweet. he gave us an update there. he would love to meet with iran, but they have to change their tune. president also tweeted ahead of his arrival there, "our country is much stronger and much richer since it was that i took office less than two years ago. we are much safer." i expect to hear more of that message from the present as he began speaking at the u.n. a few moments for now. we will take it live and keep it right here on "america's newsroom." we will be right back. the consequences underwater can escalate quickly. the next thing i know, she swam off with the camera. it's like, hey, thats mine! i want to keep doing what i love. that's the retirement plan. with my annuity i know there's a guarantee. annuities can provide protected income for life. learn more at retireyourrisk.org billions of problems. morning breath? garlic breath? stinky breath? there's a therabreath for you. therabreath fresh breath oral rinse instantly fights all types of bad breath and works for 24 hours. so you can... breathe easy. there's therabreath at walmart. i'm all about my bed. this mattress is dangerously comfortable. when i get in, i literally say ahh. meet the leesa mattress. a better place to sleep. the leesa mattress is designed to provide strong support, relieve pressure and optimize airflow to keep you cool. read our reviews, then try the leesa mattress in your own home. order during our fall mattress sale and save. for a limited time get 150 dollars off and free shipping too. sale prices are available right now. go to buyleesa.com today. you need this bed. >> president trump: iran has to change his tune before i meet with them. i'm not meeting with them until they change their tune. it will happen. i believe they have no choice. we look forward to having a great relationship with iran. but it won't happen now. >> bill: president trump is in the room at the u.n., a moment to go. ecuadorian leader is now talking there. we are waiting on the order. it's a little bit out of order, the president goes second. in this case he's a bit tardy. nonetheless, moments away. director of the u.s. commission to the u.n., niall gardner back to us. and marie harf, former state department spokesperson. when you think about the contrast of president obama's visit there over his time of two terms, and you think about the contras with this president, this is a much more direct message. i don't want to call it an entire 180, but some of the policies are. and when he thing about world leaders coming around, this president's vision of what america's role in the world is. it's universal on so many things. >> that's true. present time, i think, seize foreign affairs very differently, as he does mention, then president obama. i think president chavez really focused on a transactional relationship rate he's a businessman. whether it's trade deals, international organizations, he is very focused on what the u.s. gets out of things, and really wants the u.s. to get more out of things than other countries. now, on the face of it, that's not a terrible proposition. but that's not always how global affairs work. there are some problems we all need to sacrifice together to confront. i think that -- donald trump, yes, today he will use very direct link which, but people around the world look to the united states under barack obama for leadership not adjust for issues of security but combating health challenges, whether it was a bullet -- you member that crisis -- whether it was hoping with the refugee crisis. they're all these issues that the u.n. deals with it aren't just about tough talk. they are about working together. donald trump, for better or worse, bill, his negative reaction toward a lot of what the u.n. does, his very bombastic rhetoric, that has alienated a lot of people and leaders around the world that we need to work with us. they are going to be watching closely today for that town to see what the president says. >> sandra: you just heard the words of the president as he entered the united nations here, talking about north korea. talking about chairman kim, dealing with us, as he put it, "far greater than media would understand or know. it has been a good relationship. there been no tests. we got our hostages back. our great heroes." he was really touting the progress that he and his administration are making when it comes to north korea. >> certainly, i think we have seen more positive upticks in terms of their relationship with north korea. but we haven't seen yet, i think, significant concessions on the north korean side. this is why the administration has to maintain a policy of maximum pressure against the north korean regime. further enhancing the sanctions against the regime, strengthening the u.s. military presence in the region. there is no real, i think, at all, for any complacency on the part of the administration. but it's very clear that the united states has to lead with regards of confronting the north korean threat. and the rest of the world will follow. but we certainly do need to see more results coming from the north korean side. so far, there's been an awful lot of rhetoric from pyongyang. in the way of deliverable. we have to be maintaining our guard, and i will resolve with regard to confronting what is a very deadly threat in asia at this time. >> bill: we are waiting for the ecuadorian leader to wrap up here. when that speech concludes, the president will appear stage lef left. jonathan inside the u.n. now. the president will chair his security council meeting tomorrow. it happens right around this time, 10:30 eastern time. the focus then would be on iran, as well. since that time, we have been told that that message will be broader in the sense of nonproliferation around the world. what would be your expectation for president trump chairing the u.n. security council? how was he going to run that meeting? >> bill, i'm sorry, there is a demonstrate in happening near here so i couldn't hear a portion of your question. in terms of tomorrow's meeting, it is tremendously significant. it will put to both iran and north korea, of course, in the spotlight. it is also one thing that you didn't mention, i believe, what they are will also be a discussion about chemical weapons attacks. it took place in syria on a number of occasions. what we witnessed, even in the united kingdom with a rogue killer agent being released there and affecting quite a number of people. but in terms of the focus on iran and north korea, the president will come out very strong. he is chairing that cute dumb executed council meeting because the united states has the presidency of the security council this month. he will come through and be very forceful, and add to what he will say in the address coming up right now. add some more tough words, actually point out a lot of issues that the united states has. it's not just about ambitions for that meeting. curtailing any sort of effort that they have to rush toward the atomic bomb. but also fiddling around and actually firing off a ballistic missiles that can carry a payload and affects not only the united states but regional countries in a terrible way. iran is meddling in yemen, in syria, of course. in lebanon, and other parts of the world. in terms of north korea, also to make it clear to kim jong un, that, yes, we are in a better place than we were a year ago in terms of north korea's experimentation and attempts to rattle things and unnerve people with its icbm tests and nuclear test -- but, this game isn't up, and the united states is going to maintain very severe and punishing sanctions on north korea until it sees the light and comes around. >> bill: thank you for that. a reminder that there is a tariff battle happening right now between the two biggest economies in the world, sandra. i am certain that will come up. perhaps the message from the president is that all will be the same for all people in all countries. nonetheless, that could be on the list, here. you've got this conflict, geopolitical conflict with russia, that john bolton has talked about for the past couple of days, as well. we're going to break in right here, we will be back with the president is at the podium. standby. country give you as a veteran is the eligibility for a va loan for up to 100% of your home's value. if you need cash for your family, call newday usa. with automatic authority from the va, we can say yes when banks say no. give us a call. call 1-877-423-5732. if you're a veteran, own a home, and need money for your family, call newday usa to use your valuable va home loan benefit. thank you, admiral. it lets you borrow up to 100% of your home's value. thank you, admiral. with today's rising home values, that could mean more money for you and your family. thank you, admiral. money to pay down debts and get financial peace of mind. thank you, admiral. we'll do everything we possibly can to get you approved. call 1-877-423-5732. until i held her. managing my type 2 diabetes wasn't my top priority. i found my tresiba® reason. now i'm doing more to lower my a1c. i take tresiba® once a day. tresiba® controls blood sugar for 24 hours for powerful a1c reduction. (woman) we'd been counting down to his retirement. it was our tresiba® reason. he needs insulin to control his high blood sugar and, at his age, he's at greater risk for low blood sugar. tresiba® releases slow and steady and works all day and night like the body's insulin. (vo) tresiba® is a long-acting insulin used to control high blood sugar in adults with diabetes. don't use tresiba® to treat diabetic ketoacidosis, during episodes of low blood sugar, or if you are allergic to any of its ingredients. don't share needles or insulin pens. don't reuse needles. the most common side effect is low blood sugar, which may cause dizziness, sweating, confusion, and headache. check your blood sugar. low blood sugar can be serious and may be life-threatening. injection site reactions may occur. tell your prescriber about all medicines you take and all your medical conditions. taking tzds with insulins like tresiba® may cause serious side effects like heart failure. your insulin dose shouldn't be changed without asking your prescriber. get medical help right away if you have trouble breathing, fast heartbeat, extreme drowsiness, swelling of your face, tongue or throat, dizziness or confusion. (man) i found my tresiba® reason. find yours. (vo) ask your health care provider about tresiba®. covered by most commercial health insurance and medicare part d plans. it has been really a very good relationship. as you know, there have been no tests. no nuclear test, no rockets, no missile launches, and we've got our hostages back. we are getting the remains of our great heroes back. that has already started, that process. many more are coming in the very short future. so, we are doing very well with north korea. again, far greater than anybody would know. i have much personal correspondence with chairman kim, and we will -- i think we will do something that's good for chairman kim, and good for north korea, and also good for the rest of the world. [reporters yelling] >> president trump: i am meeting with rod rosenstein on thursday. today i am doing other things, as you probably -- it's a very sad case, and we want to see it fixed. what's happening there is a human tragedy. okay? >> bill: president trump's opening comment as he arrived at the u.n. about 40 minutes ago. the ecuadorian leader is now wrapping up. that means the president is next in line. as we get ready for that, we want to welcome our fox stations from across the country. as we do that, we will take a pause here on the fox news channel in order to enable those stations to join us as we get ready for this address. nikki haley has said, in part, that with the president will do is tap his successors for this administration a member, a year ago, it was about "rocket man." this year, we are about to find out the message. standby as we pause. >> bill: this is fox news coverage of president trump's address at the general assembly in new york city. i am bill hemmer, along with sandra smith as our coverage continues here on the fox news channel. welcome to our viewers across the country and around the world. president trump with a message today about iran, sandra. certainly about north korea, as well. when he unlike in the past, we don't have a speech, and we don't have your preview. the remarks before they go public. >> sandra: he walked into the united nations a short time ago with his team at his side, including the ambassador nikki haley as well as the first lady, melania trump. advisor of uncle tom, his daughter, with him. also tiffany trump, one of his daughters as well. as he entered the room, we were all noting -- we saw a couple other world leaders go ahead and the speeches. he's expected to have some strong words directed toward iran. >> bill: leading into that conversation, his speech, rather -- the message that iran has to change its tune. give a lot of leadership, all over the world, that is not happy with the president's decision to get out of the iran nuclear deal. this demonstration has not changed, double down on sanctions and ugly or november also have a message of the middle east and what's happening in iran. out of tel aviv, all of this stuff headed up -- all these decisions, i should say, headed up with the commander-in-chief now the room. >> sandra: he has not entered the room. he's expected to speak at any moment now. the present was training this morning ahead of his arrival, saying that "our country, the united states, is safer now than ever before." the president is expected to begin speaking shortly. >> madam president, mr. secretary general. world leaders, ambassadors, and distinguished delegates. one year ago, i stood before you for the first time. in this grand hall. i addressed the threats facing our world, and i presented a vision to achieve a brighter future for all of humanity. today i stand before the united nations general assembly to share the extraordinary progress we have made. in less than two years, my administration has accomplished more than almost any administration in the history of our country. america -- it's true. at [laughter] didn't expect that reaction, but that's okay. [laughter] [applause] america's economy is booming like never before. since my election, we have added $10 trillion in wealth. the stock market is at an all-time high in history. jobless claims are at a 50-year low. african-american, hispanic-american, and asian-american unemployment have all achieved their lowest levels ever recorded. we have added more than 4 million new jobs, including half a million manufacturing jobs. we have passed the biggest tax cuts and reforms in american history. we have started the construction of a major border wall, and we are greatly strengthening border security. we have secured record funding for our military. $700 billion this year. $716 billion next year. our military will soon be more powerful than it has ever been before. in other words, the united states is stronger, safe safer, and a richer country than it was when i assumed office less than two years ago. we are standing up for america, and for the american people. we are also standing up for the world. this is great news for our citizens, and for peace-loving people everywhere. we believe that when nations respect the rights of their neighbors and defend the interests of their people, they can better work together to secure the blessings of safety, prosperity, and peace. each of us here today is the emissary of a distinct culture, a rich history, and a people bound together by ties of memory, tradition, and the values that make our homeland like nowhere else on earth. that is why america will always choose independence and cooperation over global governance, control, and domination. i honor the right of every nation in this room to pursue its own customs, beliefs, and traditions. the united states will not tell you how to live, or work, or worship. we only ask that you honor our sovereignty in return. from warsaw, to brussels, to tokyo, to singapore, it has been my highest honor to represent the united states abroad. i have forged close relationships and friendships, and strong partnerships, with the leaders of many nations in this room, and our approach has always yielded incredible chang change. the support from many countries here today, we have engaged with north korea to replace the specter of conflict with a bold and new push for peace. in june i traveled to singapore to meet face-to-face with north korea's leader, chairman kim jong un. we had a highly productive and meetings. we agreed that it was in both countries' interest to pursue the denuclearization of the korean peninsula. since that meeting, we have already seen a number of encouraging measures that few could have imagined only a short time ago. the missiles and rockets are no longer flying in every directio direction. nuclear testing has stopped. some military facilities are already being dismantled. our hostages have been released, and as promised, the remains of our fallen heroes are being returned home. to lay at rest in american soil. i would like to thank you chairman kim for his courage, and for the steps he has taken, though much work remains to be done. the sanctions will stay in place until denuclearization occurs. i also want to thank the many member states who helped us reach this moment. a moment that is actually far greater than people would understand. far greater. but, for all their support, and the critical support that we will all need going forward. special thanks to president moon of south korea, prime minister abe of japan, and president xi of china. in the middle east, our approach is also yielding great strides in very historic change. following my trip to saudi arabia last year, the gulf countries opened a new center to target terrorists' financing. the are enforcing new sanctions, working with us, to identify and track at terrorist networks, and taking more responsibility for fighting terrorism and extremism in their own region. the uae, saudi arabia, and qatar have pledged billions of dollars to aid the people of syria and yemen. they are pursuing multiple avenues for ending yemen's horrible, horrific civil war. ultimately, it is up to the nations of the region to decide what kind of future they want for themselves and there children that leaves the united states working with the gulf council. jordan, and egypt, to establish a regional strategic goal so the nations can advance prosperity, stability, and security across their home region. thanks to the united states military, and our partnership with many of you are nations, i am pleased to report that the bloodthirsty killers known as isis have been driven out from the territory they once held in iraq and syria. we will continue to work with friends and allies to deny radical islamic terrorists any funding, territory, or support, or any means of infiltrating our borders. the ongoing tragedy in syria is heartbreaking. our shared goals must be the de-escalation of military conflict, along with a political solution that honors the will of the syrian people. in this vein, we urge the united nations-led peace process be reinvigorated. but, rest assured, the united states will respond if chemical weapons are deployed by the assad regime. i commend the people of jordan, and other neighboring countries, for hosting refugees from this very brutal civil war. as we see in jordan, the most compassionate policy is to place refugees as close to their homes as possible, to ease their eventual return to be part of the rebuilding process. this approach also stretches finite resources to help far more people, increasing the impact of every dollar spent. every solution to the humanitarian crisis in syria must also include a strategy to address the brutal regime that is fueled and financed it. the corrupt dictatorship in iran. iran's leaders sow chaos, death, and destruction. they do not respect their neighbors or borders, or the sovereign rights of nations. instead, iran's leaders plunder the nation's resources to enrich themselves and to spread mayhem across the middle east and far beyond. the iranian people are rightly outraged that their leaders have embezzled billions of dollars from iran's treasury, seized valuable portions of the econom economy, and looted the people's religious endowments, all to line their own pockets and send proxies to wage war. not good. iran's neighbors have paid a heavy toll for the region's agenda of aggression and expansion. that is why so many countries in the middle east strongly supported my decision to withdraw the united states from the horrible 2015 iran nuclear deal. and reimpose nuclear sanctions. the iran deal was a windfall for iran's leaders. in the years since the deal was reached, iran's military budget grew nearly 40%. the dictatorship used the funds to build nuclear-capable missiles, increase internal repression, finance terrorism, and fund havoc and slaughter in syria and yemen. the united states has launched a campaign of economic pressure to deny the regime the funds it needs to advance its blood he agenda. last month, we began reimpose and hard-heading nuclear sanctions that have been lifted under the iran deal. additional sanctions will resume november 5th, and war will follow. we are working with countries that import iranian crude oil to cut their purchases substantially. we cannot allow the world's leading sponsor of terrorism to possess the planet's most dangerous weapons. we cannot allow our regime the chance to threaten america, and threaten israel with annihilation, to possess the means of possessing a nuclear warhead to any city on worth. just can't do it. we ask all nations to isolate iran's regime as long as it's aggression continues. we ask all nations to support iran's people as they struggle to reclaim their religious and righteous destiny. this year, we also took another significant step forward in the middle east, in recognition of every sovereign state to determine its own capital. i move the u.s. embassy in israel to jerusalem. the united states is committed to a future of peace and stability in the region, including peace between the israelis and the palestinians. that aim is advanced, not harm to, by acknowledging the obvious facts. america's policy of principled realism means we will not be held hostage to old dogmas, discredited ideologies, and so-called "experts" who have been proven wrong over the years, time and time again. this is true, not only in matters of peace, but in matters of prosperity. we believe that trade must be fair and reciprocal. the united states will not be taken advantage of any longer. the decades the united states opened its economy, the largest, by far, on earth, with few conditions, we allowed foreign goods from all over the world to flow freely across our borders. yet, other countries did not grant us fair and reciprocal access to their markets in return. even worse, some countries abused their openness to dump their products, subsidize their goods, target our industries, and manipulate their currencies to gain unfair advantage over our country. as a result, our trade deficit ballooned to nearly $800 billion a year. for this reason, we are systematically renegotiating broken and bad trade deals. last month, we announced a ground-breaking the u.s.-mexico trade agreement. just yesterday, i stood with president moon to announce the successful completion of the brand-new u.s.-korea trade deal. this is just the beginning. many nations in this hall will agree that the world trading system is in dire need of change. for example, countries were admitted to the wto that violate every single principal on which the organization is based. the united states, and many of the nations played by the rules, these countries used government-run industrial planning and state-owned enterprises to rig the system in their favor. they engage in the relentless product-dumping, forest technology transfer, and the theft of intellectual property. the united states lost over 3 million manufacturing jobs, nearly a quarter of all steel jobs. 60,000 factories after china has the wto. we have racked up $13 trillion in trade deficits over the last two decades. those days are over. we will no longer tolerate such abuse. we will not allow our workers to be victimized. our companies to be cheated, and our wealth to be plundered and transferred. america will never apologize for protecting its citizens. the united states has just announced tariffs on another $200 billion in chinese-made goods. the total so far is $250 billion. i have great respect and affection for my pen, president exide, but i have made clear our trade imbalance is just not acceptable. china posthumous market distortions and the way they deal cannot he tolerated. as my administration has demonstrated that, america will always act in our national interests. i spoke before this body last year and warned that the u.n. human rights council had become a grave embarrassment to this institution. shielding egregious human rights abuses while bashing america and its many friends. our ambassador to the united nations, nikki haley, laid out a clear agenda for reform, despite repeated warnings. no action at all was taken. the united states took the only responsible course. we withdrew from the human rights council, and we will not return until real reform is enacted. for similar reasons, the united states will provide no support and recognition to the international criminal. as far as america is concerned, the icc has no jurisdiction, no legitimacy, and no authority. the icc claims near-universal jurisdiction over the citizens of every country, violating all principles of justice, fairness, and due process. we will never surrender america's sovereignty to an unelected, unaccountable global bureaucracy. america is governed by american americans. we reject the ideology of globalism, and we embrace the doctrine of patriotism around the world. responsible nations must defend against threats to sovereignty. and not just from global governments, but from other newer forms of coercion and domination. in america, we believe strongly in energy security. for ourselves, and for our allies. we have become the largest energy producer anywhere on the face of the earth. the united states stands ready to export our abundant affordable supply of oil, clean coal, and natural gas. opec and opec nations are, as usual, ripping off the rest of the world, and i don't like it. nobody should like it. we defend many of these nations for nothing, and then they take advantage of us by giving us high oil prices. not good. we want them to stop raising prices. we sought want them to start lg prices. and they must contribute substantially to military protection from now on. we are not going to put up with it, these horrible prices, much longer. reliance on a single foreign supplier can leave a nation vulnerable to extortion and intimidation. that is why we congratulate your opinion states such as poland for leading the construction of a baltic pipeline so that nations are not dependent on russia to meet their energy needs. germany will become totally dependent on russian energy if it does not immediately change course. here in the western hemisphere, we are committed to maintaining our independence from the encroachment of expansionist foreign powers. it has been the formal policy of our country since president president monroe that we reject the interference of foreign nations in this hemisphere, and in our own affairs. the united states has recently strengthened our laws to better screen foreign investments in our country for national security threats. we welcome cooperation with countries in this region, and around the world, that wish to do the same. you need to do it for your own protection. the united states is also working with partners in latin america to confront threats to sovereignty from uncontrolled migration. tolerance for human struggling, and human smuggling, and trafficking, is not humane. it's a horrible thing that's going on, at levels that nobody has ever seen before. it's very, very cruel. illegal immigration funds criminal networks, ruthless gangs, and the flow of deadly drugs. illegal immigration exploits of vulnerable populations, hurts hardworking citizens, and has produced a vicious cycle of crime, violence, and poverty. only by upholding national borders, destroying criminal gangs, can we break this cycle and establish a real foundation for prosperity. we recognize the right of every nation in this room to set its own immigration policy in accordance with its national interests. just as we ask other countries to respect our own right to do the same. which we are doing. that is one reason the united states will not participate in the new global compact on migration. migration should not be governed by an international body, unaccountable to our own citizens. ultimately, the only long-term solution to the migration crisis is to help people build more hopeful futures in their home countries. make their countries great agai again. currently, we are witnessing a human tragedy, as an example, in venezuela. more than 2 million people have fled to the english inflicted by the socialist regime, and its cuban sponsors. not long ago, venezuela was one of the richest countries on earth. today, socialism has bankrupted the oil-rich nation, and driven its people into abject poverty. virtually everywhere, socialism or communism has been tried, it has produced suffering, corruption, and decay. socialism's burst of power leads to expansion, oak ridge to incursion, and oppression. all nations of the world should resist socialism and the misery that it brings to everyone. in that spirit, we ask the nations gathered here to join us in calling for the restoration of democracy in venezuela. today we are announcing additional sanctions against the repressive regime, targeting the inner circle and close advisors. we are grateful for all of the work the united nations does around the world to help the people build better lives for themselves and their families. the united states is the world's largest giver in the world, by far, of foreign aid. but if you give anything to us. that is why we are taking a hard look at u.s. foreign assistance. that will be headed up by secretary of state mike pompeo. we will examine what is working, what is not working, and whether the countries who receive our dollars and our protection also have our interests at heart. moving forward, we are only going to give foreign aid to those who respect us and, frankly, are our friends. we expect other countries to pay their fair share for the cost of their defense. the united states is committed to making the united nations more effective and accountable. i have said many times that the united nations has unlimited potential. as part of our reform efforts, i have told our negotiators that the united states will not pay more than 25% of the u.n. peacekeeping budget. this will encourage other companies to set up , get involved, and also share in this very large burden. we are working to shift more of our funding from assessed contributions to voluntary, so that we can target american resources to the programs with the best record of success. only when each of us does our part and contribute to our share can we realize the u.n.'s highest aspirations. we must pursue peace without fear, hope without despair, and security without apology. looking around this hall, where so much history has transpired, we think of the many before us who have come here to address the challenges of their nations and of their times. our thoughts turn to the same question that ran through all their speeches and resolutions, through every word, and every hope. it is the question of what kind of world will we leave for our children, and what kind of nations they will inherit. the dreams that fill this hall today are as diverse as the people who have stood at this podium. as varied as the countries represented right here in this body are. it really is something. it really is great, great history. there is india, a free society, over a billion people, successfully lifting countless millions out of poverty and into the middle class. there is saudi arabia, where king and the crown prince are pursuing bold new reforms. there is a zero, proudly celebrating its 70th anniversary as a thriving democracy in the holy land. in poland, the great people are standing up for their independence, their security, and their sovereignty. many countries are pursuing their own unique visions. building their own hopeful futures, and chasing their own wonderful dreams of destiny, of legacy, and of a home. the whole world is richer. humanity is better, because of this beautiful constellation of nations, each very special, each very unique, and each shining brightly and it's part of the world in each one, we see awesome promise of a people bound together by a shared past and working toward a common future. as for americans, we know what kind of future we want for ourselves. we know what kind of a nation america must always be. in america, we believe in the majesty of freedom, and the dignity of the individual. we believe in self-government, and the rule of law. and we prize the culture that sustains our liberty, a culture built on strong families, deep faith, and fierce independence. we celebrate our heroes. we treasure our traditions. above all, we love our country. inside everyone in this great chamber today, and everyone listening all around the globe, there is the heart of a patriot that feels the same powerful love for the same intense loyalty to your homeland. the passion that burns in the hearts of patriots and the souls of nations has inspired reform and revolution, sacrifice and selflessness, scientific breakthroughs and magnificent works of art. our task is not to erase it, but to embrace it. to build with it, to draw on its ancient wisdom and to find within it the will to make our nations greater, our region safer, and the world better. to unleash this incredible potential in our people. , we must defend the foundations that make it all possible. a sovereign and independent nations are the only vehicle where freedom has ever survived. democracy has ever endured, peace has ever prospered. so, we must protect our sovereignty and our cherished independence above all. when we do, we will find new avenues for cooperation unfolding before us. we will find new passion for peacemaking rising within us. we will find a new purpose, new resolve, and new spirit flourishing all around us and making this a more beautiful world in which to live. so, together, let us choose a future of patriotism, prosperity, and pride. let us choose peace and freedom over domination and defeat, and let us come here to this place to stand for our people and their nations, forever strong, forever sovereign, forever just, and forever thankful for the grace and the goodness and the glory of god. thank you, god bless you, and god bless the nations of the world. thank you very much. thank you. [applause] >> on behalf of the general assembly, i -- >> bill: there it is, the second address of the president of the united nations. if you had lines. first on north korea, sanctions will stay in place, he says, until they get rid of the nuclear program. on iran, he says the leadership has taken billions of dollars, causing mayhem, saying "we cannot allow them to possess weapons of mass instruction." on syria, the u.s. will respond if assad uses chemical weapons again. on trade, he calls it unfair for the u.s. and says "those days are over. "the driving theme, is that administration is making america rich again, and he will put america first in all things. insisting come at the outset, "we will not tell you how to lie or how to worship." about 35 minutes in length, that's a wrap from the u.n. at this hour. a closely watched a speech there from the president of the united states. stay tuned it to this fox news station, and continuing coverage of the story on cable and online at foxnews.com. until then, i am bill hemmer along with sandra smith here in new york. and now our coverage continues on cable. >> sandra: for more on this, we bring in kathy morris rogers. she chairs. thank you for your time this morning, you've been listening to the president. what did you think of his message? >> i thought the president gave a strong message, strong leadership, on behalf of the united states of america. but also, a challenge to the rest of the world, really celebrating sovereignty, independence, freedom-loving people. i appreciated his focus on making sure that the united states -- or the united nations is accountable, effective in its mission. i thought it was a very good speech. i pray she has leadership as well as the ambassador nikki haley leadership at the u.n. on behalf of the united states. >> sandra: that's your reaction. how do you think the world respond, congress on college that america first message that resonated throughout the speech? "we are standing up for america and the american people," the president said. "the u.s. is a stronger and richer country than it was when i assumed office." in fact, he opened with "mired administration has accomplished more than almost any administration in the history of our country." >> i also have the president talk about the importance of every country, self-determination for every country around the world. i thought the president really lays out the importance of how we are all connected as countries around the world. you know, i have often said that in order for us to be a diplomatic power, we need to be a military power. to be a military power, need to be an economic power. it's all connected. clearly, america is a strong leader in this world. the president is communicating very strong leadership. i think he was challenging other countries to be their own -- to be self-determining, like americans are. we cherish that as america. we cherish our sovereignty, our independence. we cherish that we -- we believe in self-determination for ourselves as individuals, as well as for our country. what i heard is that he is saying that's what he wants for the other countries in the world, too. america has done more to lift people out of poverty. our economy is booming, and it does have an impact on countries around the world in a very positive way. speed went your original point, "we are standing up for america and the american people." the present finish the sentence with, also, "we are standing up for the world." specifically on north korea he took a lot of credit for the progress is being made they are, as he timed it. he said "i would like to thank chairman kim for his courage and the steps he has taken. much work still remains." the president said. what did you make of his message on north korea? speak of the present has remain strong on north korea. that is in print important. i am encouraged by what we are seeing in north korea. their response to date. we need to remain vigilant. we need to remain strong. we have seen north korea in the past to make statements, but this time -- i would encourage the president to remain strong. but i am overall encouraged. it wasn't that long ago that we were fearful of a ballistic missile that will be pointed out america and hitting american cities. today, it's a very different conversation. i do believe the president deserves some -- a lot of credit for his leadership, secretary pompeo, bringing north korea and south korea together where they have a goal now is actually coming together as one. >> sandra: he was expected to use very strong language when issuing his message to iran. as he addressed the 73rd session of the u.n., congresswoman, he said "it's leaders so chaos, death, and destruction. they do not respect your neighbors and borders." how will his message on iran be perceived as it was highly anticipated heading into this? >> iran is the largest sponsor of state terrorism. today, in the world. i am proud that this administration has pulled out of the iranian deal. that was not a good deal. it did not ensure that iran would not develop a nuclear weapon. we need to remain very clear in our strengths, our sanctions against iran, make sure that we are doing everything possible to ensure that they do not develop a nuclear weapon. our greatest ally in the middle east is israel, and iran has made it very clear as to what their intent is as it relates to israel. i am proud that this administration is standing strong by israel, and also making sure they are staying strong against iran and its goal to develop a nuclear weapon. >> sandra: the iran deal was a win fill for iran's leaders, he made the case. "leaders use money to build muscles and fund terrorism." he went on, before he entered the room, you heard a couple of the big news items had again to deliver the speech. in fact, he commented on the meeting with rod rosenstein on thursday. a lot of other things on the president of austria's plate this week. obviously, the kavanaugh hearing will take place on thursday, with his accuser. congressmen congresswoman, thise week for this country as we see this president delivering this message at the u.n. >> yes, this is a big week. i am pleased that we are moving ahead with this hearing in the senate to make sure that dr. dr. ford has a chance to be heard. women must be heard. i also believe it's important for judge kavanaugh to also have a chance to defend his character. these are serious allegations, and this hearing on thursday is going to be very important. we have an important decision to make. it's over in the senate, but not in the house. they have a very important decision to make aft to who is going to the next justice on the supreme court. also, rod rosenstein -- the fbi and rosenstein have not been cooperative with congress. they have not been forthright about turning over documents. this is another very important meeting. >> sandra: he entered the u.n. a few moments ago prayed he will be meeting with rosenstein on thursday. congresswoman, thank you for your time this morning. good to have you want. >> thank you, good to be with you. >> bill: there has been movement on venezuela, too. he called it a sad case and wanted to see it fixed. at one point he calls it a human tragedy before that speech began. on the topic of kavanaugh, there is a nod to make a lot of reaction coming from the hills surrounding thursday's hearing. >> this man, judge kavanaugh, has been in very responsible jobs for well over 20 years. not one woman has ever come forward to say that he acted inappropriately in the workplace, that he used his power in an untoward way. speak to the confirmation battle still rages. kavanaugh says he will to mike wants a fair process. the big question, whether that request is honored. the senator will answer that question up after this. to maker case. judge kavanaugh will have an opportunity to respond. my guess is things will proceed from there. i expect at some point the committee is going to put his out on the floor of the senate, where we will have a debate and ultimately a vote. i believe he will be confirmed to the supreme court. >> sandra: he made his case last night. he wants to be treated fairly in all this. he wants to see a fair process play out. are democrats willing to give him that? >> no, of course not. this was an 11th-hour ambushed by the democrats on the committee. think about what he has been through. he started off answering over 30 hours of questions, in an open session from democrats and republicans on the senate judiciary committee. they had closed sessions where they asked him questions. they submitted 1300 questions for the record, more than all previous supreme court nominees combined. he answered those. he has answered six fbi background checks. this has been an incredibly open, transparent process. republicans have been very fair to democrats. democrats, on the other hand, get a letter, a piece of information back in july, which they decide to hang onto and then unleash at the 11th hour to try and delay and derail this nomination. they have not been fair to this nominee at all. it's been a circus from the get-go, from their standpoint. it's very clear they are doing everything they can to prevent him from going on the court. notwithstanding that, senator grassley has conducted a very fair process. the judiciary committee's going to hear on thursday for both of these individuals, and we will move forward from there. >> sandra: those background checks you mentioned, on kavanaugh, by the fbi, were not enough for senator chuck schumer read the leading democrat. he made this case on the senate floor. the fbi should reopen the background check investigation,d conduct a hearing where the appropriate witnesses are called and to the accuser and the accused. anything less will be viewed by the american people, and i believe, judged by history, as a stain on republicans in the senate and a stain on the integrity of the majesty of the supreme court. >> sandra: senator, your response to that? >> first off, senator schumer and all democrats it seems, at least appear now, have adopted the standard of "guilty until proven innocent." clearly, and other fbi back on check -- i don't have any idea what that purpose that serves at this point. you talking about 36 years ago. i don't know who they would interview. who they are going to talk to. whose memories are going to be intact at this point in time. i don't think that a company does anything for that simply a delaying tactic on the part of the democrats who come as i said, from the very beginning, done everything they can to try and, first off, destroy the reputation of this judge. secondly, delay and ultimately derail his nomination. his confirmation to the court. all that being said, i think the american people see through it, and we are determined -- i think senator grassley has demonstrated this throughout the entire process -- to make sure there is a fair process, and he's going to give dr. ford an opportunity on thursday to be heard. in a process that he described as being "comfortable, safe, and dignified." i think that is the most that anybody can hope for. >> sandra: when it comes to a vote, susan collins obviously is a key player. at this point, do you think he can still get confirmed? >> i think he can. i do think that all of our members are going to make up their own minds, but i think what has been really important to republican senators as of the process be fair and allow for all parties to be, obviously, heard from. in this case, that's going to happen. it's going to happen on thursday. i believe that our members are going to be satisfied in the end that this has been a fair process. then it's just a question up or down of whether or not you think that person is qualified to be on the supreme court. i think he has proven over time, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that he's incredible he qualified, well-respected, a great legal mind. all the things you want to see. >> sandra: his wife last evening prethink you, you settle up. we will see where it goes this week. senator thank you. >> bill: present time taking aim at around. we expected this moments ago at the u.n. general symbol. we talked to bill richardson, former u.s. investor to the u.n., to gauge the speech and the message and how that is being received. come on back. >> we cannot allow the world's leading sponsor of terrorism to possess the planet's most dangerous weapons. insurance that won't replace continues, and we ask all nations to support iran's people as they struggle to reclaim their religious and righteous destiny. >> bill: prison term on the world stage delivering a second address to the general simile moments ago. we're going to get more reaction on the president speech. bill richardson, former u.s. ambassador, former governor of new mexico prayed he's at yale university today. i understand there's some action there. outside the classroom, what did you think of egress that we heard from the present today? >> it was very typical president trump. very nationalistic, unilateral statement. i was pleased with what he said about russia, for instance. he is taking off the gloves, and there's been some questions about that. i was pleased about the north korea issue. things are better. i was pleased he didn't announce a summit. i want to see more preparation and more north korea doing a lot more before we get a summit. you know, he did go after everybody. opec, oil prices -- i worry, too, bill, about a trade war. look, there's no question that the international trading system is not beneficial to the united states. to do it with retaliatory tariffs, with china, we with our european allies, not in the nafta agreement. i hope you do that soon with canada. i'm a little worried they're. >> bill: trying to get some leverage. his quote was "those days are over." there is a lot of agreement with him, just in your initial response, there. i thought at the outset it was very interesting, just paraphrasing a little bit here prayed "america will always choose its best path." suggesting that every other ruler in that room will suggest the best path for their country as well. and then he said "the u.s. will not tell you how to live, we will not tell you how to worship." suggesting "don't tell us how to live, either." that has got to the root of the decisions that he is made with these deals, that he's pulled america out. >> you know, bill -- obviously, the president of the united states has to stick up for the country, our own people at the u.n., too. the u.n. -- i was there, i think it's a very good useful body. they do gang up on us. on his real issues, and many other terms. look -- i think he is asserting america's strength. we are the biggest power in the world. we contribute 25% of the u.n. -- he saying "don't mess with us." that's okay to say. what i worry about is, you know, the language on trade. i worry about, even on iran -- i don't want iran to pull out of the nuclear deal. they are still complying with it. they are still observing it. you know, i worry that somehow they are going to say "well, we can't work with the europeans or the united states." the middle east is kind of exploding. again, i will give him credit. north korea, i think things are better. i like the rhetoric on russia, on energy. the pipelines. the europeans should get their natural gas from the united states, not from russia. >> bill: on that point, germany, he said "end of the russia deal." on a topic you know very well, and that is north korea, here's the comment about chairman kim. remember where we were a year ago, okay? and we are 12 months later toda today. >> president trump: i would like to think chairman kim for his courage and for the steps he has taken, though much work remains to be done. the sanctions will stay in place until denuclearization occurs. >> bill: what you think of that? >> that's good. the sanctions will stay in place until denuclearization takes place. now, on denuclearization, bill -- you know, kim jong un, maybe they've become friends, but he has done nothing on missile. he's done nothing on nuclear weapons. he's done nothing on material. he's got to step up to the plate a little more, and i think maybe the president of has been negotiating, saying that the national security advisor, secretary of state, is new special envoy, have to get some progress before kim jong un really wants a summit. that gives them a lot of credibility. i saw a little negotiation. i am pleased that he is not agreeing to step-by-step process of "okay, if you do a little bit, north korea, we will lift sanctions." it seems that he is keeping a strong position. i am pleased with that north korea components. >> bill: that not at the end, too, about the united nations. he's got a building across the street with his name on it, they talked about the u.n. having "unlimited potential." thank you for a time, it's great to have you back twice in one week. bill richardson. thank you. ♪ speed when it was judgment day for the actor and comedian bill cosby. he will learn his fate after being found a sexual assault. rick leventhal joins now from the courthouse in norristown, pennsylvania. what's the latest there? >> they just took the time whether to consider him a sexually violent predator. they had a defense witness, testified that he should not be. yesterday, they said he should be. that witness said that bill cosby had an uncontrollable urge to violate young women and would likely do it again. of course, the defense is saying that's not going to happen. he's 81 years old, he's legally blind, and he's not a threat to anyone else. that's what the judge has to decide before the judge decides what bill cosby's sentence will be. that's a big question today. will he be sentenced to prison or jail time, or will he be given simply house arrest for those three counts of aggravated assault against a andrea constand, who was in the courtroom yesterday. she prevents presented a shortm statement in court. she told the judge a book of the jury heard me, mr. cosby heard me, and now all i'm asking for is justice as the court sees fit." sandra, we did just get the longer letter that andrea constand filed with the court when she talked about how bill cosby, in essence, ruined her adult life. she said in this letter "bill cosby took my beautiful, healthy, young spirit and crushed it. he robbed me of my health and vitality. my open nature, and my trust in myself and others." clearly, andrea constand believes that bill cosby should go to prison. the charges carry ten years each, so 30 euros total. those were emerged yesterday by the judge, and the prosecutor asked for five to ten years. he could come again, be sentenced to house arrest. some people believe it will be in the middle. two to four years. but something we will have to wait to find out, sandra. >> sandra: rick leventhal's at the courthouse where bill cosby awaits his feet. we'll keep in touch and check back in. thanks, rick. >> bill: the president lincoln's plan to meet with rod rosenstein, that will happen in two days on thursday at the white house. >> president trump: i am meeting with him on thursday when i get back from all of these meetings. we would meeting at the white house. we will be determining what's going on. we want to have transparency, openness, and i look forward to meeting with rod at that time. >> bill: issues in "the new york times" reporting that the deputy ag suggested using the 25th amendment to remove the president from office. what is rosenstein's future hold? former u.s. attorney andrew mccarthy will answer that question next. thanks to tena intimates overnight >> sandra: fox news alert, deputy general rod rosenstein set to meet with president trump at the white house on thursday with his job possibly on the line. joining us now, former u.s. attorney and fox news contributor anti-mccarthy. the president, a short time ago, andy, did confirm that we'll be meeting with rosenstein on thursday. what happens? >> i would expect that rosenstein will emerge from the meeting still the deputy attorney general. i think president trump is trying to deal with two different things. i think you would like to clean house a bit at the justice department, but he doesn't want to project instability before the midterm elections. particularly if the polls indicate that the republicans are turning the tide are true. that's probably the last thing he would want to do. i think i think you have a thing, sandra, is that his lawyers are telling him mueller is probably getting toward the end of his investigation. there doesn't seem to be much more for him to do. if your moves rosenstein, what people will then say is that he is obstructing the investigation, and that opens a whole new can of worms. i expect the deputy attorney general will write it out, even though i don't think he should be able to write it out. >> sandra: the chairman of the house free and caucuses making it very clear that they stand ry if he doesn't agree to answer qe wire allegations. here he is making my point. >> if, indeed, rod rosenstein said these things, which many believe that he did, many believe that he said it in a nonjoking manner. he needs to explain that, not only to the president of the united states, but the american people. i can tell you that if he does not, there are a number of us who are standing by, really, with impeachment documents. >> sandra: so, what do you make of chairman mark meadows, really going on the offense, there? >> i don't think there is a basis to impeach rosenstein. i've been very critical of him. i didn't think there was a basis to impeach him when they raised this a few weeks back. frankly, sandra, i think we are missing the important issue, here. there is no doubt in my mind that it's important that rosenstein raise the 25th amendment and may have even raised the possibility of wiretapping the president. what i think the boy missing is the important element here of the timeline. he did this at exactly the same time that he ultimately appointed robert mueller under circumstances where there was no underlying criminal offense. we are talking about a period of time when he had some desperation to show democrats and others in washington that he was still reliable after he got serious blowback from the memo he wrote in connection with comey's leaving, his dismissal. >> sandra: can you clarify this? we are just getting worried here from a spokesperson for the justice department that rosenstein has not received an official invitation from any committee to testify. when asked, they did not answer if he would come voluntarily. but this follows, obviously, mark meadows putting it out there that rosenstein must come before congress this week under oath and tell the truth about these alleged statements. but no official request, as per the justice department. speak out you know, it's always sad to see these games get played. ordinarily, the congress does not want to issue subpoenas to get officers of the justice department to come to capitol hill and sit by for oversight hearings. they shouldn't have to do that. they should make respectful requests. sometimes, the way that gets communicated, there is some confusion about whether there's actually been a demand or a request. there is a lot of standing on that ceremony. i think it's a bunch of nonsense. if some but he wants the deputy attorney general to come and testify, that somebody on the committee ought to pick up the phone and ask him. if they have to issue a subpoena, than issue one. but you always have to hope that it doesn't get to that. >> sandra: think you very much to coming down mike for. always to tree to get a perspective. >> bill: the president of the u.n. is going to be with the president of columbia pretty stark about brett kavanaugh a moment ago, saying that he's a wonderful human being. that they are connors, they don't believe him themselves. he's a high-quality person, he's been in a con game. when that becomes available, we will share that with our viewers and a moment here from the u.n. first, a quick check of "outnumbered," the ladies with the city. hey, melissa. >> new development, you were talking about in the kavanaugh controversy. the president's nominee vigorously defending himself against sex assault allegations, and exclusive interview with fox. this, as christine ford's lawyer has new complaints were chairman grassley over thursday's hearing. all the latest, and we will have some spirited debate on that, obviously. also on thursday we discussed rod rosenstein. this after reports that the doj drafted an exit statement before his trip to the white house yesterday. now, republicans say that rosenstein should testify to congress or face an impeachment vote. all that, plus our hashtag, speech when he went. "outnumbered" top of the hour, don't miss it. >> bill: thinks. a moment, the pope, pope francis, his demeaning change. the message she has for a billion catholics worldwide, coming up next. flonase relieves sneezing, itchy, watery eyes and a runny nose, plus nasal congestion, which most pills don't. it's more complete allergy relief. flonase. i'm lucky to get through a shift without a disaster. my bargain detergent couldn't keep up. so, i switched to tide pods. they're super concentrated, so i get a better clean. number one trusted. number one awarded. it's got to be tide we're in memphis, tennessee, ♪ a city with one of the highest increases of women-owned businesses in the u.s. it's really this constant juxtaposition when you're a mom and an entrepreneur. with more businesses starting every day, how do they plan for their financial wellness? i am very mindful of the sacrifices that i make. so i have to manage my time wisely. ♪ plan your financial life with prudential. bring your challenges. (woman) learned ao play second language. applied to college. applied for a loan. started a business. started a blog. shared a picture. shared a moment. turn your wish list into a checklist. learn more. do more. share more. at home, with internet essentials. >> bill: from the vatican, pope francis now issuing a call for change within the catholic church, sing the sex abuse scandals are driving people away. lauren green is watching that story from here in new york. good day. >> hey, bill. february can't come soon enough for pope francis. a scheduled meeting on abuse in rome is too far away to assuage the anger raging at the catholic church. on his last stop of a four-day visit to the baltic state, francis told the crowd of young people that the church must be converted. his words coming in the wake of germany's bishops releasing a report that found more than 30 victims were abused between a number of years. more than half under 13, and nearly a third were altar boys. the hopes think he understands that outrage. translator mack we understand that we don't believe this is very bad, what a church, a community, believes in such a way that young people believe it does not give anything to their lives. >> the pope's words are a prelude to a month-long meeting of the vatican focused on young people. >> bill: what's the latest at in the u.s.? >> pennsylvania lawmakers are changing rules on the statute of limitations on clergy sex abuse. victims are rallying in support of the bill that would give the victim's a two-year window to file complaint that would otherwise be too old to pursue. the grand jury last month found more than a thousand victims at 300 predator priests. most of the cases were too old to litigate. >> judgment day is upon us, people. judgment day is upon us, and this legislation will set the path straight! [applause] for all victims of pennsylvania! >> the law was passed overwhelmingly with a large margin. credits of the bill argue it violates the constitution. >> bill: thank you, lauren. >> sandra: new develop men's and the fight over brett kavanaugh's supreme court nomination, and moments ago, president trump once again aggressing addressing the controversy of the united nations. he was saying what they're doing to kavanaugh is horrible. we will have more on that just ahead.

Way
Lot
Support
Ford
Many
Senators
Problem
Dr
Accusation
Republican
College
High-school

Transcripts For DW Drive It - The Motor Magazine 20181024 02:30:00

what is humankind learned from the great war. because it learned anything about. nine hundred eighteen not forgotten d w c november focus. oh and welcome to drive with the need to be a motor magazine coming up smart e.q. this nancy electric convertible. the new leader you touring quantity and quality. plus the world premiere of the out each are i'm. here in san francisco it's been fifty one years since the hippies descended on san francisco with their flowers and beats what's hip today is driving and liking car around town and our car man montas has found plenty in charging points and dean in mn dot. com i intend to not say it's a global trend that of course german car makers are aware of what is germans like to be thorough they tend to wait a bit before going public. biz man on the. opened in one nine hundred fourteen to san francisco civic auditorium has hosted boxing matches basketball games opera performances and concerts by everyone from elmo's to lady gaga and more recently showcases for automotive visions of the future alike creek has gone out is the motto of this event presenting everything connected to allergies first all electric shiri. and then. a car with an electric motor would be pretty silly because you'd have to push the audi tron all electric to be unveiled later has to emodus with different looks and different sizes and why. they wanted to reproduce or quatro system so firstly that means two electric motors we also wanted a modular design which the designers achieved by maximizing the synergies and identical pirates so that we could use a lot of parts for both the front foot and rear power trains that fought on the front motor has an output of one hundred twenty five kilowatts the rear unit one hundred forty five and one special is that power is always available the motor will not end up reducing its output when it overheats them up to install the water cooling system that makes it possible to control the temperature of the of the thermal management and that guarantees that a collar is continuously available to go through. the new drive technology opens up all new possibilities for the design to. you can see how all electric cars have different proportions are looking toward the future will be giving cars a far more targeted market positions two examples are not zero for long journeys the audi icon and this one is for pure driving enjoyment and both can only be designed this way because there are all electric cars and. in a further engineering advanced the icon combines all electric power with antonymous driving for now let's look at the newly trying one electric motor is not enough nor are just batteries. that all those components have to be fitted together of course amount is points out there are various options first you take an existing car remove the combustion engine and fuel tank and install the record motor and batteries in their place plus the necessary electronics shouts. out second option you start from scratch so the. everything is configured to the requirements of an electric car in terms of the actuals and body gate on fosco also the gate service the audi option at the front and back you have a card so the modular longitudinal system which are already available in house that includes a very good axle suspension then you create a new middle section and insert the batteries and then add the emo theirs at the front and rear. out he came up with something special for the evening's presentation of the eater on a white show with hundreds of drones so what about all that new design freedom. and means to be instantly recognizable as an entity but i closer look reveals just how much it differs from a q seven or q five starting with the most important element is a single frame which no longer has an air inlets we end word of the color scheme so now it's light and not dark we also wanted the car to have attractive contours as this is the first all electric audi we have to take customers along on the journey one that other cars will be joining us short intervals stops and. the million rising people with a design transition car by car. each run is packaged in the body of a class that in germany at least does not have the best environmental reputation it's an s.u.v. position somewhere between the q five and q seven. and germany were more skeptical of such cars with the global reach and with the really big demand for immobility use the us for this car is ideal also in terms of its size and pasties as faults a golfing they're going to use again although. what also catches the go wing mirrors or rather cameras which sort of. when hans spoke of aerodynamics and visibility. this is now sitting in the new audi eater and would love to stay put it's all nicely put together including the cameras replacing the mirrors he will have to test them out on the road but will have to wait advance and syrup pm launches do in late twenty teen in germany it will cost just under eighty thousand euros although cheaper versions with different motor options will be added later will have less power but might have a slightly greater range and this additional about off if eli stone that i'm busy. does about. now on its second generation the x c sixty is volvo's most important model the first generation of the compact luxury crossover s.u.v. dominated the brand sales for nearly a decade with close to a million units built the n.c. sixty second generation now has a new design and an expanded line of engines and equipment and t. shaped daytime running lights and the vertical grill present the new brand face of oval and the simulator ready of its big sister the x c ninety is striking. the mat chrome wing mirrors are part of the are designed trimline and profile of a smaller model is identified by its rising window line coherent proportions and timeless refreshed contours. twenty zero pipes at the rear underline the s.u.v. sporty character. cheerier is typically well we'll know for. and neatly arranged. the instruments are digital cutting down on the buttons and switches with a large touchscreen incorporating most of the controls. are just irani can't complain about the wall x c sixty suspension noting that it's optimally adjusted for the corners proportions that drivers who prefer a sportier feel can set the drive mode to dynamic that ties on the suspension but not so stiff that the rides i'm comfortable it's still smoothness over any rough patches by vic. he's testing the n.c. sixty four with a one hundred forty kilowatt diesel engine and it made speed automatic transmission and makes the dash from zero to one hundred kilometers an hour in eight point four seconds global rates fuel consumption at five point one leaders per one hundred kilometers in germany the volvo x c sixty four with the are designed trim lists for just under fifty thousand euro. it's good to mention ronny knows there are people out there who swear by the volvo actually sixty's all wheel drive and regularly take it off the paved roads which is fine that there are others who wonder why they need all wheel drive when they do all their driving in town all those answer is to offer front wheel drive as an option for the axiom sixty. six is a statesman. the driver says have also been updated and expanded the volvo city safety system includes collision avoidance and full auto braking these are triggered. the x c sixty takes another vehicle coming towards it in the same lane the automatic braking will at least reduce the impact someone. has a fit if ronnie describes the x. hundred sixty is a well rounded package and right in the middle between an entry level as u.v. like the x e forty and the big x e ninety so if the x. hundred forty strunk is too small and the front wheel drive not enough but the x. the ninety's too pricey the x.e. sixty's might well be just right for you. following the huge success of the i thirty n. hyundai is now introducing an end version of the fast back edition like weiss and two levels of output their standard version generates one hundred eighty four kilowatts the performance edition two hundred to me-i thirty fastback and hits the market in january twenty ninth. some dreams do come true the nine eleven speedster concept presented by porsche in the heritage version is going into production in twenty nineteen it was developed by the porsche motor sports center in visonic near stuttgart in close collaboration with the porsche style and porsche exclusive monophonic tour. we're going to be testing the all electric drive smart bravos e.q. but first let's have a look at the economics of electric power and its advent. it's a question of well says car review on hold and you have to be rich in the year after eight hundred seventy eight to afford thomas edison's light bulbs instead of a dim gas lamp. you have to be somewhat rich nowadays to drive an electric car in this case at least eleven thousand years richer to drive a smart e.q. instead of its internal combustion engine version so is it worth the money as the value on some it's a bundle is more to us when distancing that's what we think. our test car is this bright red e.q. with a bravo style package which in germany concert another four thousand three hundred fifty euros this little city car has its own lecturing drive accessories in the trunk. the interior matches the exteriors with the same bright red another eye catcher is the multifunction leather sport steering wheel the shift knob and hand brake lever are also trimmed in leather as special indicator tracks power usage and battery charge status was smart you can have a convertible and electric drive everybody style two or four door convertible or hatchback is available as an addition to the side bars can even be removed and stowed in a specially provided compartment inside the tailgate. owns us this kind of music is that an electric car shouldn't have to cost more than a combustion engine model because it dispenses with components like the engine exhaust clutch and the expensive eight speed automatic transmission but it has other features they can add up financially the battery and the twenty two kilowatt charging cable cost in eight hundred forty euros if people today don't have an idea of how far a charge can really take them so buy and hold suggest leasing an electric car which can be returned in two or three years and then purchasing a new car with the latest technology. the bravos version includes a sports suspension that holds the city car one centimeter closer to the asphalt the bravos package does not extend to the power train. in the regular electric versions the power comes from a sixty kilowatt electric motor and produces one hundred sixty new meters maximum torquey mediately giving the car lots of get up and go e.q. has a top speed of one hundred thirty kilometers per hour. as i know it's noticed the abundance of electric power features but the roof for example uses electric power too and that comes at the expense of range lights but it's. the smart q.'s range on a single battery charge is officially between one hundred forty five and one hundred sixty kilometers major power consumers such as the air conditioning and radio infotainment system can reduce that figure so it's always good to know where the nearest charging station is. and i last night i know warns that even at a fast charging stations it can take four hours to refill a totally empty battery using a regular two hundred twenty volt household outlets but it can be as much as six hours. while on the road the car selects various recovery levels automatically no matter what the traffic situation as a result they can harvest energy when the car is coasting for example and add a little to the range. does not include the smart e.q. drives almost say in the way in excel the range from zero to sixty kilometers an hour in about five seconds now i know it returns to the topic of well the range is one thing v.q. does not have a wealth of smart claims one hundred sixty kilometers but in practice it's more like one hundred thirty that's enough for most city driving but imagine taking someone to the airport and then coming back it's winter so you have your lights on plus they heating and it gave you the radio and that short trip can rapidly turn into an undesired adventure out of the hudson on one true life doesn't bother you and dot com does a ton of top show and so i don't tell you i'll be on. v.w. launched the to rake in two thousand and two and now here comes the third generation of its flagship s.u.v. while the body has grown slightly larger the aluminum steel construction has reduced the new models weight by around one hundred kilos it's also got improved much on the safety and comfort for us. buyers have a choice of three exclusively equipment lines. on the front of the court i guess one of my favorite deals and that because a we were able to develop a very nice and why the he at that gives the car a very strong identity we form a great the grill and then lights it creates something special if the collar of copper and personality. pulled contouring runs from the front down the sides a broad shoulder at the rear merges the passenger compartment to the lower body the contouring is continued in the taillights l.e.d. strips. and the headlights likewise boost the latest l.e.d. technology. that's been under the headlights now come with your matrix modules with an array of the light sources over seventy allowed for the matrix system which now enables the lights to adjust to current conditions the car is used to have just one light source which could be switched on or off now there are l.e.d.s. which can be activated individually for each point on the road on the plus side if the headlights can spotlight on objects of interest to alert the driver the lights are also selectively activated so that you can drive when i. beams well not a dazzling other drivers this is only possible with a large number of l.e.d.s. they can be incorporated into the matrix systems on. the new flash function helps drivers at night time it works in tandem with the infrared sensors which can detect pedestrians or animals one hundred thirty meters ahead and display them in a digital cockpit. the function focus is the driver's attention while at the same time preparing the brakes to engage if necessary. the new touring emerges the digital cockpit in infotainment system in there was single unit angled in towards the driver the fifteen inch t.f.t. touchscreen works intuitively with no physical buttons and switches proximity sensors detect when the driver swipes with one or two fingers or simply waves in addition the content displayed can be customized. mispresent i've configured it according to my own preferences there is my map where am i hop and where is the traffic try i also want to know what i'm listening to i can also swipe without being totally precise to change music tracks or so might the contact from my phone book. so i'm not really distracted when it's humid i'm also over to mr that's done with someone else might not like the music because they prefer a quiet right so i hold my finger down here and happen and i get a list of kind of like a recipe and i can select the content that is of interest to me then it might be the weather or as we're going to tour a got off road information off for months if i want something i use rarely i can press the home button to reach another page or i can choose a different clock design or proceed to other content one design also over the order in the i'm not in height. misprision. deter igs active suspension with a role stabilisation translates into far more comfortable handling while the actively steering rear axle makes it far more maneuverable. this is a very special component on the rear axle as you can see it in this graphic depiction it's located behind the actual one with the wheels attached on the outside of a fence and this is the all wheel steering which works into wales if it's in the. up to thirty seven kilometers per hour and provides more agility and maneuverability on city wrote about the rear wheels turn in the opposing direction to the front wheels reducing the turning circle to eleven point two meters that's just twenty centimeters more than the goalposts would buy and i grew up and it speeds over thirty seven kilometers per hour their rear wheels turn in the same direction as the front wheels ensuring greater stability when changing lanes for example for those that may have were. in germany the starting price for the entry level new touring is just over fifty seven thousand euros but that doesn't include the new lighting display and suspension features they push the price up by at least another ten thousand year s. . we're taking this subaru livor going to a different kind of road test about what they thought their vote subaru has come up with an interesting route for car to mystery mine a well from budapest to vienna about three hundred kilometers taking in highways country roads and little mountain roads ideal for putting them aboard as various abilities through their paces in this day of all social. after leaving budapest's city limits behind us we head into one of hungary's many wine growing regions on the morgues tight suspension the winding road. for loads of fun. along the way we passed through some typical hungary in villages lining the main road away from the highways the roads are relatively empty. but that doesn't mean that you can put your foot to the floor a real way crossing keeps us waiting with other cars and cyclists meanwhile full of bored standard start stop system limits the damage to the environment and the wallet. and off we go again. only one engine is available for the lord and one point six liter one hundred twenty five kilowatt gasoline powered unit achieves a top speed of two hundred ten kilometers per hour the permanent all wheel drive is constantly combined with a linear tranny continuously variable automatic transmission a stop by a lake allows for time to have a closer look at the level or the midsize station wagons design can definitely passes sporty especially with the macho looking air intake in the hood. this leak profile of the sloping roof line enhances the athletic look. eighteen inch alloy wheels door mounted mat wing mirrors engine rear windows all work well in the overall concept. the rear design is rounded off by the twin exhausts. and the roof spoiler above. the interior continues the theme of the sport station way. begin for the team and system with a touch screen is standard in the sport trim. as are the leather sports sheets. yeah with a man alone has no complaints about the space there is no shortage of leg room while the head room is a bit tight but still acceptable. that comes with the body style with the seats two are pretty comfortable maybe a little harder than otherwise but all in all no problem. if. i'm to hit the road again given all the sporty design points in features love boards engine isn't as powerful as might be expected but still not exactly like it's a buck share with good pick up the all wheel drive combined with a low center of gravity actually makes for a lot of fun at the wheel when picking careers at high speed. we've tested the subaru all aboard speed and dynamic quality the final stretch of our route takes is on to the highway everything gets here mondello says the laborious pleasantly quiet in sight the engines running smoothly the sound insulation seems good and he's altogether satisfied with them up. for the day is drawing to a close and so is our ten strike humana was quite impressed with all of ork and has its strength both on the highway and on country roads but one problem he's noticed was the somewhat high fuel consumption but maybe he's just got to learn to drive with a lighter foot on the pedal that's what they were the father about the most ready of the four photographs they have with us that's all freedom. the boy. next time i'm driving up hot hatch from peugeot we check out at three o h e g r i. am an electrically powered van. after. the boat. on. the boat. move. the ball. close to. the. border and africa. and mali are shutting down the escape routes move the funding from the immunoglobulin numbers of the refugees reaching europe. but at what cost. we look at the measures being taken south of the song and the be no entry to the beam it's. going. the fast pace of life in the digital shift has the lowdown on the web showing new developments and providing useful information the witness finds and interviews with the makers and users. shifts in forty five minutes. this is the emmy and us live from berlin also bring in our correspondent ophelia harms a rhodesian joins us from preorders now that we're here to find out what happened here that the use of his d.m.z. as the head of the environment team with me is the debit card fund that summed up it's a fun party and we do have some breaking news that's coming into us now it's all about perspective closer. w. thank you for joining us. he takes it personally i do it with all of the wonderful people in stories that make the game so special. for all true fans. based on. pick up more than football longline climate change. waste. pollution. isn't it time for good news eco africa people and projects that are changing no one fireman for the better is up to us to make a difference let's and screaming at each other. for good environment magazine. long d.w. . frank food. international gateway to the best connection self road and trail. located in the high. out of europe you are connected to the whole world. experience

Design-transition-car
Points
Town
Liking
Dean
Mndot
Man-montas
Com
Germans
Bit
Carmakers
Trend

Transcripts For DW DocFilm 20190406 19:15:00

you're watching the news from berlin coming up next a documentary looking at the rwanda genocide that started twenty five years ago this week for now and on behalf of the whole team thanks so much from washington this. first day in school. her first climbing lesson. as grand the moment arrives. joined the rank and chain on her journey back to freedom. in our interactive documentary. returns home on t w don't come to tanks. and. for. good india the past is still president. here just over fifty years ago a new age dawn. this is the river ganges which rises in the himalayas and flows through northern india. the ganges is worshiped by hindus and many seek spiritual enlightenment on its banks one of the towns on the ganges is rishikesh which was made famous by the beatles. john paul george and ringo of course these four here are not the real beatles. they're a tribute band. the band was invited in twenty eighteen by the minister of tourism to celebrate the anniversary of the real beatles visit to india. but he's right i think it's right. that it is the case they said the beatles are bigger than god but everything is god at least the cats helped them to be. at the very least their stay impacted the beatles music says john thompson here is george harrison. has had such an amazing effect on the beatles they wrote the whole wide out was written. and they created. music basically which is iconic for the sixty seven it's a mazing to be. by decades that goes. here in one thousand nine hundred sixty eight tie above the ganges the beatles lived in the ashram of moher regime as. known as the father of transcendental meditation. in twenty eighteen the currently derelict ashram hosted a temporary exhibition to mark the fiftieth anniversary of the beatles stay in rishikesh the band and their entourage stayed for a few months and then left amid rumors of sexual misconduct on the part of a. marashi. locals had been hired to work in the ashram they had no idea how famous the celebrity guests were. who will by july and i thought it didn't go by they spent the whole time playing music and packing string instruments. they sang in english though i've no idea what it was signalling got to the guy got to the gun he got the vietnamese. then got that. they also meditated i can't remember how exactly but it lasted for hours and hours later. the train and ana are from hamburg. they're exploring the site. as it can be this that they mannequin i know the beatles from when i was growing up because my parents used to listen to them and we were actually just talking about whether we know unlike the white album since it was written here i've listened to it but it's not really my thing is present. these two young women wouldn't say they have much in common with those who come here for enlightenment is free standing a country relate to this i'm hanged for inspiration and to see a new side of the world but i'm not looking to amiss myself in a different way of life i'm told when i'm under the leaves fall. although that's exactly what these people are here for nearly two thousand participants have come to the international yoga festival most of them are european or american a special yoga session commemorated the fifty year anniversary of the beatles so joining in india route or hold the festival director is originally from california she's lived in rishikesh for two decades and has seen a shift in attitudes toward spirituality over the years. that has spirituality has spread as yoga has sprung up people have realized i have. it's not just no to venice but it's yes to this and so where in a hippie movement i think people were moving away from the establishment here people are moving toward something. speakers from all over the world give talks on meditation. you. see you reason this is. the miners are originally from germany they moved to rashid cares years ago partly inspired by the beatles. when i was eighteen years old and living in the small town. i read in the paper that the beatles had. a good rule. i couldn't even pronounce his name back then and i thought it was all a bit weird. but i was a beatles fan ago and three years later i am back to my own spiritual quest. these days the miners teach transcendental meditation themselves but they have mixed feelings about spiritual tourism rishikesh has grown dramatically as a result and is now home to some one hundred yoga centers a population of over one hundred thousand and several slums. everything you see here used to be forest and all of it. was a spiritual place there were no two wrists and it was very peaceful. now there are all these buildings and the town center is super hectic. here meditation also comes packaged as a mass event as a quick fix rather than a spiritual journey. for a country and honor from germany where she cashes just one stop on their trip through india and the beatles tribute band will also be moving on after their shows . in the meiers meanwhile will stay put they just hope things will calm down again once the anniversary celebrations are over. in modern india the past is ever present the legacy of the islamic mogul empire for example includes the red ford in delhi along with many other famous landmarks. but some hindu nationalists would rather see the traces of the mugabe is removed from public life and indian history reframed. they believe that hindu tradition holds the key to the country's progress. seven year old heigho is proud of her trophy collection she's the best student in her class and also the best athlete yet i love this one is my favorite i won first place for solving one hundred math problems in six minutes. five planet. her parents believe there is a secret to their daughter's success. obvious us lots of it is not so good with deliberately demanded that we use an alternative therapy when i was pregnant. that's why she's already won twenty prizes she's a straight a student. one of those in the underclass. the family has a hindu shrine at home they pray according to tradition and also returned to hindu teachings for their family planning. the parents feel high and for others many awards are due to those traditional you know methods. to go there but. this is where higher as parents want to learn them this is good to run india's western most state. at the end of this lane is a complex where parents to be come for advice and treatment. from is run by a doctor nor vonnie. pregnant women here follow a strict schedule and compassing prayer yoga astrology and i are vedic there and. here. the women must also abstain from both sex and meet at. the. heart of our and i am good you are here at. home and are you over there are powers are believed to be holy animals that boost divine energy you are. that of the you there are many people in india these days born with inherited conditions or disabilities or. the genetic disorders a passed on. but by returning to ancient pregnancy treatments we can stop this from happening i them they think it is now well study as it is out. there every day here in the strict the regimented and the living quarters are more needed to push the phone this woman is six months pregnant and we know that like the hundreds of couples who have come here she and her husband hope their investment will pay off let alone that bell. i think i can already feel the effects of the method i have a very strong feeling that my baby is developing well. we want our baby to be healthy and as intelligent as possible so that it will grow up to help india become one of the world's leading nations. raising children as an act of patriotism this is dr not ronnie's practice in town couples in treatment here generally believe that excess materialism and an erosion of hindu values are hampering india's development in was that hard coded as you have a place to come you must look for the youth of today are useless forefathers were cut from a very different cloth they have more talent and that's what we'd like for the. good dr is told the couple that next week would be an ideal time to conceive. every play here. she told us that's when the alignments of the planets will be most favorable with already started purifying out blood bodies and minds what is your body your. doctor know vonnie advertisers or services with pictures of fair skinned babies as a light complection corresponds to mainstream is that extended zen fits with hindu nationalist ideals of racial purity doctrine our bonnie thinks nazi germany's family planning system actually grew an indian tradition here. the germans refer to ideas that we have forgotten. they developed a system for raising strong children in fact those methods originated in india. doctrine our bonnie has ties to the paramilitary far right hindu organization r s s . the parties parades and military maneuvers are reminiscent of fascist rallies during the second world war r.s.s. leaders openly admired mussolini and hitler. i think. you get. used to. that. idea. and. so these. could be a. game indian prime minister narendra modi doesn't go so far as to speak of a master race but next to the ruling party the b j p he's also a member of the r.s.s. and he takes every opportunity to call for a return to his new traditions modi originally comes from couture much like dr not bonnie. she's visiting go to university for a conference on bearing perfect children the organizer is dr knot bonnie's mentor hitesh johnny got ecologist who also has ties to the r s s that we get. now your vedic garb the science of pregnancy was practiced in ancient india and is thousands of years old unfortunately much of this traditional wisdom has since been forgotten. i began teaching these practices ten years ago the point is to eliminate the risk of genetic disease during pregnancy already to ensure they are passed on and the best way to do that is to updated ancient indian practices the result is healthy happy children were protests john a hand doctor now bonnie have high hopes for their form of ira vedic prenatal care in india. was it out we would like to expand into old indian states of the time being we have seven births and at we want to ensure women give birth to the best progeny not just in india but all over the world. progeny would have the so may say you. know only eight couples can be treated in doctor in our bonnie center at the same time. they're encouraged to see themselves as ambassadors of the supposedly revolutionary technique and their children to assuming of course they turn out as remarkable as expected. the happy parents could then give their thanks here in this new hindu temple in good herat. the state's most famous son if not india's most famous son his mahatma gandhi but although he was born to a hindu family gandhi respected all religions. this is where the boy who would later be known as the father of the nation went to school. these days gandhi's childhood home is a museum one that aims to promote his message of religious tolerance and nonviolence. gandhi launched the struggle for independence against british imperial rule in mt about the capital of garage and the fifth largest city in india. has just begun to yosh from is one of the city's main attractions. gandhi lived here in a sort of commune with his followers for twelve years putting his principles into practice. these included not only nonviolence truth celibacy and non possession but also domestic production and self-sufficiency gandhi himself spent many hours a day at a spinning wheel which consequently became a symbol of the indian independence movement. in and about and across cruger. almost ninety percent of the population is hindu but there is also a sizeable muslim minority who live mainly in the old town. became india's first unesco world heritage city in two thousand and seventeen. its center is the almost six hundred year old mosque one of the largest on the subcontinent but not everyone in gujarat has proud of this muslim heritage religious tensions run high and in two thousand and two muslims were massacred in the garage riots the official death toll was one thousand but according to unofficial estimates as many as two thousand muslims were killed the music video mogul rap asks how it could have come to the riots. of so many. suffering for. the video seeks to be a history lesson and a reminder of the fact that india has always been a country of enormous cultural diversity. and the stories look just so here we go listen to them look you know. they clip champions the idea of india as a melting pot. it was made by students at the renowned national institute of design here and department. they didn't really feel good to begin on the part of companies that keep it happening but then i say this is a more. open mindset that we come you're in such an institution but then i would say they don't a lot of problems doing and that's how we're going to reduce waste and the days and i understand i'm more interested in the students were surprised when their beauty you know went viral you got more clicks then some big budget bollywood clips. oakwood reaction because at the end of the deed was a hip hop music we deal with rap music radio so it was really really should by all . been equal to the night they were a few friends white country and i got into a fight somebody like people all of different you know as i'm concerned if in fact there are limits or yeah there were some from haters of course some people go live that no you don't know how to. listen to right you. know. and the stories with this cast we can bring the emphasis so we listen to my kids. and the beauty of. it was that mix. loves the project was originally conceived by two of the institute's professors who were concerned about the rising into religious tension they were saying. i could have not all reactions have been positive or a. lot of hate mail which was unpredictable lines which is about you know there's a word it. means the nonbeliever in islam so by that presumably by hindu has been called the means and also. stockholm syndrome victims and all that but be that also pleased it will get worse before it gets better. which means that in the shutdown there may be more problems but in the long term india is going to be alive kicking and is going to be a beautiful place hour delays in our differences so here we go listen to the group go right into religious conflict is not the only challenge for indian society the country is also grappling with gender inequality. and. is in early twenty's and the mother of two children six years ago she was forced into an arranged marriage she suffered cruelty and abuse at the hands of her husband her family wouldn't help her so she turned to a women's help center for support. the. come back i'll give you a miss or do you think it's over that he would wake me up at night and force me to have sex even when i was sick if i refuse he'd hit me. there were days when i was in so much pain i couldn't sit down or move properly. suresh is sixty years old her ordeal ended twenty years ago but it's only down that she's speaking out despite the anger from her family directed at her for breast marching their honor suresh was married to a man she has since divorced who cheated on her with her own daughter in. law you have. the one you forgot. he kept on having sex with me despite my objections not that he would get drunk beat me write me again and again i ended up running away. and also women's rights activists to try to lehigh daryn courage as victims of domestic and sexual violence to come forward and help. find work and a place to live however she can help them take legal action because in india marital rape is not a criminal offense. it look easy the basic problem is patriarchal tradition a woman is considered the property of her father until she gets married and then she is the property of her husband she is not free to make her own decisions she has to be a b. d. and or she'll be beaten. indian patriarchy is the subject of the film lipstick under my burka a tale of female desire and oppression. initially it was banned by india's censor board because it hit too close to home says the film's director. but i do feel that. there is a high level of. abuse we've been we've been mad you we're going to the ships although we're different it would be magic and it becomes very difficult because you're always told the will get out. this may change in future and september twenty eighth seen the indian supreme court decriminalized adultery which some saw as a step towards criminalizing marital rape. but the right wing government doesn't want to see new legislation introduced nor do many men. this is a self-help group for men who feel they've been falsely accused of abuse by their wives of a hunch often don't seem to. welcome the sort of that's implicit in the piece and not the. other. one of them explains that his wife lied about him to the police because he'd asked her for a divorce. if the police yelled at me. especially the women. but they threatened to hang me by my feet and to torture me if i went ahead with the divorce. that already laws under which a white can seek protection from a husband who's doing. six unfortunately there is no such protection for men so mad at the rape law and in. this university in delhi is said to be progressive some students here think it's high time marital rape is criminalized but there are others who think a new law would end up misused they have seen many cases registered bed women have utilized their rights of these dowdy is a noise in and they get their way and misused in physical intimidation something which is very easy to do a couple again and said if. i was then saying we want to get. is hiding. women's rights activists tried to out here and some of her colleagues went to the indian supreme court for a hearing on the issue slated. like. the hearing was postponed. he said this was not necessarily a bad thing is it only lets me but lael. we have to be patient it will take time for society to change first of all we need to put an end to the idea that women are men's property not even the law will make that change. it with. little or no marital rape remains non criminalized in india still several activists lawyers and even victims of marital rape feel confident that time is on their side . four hundred kilometers south of delhi these women are also looking to take their destinies into their own hands they've come from all over the world to attend the barefoot college in the state of run just as. many of the students in this class are from africa. most cannot afford electricity or live in homes that are not connected to a power grid. yeah a week there the letter was at the barefoot college these women spend six months learning useful repair skills and how to set up solar systems in their villages back oh. look i'm learning about electricity when i came here there was no electricity at home they're just installing it now after this course my neighbor and i will be able to have electricity in our homes to say that a pop up or do they too far have been learned their lit the fuse they screwed a verse by nurse this is that they're going sixty three feet i learned i know you just. next door is a class full of women from rural parts of india. no song is from the mountainous region of le duc the doc has plenty of sunshine but little electricity. that is small. enough. that it. would be forced to and it is said that she educating women is a priority as bhagwat non down coordinator of the college's solar division explains . what so. at first we also taught men but then we saw that they didn't pass on what they learned as much. men also sometimes switched jobs or moved away from their villages women are more low. harrison i guess they also have few alternatives more than ten thousand women have gained qualifications at the barefoot college entirely free of charge the tuition costs are covered with donations perhaps surprisingly the best students are not the youngest maybe grandmothers grandmothers definitely they have fewer family commitments and lots of time. so you know what we give them a task and they take that task and what they've learned back to their villages. through villages that look similar to this one which is only a few kilometers from the school. there's no power line far and wide but there's munna minor graduated from the barefoot college two years ago she's on her way to a client who has a solar power system that keeps breaking down and money is going to help her fix it . the limbs keep flickering on the know that there's something wrong but i don't know what the problem is. minor sets to work she examines the solar power device and traces the problem to the storage unit. what a particle what was that about a socket all of them were built this side of the thirty seven about a few twists of the screwdriver and the light goes back on. there are forty five homes in this village and i've installed solar power systems in twenty three of them now there are only sometimes problems with the storage units but i'm here to help fix those with michigan yet with basically many. thanks to solar power people in this village now have light after sunset. usuals shot in the. back at barefoot college another part of the syllabus promotes cultural understanding these women from africa are giving a concert. service the women from the dock also perform traditional songs from their region the students leave the school with valuable skills. i'm very proud that i can now install solar power systems. and i hope my country ivory coast will be proud of me too. ever the so let every. day to have this. like so loaded fish i mean the barefoot college teaches women to be solar power mechanics and in the process gives them self confidence and self respect. i am. going to look. at this school in bihar in northern india students about to city exams are being first for cheat sheets. cheating has been a chronic problem here and state authorities have been clamping down on. the students even after take off their shoes. anyone found to be cheating faces stiff penalties. but. it looks like. it's become so hard to cheat. failed math. did you but i think it's unfair they don't teach us properly and then they tighten the rooms and we have to pay the price. when then if you study at home you should be able to do well i got the guy who argued nonsense which people can afford except you wish and we poor people suffer. the climbdown is partly a reaction to these pictures relatives and friends were filmed climbing a high school's walls to help students inside sitting in exam. that's what. i was on the fourth floor sitting in the front row and it was chaos i couldn't concentrate the teachers had completely lost control and the people outside were yelling the names of the students they were trying to pass cheat sheets to through the window. they were copying from cheat sheets and then throwing them out of the window. neighbors living next to the school witnessed the chaos the school facade has since been renovated to keep people from climbing the walls. it was always the same exam days the police would come and try to stop people from climbing up. they talk back and even throw stones at the police though they'd eventually back down. cheating is not restricted to be hard and doing well in exams is crucial to getting ahead and cheating scams have been reported frequently on television the student supposedly a stimulus exam. after he sent someone to set the test in his place a common trick which ended badly for this young woman. who supposedly outperformed all her classmates in a political science exam when a reporter asked her what political science is about chance or more cooking and stuff. but she made her had to retake the exam and failed spectacularly her reputation and future were in shatters but many in india are prepared to risk everything to improve their job prospects. back in. the exams are finished the students are all cheering and all promise that they didn't cheat. this young lady doesn't need to swindle her way to success du pree carr is a teenage math genius who rose to fame as calculator girl in twenty fifteen when she was only fourteen she can do complicated sums in record time. i didn't i have to take iraq that i can at very quickly. this one computer showed me a thousand numbers as each one would blink once and there were four numbers per second i managed to add all of those and give the total of that. to preach mathematical abilities are extraordinary. in twenty seventeen she broke thirteen records including two world records. this week her father couldn't be prouder. of what's got to get the no one paid any attention to have talent so we decided there was no other choice but to start setting new records and we spent eight years training towards that goal. but if your passion but. were they trained not a computer but using a technique called mental abacus during which users visualize or not because to do calculations was good for his father is a math teacher and self and trains with his daughter every day he's often asked where is daughter's talent comes from what do you. i think by a white knight see there is no doubt of that give you a headache the she's gifted and she has stamina a lot of young people today are too easily distracted and can't concentrate for long. but deal preet she has the necessary patience you have a key. it's just the thing it's really the luck that i think i'm. aeration from my classmates some of them have begun to emulate me i think i've become a sort of role model. such as the students who come during school holidays for mass delusion it is private institute founded by deal priests father. of the year two of them vicious parents who've heard of her success send their children to this school hoping to boost their kids' academic performance. they. will be due to human blood but if and i wish i could do math calculations the way she can i'm a big fan of hers. she's even helped me sometimes soon get calculating the lot that she needs but if either get us out there a bit of it with the children often come up to me and asked me if i have any tips to give them or if i get special training but i don't mean i just train very hot but helping them with training can. be a preacher has become a household name in her hometown of country or in northern india. deliberates mother is also a teacher and describes herself as her daughter's best friend. and me. it's funny to have a celebrity in the family. it's certainly not what we expected but now that it's happened we're just so proud of. them which it will have the bell feel. the family is discussing which record deal bridge should tackle next and they're starting to wonder if she's the only genius in the family. i think our son could also be a genius we would definitely give him the same support we give deal priest. good. is my role model and i'd love to be just like her. his brother prefers practicing math with his sister rather than with his father but she may not be at home much longer still prayed as planning to go to university to study computer science once she leaves school. country row in madhya pradesh central india is a popular tourist attraction known for its complex of historical temples built by the chandelle a dynasty more than a thousand years ago. the site is famous for its numerous erotic carvings our guide gives us some more detail. of the culture raw temples appeal both to locals and international tourists the sculptures depict for aspects of life that we find the commercial the romantic and the ascetic when the temples were built at the time of crisis birth rates were declining because people were having less sex because priests were so conservative. that the temple sculptures were designed to show the full scale of human experience they don't only depict sex as many visitors here expect some don't dare bring their children and leave them at the hotel. then we explain that the carvings don't only show the kama sutra so they go back and return with the whole family and have a nice day out. oh well i strongly believe that the erotic or the sensual is very much a part of human existence or rather than. thinking of the erotic as a subject of taboo order something that should not be spoken about openly these temples out of proof of you know how broad minded how open how secure society was in the past what i think as a society we are becoming more aggressive rather than being progressive and. as i said the temples are a wonderful proof of how sexuality sensuality in autism was something that was open to all it was there for everyone to see it was something that was openly discussed unlike today when we feel shy and we can all feel foolish about talking off matters of the body and of sex and of the law take. in addition to all its temples conjure also hosts an annual dance festival. as are all dance festival is. india's most but perhaps india's most miss diseases classical. festival. of nice in the backdrop of. campus the world are known for this site. after the sun goes down dozens of ensembles perform classical dance from india's various regions. it's an artist's dream to come and perform at home because this is probably what is one of the best you know if in terms of monumental terms of market temple architecture this is something that all of us want to see and this has how wasn't and causing the ourself heritage in terms of art. and it's a very complex composition because it has a lot of freedom a good element and it has savvy now which is kind as a facial expression and most importantly you need to feel from within to be able to communicate to the audience. is that bending the art shiba. she was up the startup ali shut up from my nap at dummy night and she says so why can't you have some compassion towards me i have been waiting for you. to show compassion to the whole boy. the annual festival is free of charge but unfortunately it doesn't draw huge crowds as special as it is cause or zero doesn't draw nearly as many tourists as the taj mahal although that could soon start to change both domestic and international tourism in india are booming as the country navigates its way between the past and the future. og the. mom of the. bomb. powerhouse turns one hundred. one hundred years of modernist architecture. one hundred years of functionalism n.p.r. is of. what's behind the legend. we asked the experts about the bad news. in thirty minutes on. most of the futurists. do it yourself network or the new. channel. don't miss out when the water starts rising people fight for survival money based on a budget because of money but when there's a flood the water comes up to a waste by your clothes trash to everyone i meet. but a lack of water is equally dangerous. there's junk you can see people move south so they can plant crops and find food. floods and droughts climate change become the main driver of mass migration you can write any apocalyptic snyder if you want and probably most of them to come to. the carnatic so this starts if you curteous on t w.

River-ganges
Hindus
Many
Northern-india
Himalayas
One
Enlightenment
The-beatles
Rishikesh
Banks
Towns
John-paul-george-and-ringo

Transcripts For CNNW Anderson Cooper 360 20160513

correspondent dana bash. >> reporter: gathering to greet the nominee for president, donald trump, and they all could not sound more eager to get beyond the discord. >> the headline is positive first step toward unifying the party. >> i do believe that we are now planting the seeds to get ourselves unified. >> in fact, trump and house speaker paul ryan even issued a carefully crafted joint stateme statement. there's a great opportunity to unify the party and win this fall. also said while we were honest about our few differences, we recognize there are also many important areas of common ground. the differences ran deep during the primaries. cnn is told that today behind closed doors ryan made clear to the billionaire it would be up to trump to unite the gop. a source familiar with the meeting says ryan told trump that while millions voted for him, many republicans oppose him, too. >> i represent a wing of the conservative party you could say. he is bringing a new wing to it. bringing new voters we never had for decades. that's a positive thing. >> still, ryan was not yet ready to endorse trump. >> this is the first very encouraging meeting, but again, in 45 minutes you don't litigate all of the process and all of the issues and principles that we are talking about. >> a source familiar with the meeting said ryan brought up something near and dear to his heart, balancing the budget by reforming medicare and social security, which trump argued he doesn't want to touch. and sources tell cnn that during the meeting trump mostly listened and said all of the right things. the most anticipated meeting was the first, just these three men, trump, ryan and republican party chair reince priebus. cnn is told priebus has been working hard behind the scenes for over a week to bridge the divide between the two. >> it's important to be unified, also important to remember -- >> but it is not usually this hard. >> you know what, this was not a usual election. i mean, it was a very contentious, tough primary, and obviously no one can deny that. it is something a lot of us haven't been through. >> do you feel like a couple's therapist? >> no, you know what, you wouldn't say that if you were in the room, it was very -- it was great. i think it had very good chemistry between the two of them. >> what were you hearing from sources? >> chemistry starts like a beautiful bromance. i wouldn't go that far. but i am told they seemed to warm to each other personally. they didn't know each other at all. in terms of the issues which is what matters here, i am told that ryan spent a significant amount of time briefing trump on his own election year agenda that he is pushing in the house to help republicans. all of them are on the ballot in november. and i mentioned in a piece that ryan pressed trump on budget related issues important to him like medicare and social security. i am told ryan also pushed trump on the question of what kind of supreme court justice he would pick. the house doesn't have a formal role in the process. nominating a conservative to fill antonin scalia's chair is one of the top things for conservatives, those that are skeptical that trump is one of them. >> thanks for the reporting. when trump left ryan, he went over to woo senate republicans. surprising words from lindsey graham who has been on a scourged earth campaign against trump for months. this meeting between the leaders, what can you tell us? >> it is described by all involved as a productive meeting. one senator briefed on the meeting told me that, quote, people actually liked him. one reason is senators like to talk and so does trump. they talked about taxes and the tone of the campaign, immigration. john cornyn talked about how republicans can win the hispanic vote being strong on immigration reform. but end of the day the gop is happy with the meeting because they believe trump will adhere, anderson, to basic republican principles. >> before i ask the next question, i want to remind people that senator lindsey graham said supporting trump would be like being shot. with that on the table, did graham say nice things today? >> they had about a 15 minute phone call. graham said he was impressed on foreign policy, but made it clear he plans to oppose donald trump this fall. another trump critic, rand paul, told me he is optimistic the party will unite. after that meeting, senate republican leaders briefed their colleagues at lunch. one was ted cruz. and ted cruz was there and made a joke and said, quote, to be honest with you, i didn't want to come back. john mccain later responded, we didn't want you to come back either. everyone laughed. it was interesting to see the republican party in a pretty good mood after this trump meeting. >> thanks. thoughts from adam kinzinger, former co-chair for the jeb bush campaign. congressman, the outcome of today's meeting between trump and speaker ryan, what do you make of it. it was a different, rosier tone than we heard from both men today. >> yeah. you know, look, obviously speaker of the house is a very principled person, he has real concerns with some of what trump said on domestic policy, foreign policy and his tone. but ultimately he is speaker of the house, leader of the republican party. i expect that ultimately he will support trump. he is going through the process to get there. look, a lot of us have major concerns with what's going on, we want to support the republican nominee as republicans, but this really is on donald trump to unite the party and this is where he has to change his tone. >> why is it on donald trump? donald trump is essentially the standard bearer for the republican party. he won the most votes, defeated a deep pool of republicans. isn't it time for those who are against him in the republican party to reach out to him? >> i think once you become the standard bearer, once you become the nominee, the burden to win is on you. you have to go out, figure out how to put together 51% of americans to put you in office. that starts with your own party. that starts with understanding where people have concerns, with you listening to that. when somebody says some of the words i've heard you use to describe people is frankly hurtful and divisive, think about that. when you hear somebody say your foreign policy is not really coherent, you admire vladimir putin, these are concerns. that's on donald trump. >> you said you put your country above your party in regards to backing donald trump. do you believe republicans who are critics of trump have warmed to the idea of his candidacy and are accepting it are putting their party above their country? >> i don't think so. everybody has a decision to make. a lot of these folks that were critics and are on his side are saying his supreme court justices will probably be better from hillary clinton's from their perspective, and look, i don't like hillary and donald trump is a better option. i think in their mind they are putting their country above their party, but we all have to make that decision in a different way. for me, again, on somebody that cares about america's role, and mission in the world, to hear some of the things he's said and the way he's said it brings real concern. >> how does it, i don't know if he is concerned about winning you over, how does he win you over? seems like those are pretty fundamental things that he has dug in on and repeatedly has the tone that he has, he says look, he can be more presidential, so far he's running the race he's running, short of some major conversion on the part of donald trump, how does he win you over? >> hard to tell until he gets there. i don't know if there's a specific formula. i can at the present ykacan tel running like a man for the job that lincoln had, that's a good first step. if he is interested on learning foreign policy and difficulties and challenges outside broad, populous statements, that will be a move, too. i understand the need to compromise, especially in a divided government, and with people with different views. i don't need him to believe 100% of what i believe, but i need him to get to reflecting some republican values and tone that's worthy of the party of lincoln and reagan and uniting the country. >> thanks for being on. >> you bet. thanks. in a moment, the panel's take and why paul ryan is still not endorsing trump. and later, a man that served as trump's butler for years, what he is saying about president obama and hillary clinton. can't repeat the words he used. and the secret service wants to know more. hillary clinton wants to succeed where 16 republicans failed. her strategy to take on donald trump. ♪ some people know how to make an entrance... ♪ to thrive under pressure... ♪ to reject the status quo... and they have no problem passing the competition. the aggressive lexus gs 350 and 200 turbo. once driven, there's no going back. here's the plan. you want a family and a career, but most of the time you feel like you're trying to wrangle a hurricane. the rest of the time, they're asleep. then one day, hr schedules a meeting with you out of the blue. and it's the worst 19 minutes of your career. but you don't sweat it because you and your advisor have prepared for this. and when the best offer means you're moving to the middle of nowhere, the boys say they hate the idea. but you pretend it's not so bad. and years later at thanksgiving, when one of them says what he's thankful for most, is this house, you realize you didn't plan for any of this you wouldn't have done it any other way. with the right financial partner, progress is possible. create your own seafood trios you can try something new with every bite. pick 3 of 9 all-new creations for $15.99. like baked lobster alfredo chimichurri shrimp and crab cakes bursting with crab meat. just hurry in before it ends. this is not a job for me, thbeing a part of helping thpeople in need is who i am. working at brookdale for me is not just a job, it's a life for me. i love it. i formed many connections with the residents. i feel like i am part of their family and they're part of mine. if you can get up in the morning, ya know, shake the dust and go up there and make somebody happy, when i go to sleep, i did my job. ♪ wait, you shot that? she calls it, "onions." it's beautiful. put this on our homepage now. can i have three tickets for "onions" please? this was like seeing the onion on a molecular level. this is talent. why are we not representing it? ¡tan bonitas! 4k on an iphone, wake up people! and the winner is... "onions." [cheering] ♪ donald trump sat down today with paul ryan, it was more than midwest style meets manhattan. they have different roles to play after the campaign. speaker ryan has unity to consider to control the house, and limiting down ticket damage from trump without alienating millions of trump voters, which may explain why he is softening tone without fully embracing him. take a look. >> this is not conservatism. what was proposed yesterday is not what this party stands for and more importantly it is not what this country stands for. if a person wants to be the nominee of the republican party, there can be no evasion and no gains. they must reject any group or cause that's built on bigotry. if i see ideas and comments that mislead the people as to who we are as republicans, i'm going to speak out on those. it is time to set aside bullying, to set aside belittlement, and appeal to higher aspirations. we need a real unification of our party. after a tough primary, that's going to take some effort. we are committed to putting effort in. i am not interested in litigating the past. i am interested in going forward and seeing where the common ground exists to make sure we can have a unified republican party. >> speaker ryan from last december to now. let's bring in alex burns, reporter for "the new york times," biographer jonathan seen ee. and mark lamont hill, and trump supporter, and former congressman rick lazzio. are you surprised there wasn't endorsement. >> i was surprised, i heard from dana bash that many congressmen and women came to paul ryan and said you need to do this and get on board. there wasn't just pressure from voters and republicans and trump people but fellow congressmen and women. i was surprised. nevertheless, i think basically today we got everything short of endorsement. that's enough to move forward. >> tara, seems like the meeting with senators, seems like it is moving in the direction of party unity. >> yeah, speaker ryan is in a tough position. he didn't ask to be here, but he is in it now. never probably imagined six, eight months ago that he would be here again, making one of the toughest political decisions of his life. i think he is dealing with an internal conflict because of donald trump's past and statements and even policy positions on things. just anathema to what paul ryan has built his career on. this is why you didn't see endorsement. as speaker, he doesn't want to give away all leverage. he wants donald trump to tone it down, to try to be more presidential because moving forward they have to endure the democrats constantly reminding republicans in congressional races what donald trump said. for example, harry reid was on the senate floor already going after republicans saying mitch mcconnell, you seem to support all of the despicable comments that donald trump made about women. that's the leader of your party. i am assuming you agree with that, too. you have to deal with that, republican congressional candidates have to deal with that kind of onslaught and speaker ryan has to walk a fine line on how to build cover for those guys. >> congressman, do you think this is about maintaining leverage over trump? >> to some extent. what paul ryan is saying is what tara is saying, i want to see how you lay things out. i care about social security. you can't balance the budget without social security, you have to do something about entitlements. you need to talk about that to be responsible. i also think rising poll numbers is an unbelievable positive in terms of trying to create an atmosphere of consensus. that was a big plus. three battleground polls come out showing in a dead heat, very important. the other thing, one thing that unifies republicans now, republicans that are favoring donald trump is they want to beat hillary clinton. so that's unifying principle. i think republicans have to move past that, have a positive agenda they sell to the american public. that's going to be more difficult to get to. >> alex, in terms of reporting for "the new york times," seems like you're hearing donald trump may be willing to massage some policy positions. do you know where there seems to be wiggle room? >> i think in some ways easier to say where there isn't wiggle room. there are a couple of areas where he has firm views, things like immigration and trade that put him at odds with paul ryan. but talk to folks advising on issues like taxes and fiscal discipline, retirement security, they say there's a lot of room for conversation, for negotiation. you go down a list of positions trump has taken on issues like minimum wage. it is a different position virtually every day. >> recently on the idea of banning or temporary ban of muslims, he said that's a suggestion. >> what his people will say, and trump i think would acknowledge this, he is a negotiator by instinct and political philosophy, what it takes for him to lockdownhe republican nomination, get the party on board is back away from big things he said in the primary. i don't think any of us would be knocked over by that. >> nice way of -- he didn't just say i am negotiable and flexible, i want a ban, then he said not a ban, just a suggestion. that's a tricky place to be. i think paul ryan, he is in a tricky spot. has to be careful not to overplay his hand. every time the republican party tried to keep wraps around donald trump, he managed to evade them. if paul ryan thinks he let's go of all authority, he could end up on the wrong side. >> interesting piece in "the washington post" saying ryan is giving a head nod to congressional republicans about a path forward, basically talk about secretary clinton, how she would be a bad president, don't agree with trump on everything but know he agrees on core principles. >> i think the key in the intro was down ticket damage. that's what we talked about. when i think about the election, and it is early, i think about 1980 during the reagan landslide when 12 democrats lost senate seats, including frank church, gaylord nelson, george mcgovern. it is harder in the house because of redistricting and gerrymandering. in the senate with statewide raises and donald trump as anchor, you could see people like john mccain lose seats. >> way more republicans have to defend seats than democrats. >> when you hear trump on fox saying that was a suggestion, banning muslims, does that raise concerns? is he backtracking for general election? >> it doesn't. certainly policies that are an end and certain that are means. pro-life, that's an end we want to achieve. the muslim ban was never an end. >> does he want a ban on muslims? >> that's never been his policy, keeping muslims out. policy goal is to protect the borders. that's the means he suggested to that end. >> i don't understand, is he going to pursue, maybe we don't know this, do you think he is going to pursue a temporary ban on muslims entering the u.s. or do you think he is not? >> he is going to suggest that, say this is what needs to be done to secure the border. i assume he would talk with the fbi director and get his input. >> building a wall, is that a suggestion? >> that's an end of itself, an end, not a means. i don't think that's at all negotiable. i think that's a cornerstone of his campaign. muslim ban is to protect the country, we found out today i want to point out, in germany, they're investigating 40 people that entered the country they believe are associated with islamic terrorism. in the mass open immigration, germany has to back step. >> germany had about a million people come from syria. >> they have. >> congressman, do you think everything is up for negotiation? that's one of the criticisms by conservatives of donald trump all along that these are opening salvos in negotiation. >> if donald trump is elected president, he will be the triangulation president. you have to accept that when you vote for him, he is not going to be down the line on terms of conservative president, that's not going to happen. number one. number two, when he says things like we ought to have a religious litmus test, it is offensive to core republicans that believe the greatness has been based on immigration and that we don't want to create religious litmus. one thing to say pause on syrian immigrants, another to say all muslims be kept out of the country. this is where republicans that are on the ticket, senate or house members are thinking do i want to be associated with this. right now, it is dying down. polls are coming up. but it is a quick trigger for people to pull back. more to talk about, including breaking news, reaction from the trump campaign about his long time butler who works at mar-a-lago letting loose with ugly statements about hanging the president. he told cnn today that president obama should be, quote, hung from the port coof the white house or as i call it, the white mosque. that's not all he wrote. details when we come back. carplay integration.new ae what knee pain?? what sore elbow? advil liqui-gels make pain a distant memory nothing works faster stronger or longer what pain? advil. i've been blind since birth. i go through periods where it's hard to sleep at night, and stay awake during the day. learn about non-24 by calling 844-844-2424. or visit my24info.com. & in a world held back by compromise, businesses need the agility to do one thing & another. only at&t has the network, people, and partners to help companies be... local & global. open & secure. because no one knows & like at&t. make sure it's ano maintelligent one.. ♪ the all-new audi a4, with available virtual cockpit. ♪ the secret service is going to investigate one of donald trump's long time employees after posting on facebook he wants president obama killed. he is a 17 year butler. trump's campaign disavowed the horrible statements, says he hasn't worked at trump miralago in years. but that may be a technicality. when he tried to retire, he decided he was irreplaceable and kept him around as a historian. may not be on the payroll, but is there as historian, giving tours. randi kaye joins me with more. >> reporter: anderson, if anyone wonders why they're investigating, they can go to his facebook page. he is 84 years old. here's why he may be in hot water with secret service. just yesterday, mother jones said he posted on his facebook that president obama, quote, should have been taken out by our military and shot as an enemy agent in his first term. the post has since been removed. when cnn called for comment, he confirmed he did write the post. said he used hung, not shot, correcting the post, then told cnn i prefer he be hung from the portico of the white house or as i call it the white mosque. threatening the life of the president is a federal crime, that's why the secret service is on the case. >> he's been talking about hillary clinton as well, correct? >> absolutely. if you have kids in the room right now, you may want to cover their ears. about hillary clinton, he wrote this shows kill reclinton to be lying, deceiving, finished that with the c word. and added i would never cast my ballot for this bitch in any election. this coming from a man that worked for trump the last 30 years ago or so, notes on his facebook page he does not speak for donald trump, these are his opinions, anderson. >> wasn't there controversy yesterday about the trump campaign and white nationalist or supremacist? >> there was, mr. trump had to distance from a convention delegate that's a well known white sue premises. the delegate is william daniel johnson has pushed for whites only united states, made up of people with no ascertainable trace of negro blood. he was on the list of delegates that the trump campaign submitted for certification by the california secretary of state. once this was exposed, the trump campaign quickly blamed a computer glitch and database error for his name being on the list of delegates. he later resigned as delegate, didn't want to create more baggage for the trump campaign. and remember he got the endorsement of david duke earlier. when asked about that, he failed to forcefully reject that. >> and white supremacists did a robe oh call on trump, making headlines months ago. thanks so much. back with the panel. what do you make of the butler slash tour guide on his facebook? >> donald trump's campaign as you reported, said they're horrible statements, disavowed the butler as they should. those views that were just enumerated. there's no room in this society and country for those viewers, and donald trump believes that. i think the notion he is in trump tower, trying to get the delegates in line with the butler is silly. most people think trump is a good man that embraces all races. many african-american employees say what a kind boss he is. for ery statement you heard about trump being involved by a third party tangential relationship to a butler he fired many years ago, could put out equally positive statements from african-american employees saying he is very fair. >> the question is he wasn't fired. >> not working, retired. >> for those that say it is important, they will say this reflects, can't be of surprise to donald trump, that this employee felt, close employee to trump who had close interaction with him felt totally comfortable saying these things on a public forum. >> really comfortable, which makes you wonder what was it about everything that's going on here. he's not alone. anyone that reads my twitter feed, i think i have been called all the things he is said, might even be on my twitter feed. this is pervasive with trump supporters, unfortunately there's an ugliness brought out of the campaign, unlike anything you've ever seen before, which is troubling. whether donald trump believes it or not, that's, you know, something that he's going to have to deal with. when he played coy with the kkk during that thing, that didn't help the situation. moving forward, these kind of associations like conservatives went after barack obama and his associations with reverend wright and bill ayers, obama supporters would say well, he can't be responsible for what those people said. well, i mean, which is it? this situation with trump, he was closer to the butler than people want to say. the campaign is inconsistent on this. the butler introduced him at miralago march 6th. and had a glowing profile in "the new york times." the trump campaign didn't disavow him then because it was a glowing profile. >> you don't have any evidence how close he was with donald trump. >> he introduced him march 6th. >> you're speculating, by the way, check out my twitter feed, hundreds of horrible things are said. irresponsible to sit on the program and speculate about closeness of the butler to donald trump and whether you think donald trump knew about these views. you have no information to support that. likewise, no support that someone on your twitter feed is related to donald trump. >> come on. he introduced him at miralago. >> the trump campaign moved to disavow this. >> give them credit. they disavowed it. there are going to be crazy, toxic people in the organization or volunteers that you have no control over that say things. your responsibility as candidate is to kwaush it. >> seems to me -- i am not saying there's anything else he could have done, nor am i saying that donald trump, candidate trump knew this. i agree with you. however, there is something noteworthy. when there are so many people that are white supremacists, and they seem to hang around you, not around jeb bush or john kasich or hillary clinton, there's something about trump's campaign that speaks to them. there's something he's doing that doesn't make them feel i will yen ated in that position. >> i want to start a trending hash tag, butler syndrome. this connects this story to before, part of what congressional people are afraid of these explosions will happen every day, every week. today was the butler, tomorrow it will be somebody else. donald trump will say something. it is like the butler syndrome. they're afraid trump campaign will continue to implode. trump himself will say these things, and that will drag down the ticket, that will drag down lots of candidates in the election. >> in your reporting do you hear concerns about these kind of things a lot from folks in the gop? >> enormous concerns, not about the butler specifically or this kind of violent rhetoric, but regularly every time trump takes a step forward. think back to super tuesday and florida primary. almost every time he scores a big victory. call that visit to washington a win for him. there's also other major distractions, david duke or this episode today, tax returns earlier this week. for somebody like paul ryan that wants to give the nominee benefit of the doubt up to a point, don't want to handcuff to a guy with a giant surprise on hand. >> we have to take a break. some worries conservatives have, the way his positions have changed over time. real is touching a ray. amazing is moving like one. real is making new friends. amazing is getting this close. real is an animal rescue. amazing is over twenty-seven thousand of them. there is only one place where real and amazing live. seaworld. real. amazing when a moment turns romantic why pause to take a pill? or stop to find a bathroom? cialis for daily use is approved to treat both erectile dysfunction and the urinary symptoms of bph, like needing to go frequently, day or night. tell your doctor about all your medical conditions and medicines, and ask if your heart is healthy enough for sex. do not take cialis if you take nitrates for chest pain, or adempas for pulmonary hypertension, as it may cause an unsafe drop in blood pressure. do not drink alcohol in excess. side effects may include headache, upset stomach, delayed backache or muscle ache. to avoid long-term injury, get medical help right away for an erection lasting more than four hours. if you have any sudden decrease or loss in hearing or vision, or any symptoms of an allergic reaction, stop taking cialis and get medical help right away. ask your doctor about cialis and a $200 savings card. welcome back. the republican party tries to find a way to come together with donald trump as the presumptive nominee, there are hurdles, the biggest for some republicans the question whether trump has conservative credentials they look for in a candidate. house speaker paul ryan has been in that group. one reason it can be tough to get a read from a policy standpoint on who trump is in terms of position, tom foreman takes a look. >> reporter: throughout this chaotic campaign, the trump brand is built on clear, strong statements. for example, last december when he called for all muslims to be barred from coming to the u.s. >> donald j. trump is calling for total and complete shutdown of muslims entering the united states. >> reporter: with the nomination looming, listen to him now. >> it's a temporary ban, it hasn't been called for yet, nobody has done it, this is just a suggestion. >> i am donald trump and i approved this message. >> reporter: trump the nonpolitician has been doing what politicians do so well. highlighting possible flip flops by opponents while quietly shifting his own views, on minimum wage, last fall he acknowledged some people want to see it raised. >> but we cannot do this if we are going to compete with the rest of the world. we just can't do it. >> so you would not raise minimum wage. >> i would not raise the minimum. >> i like the idea of let the states decide. but i think people should get more. i think they're out there, they're working. it is a very low number. >> reporter: on his tax plan. earlier, he promised a break for middle class america and to hammer the wealthy. >> in other words it is going to cost me a fortune. >> reporter: and now? >> if i increase the wealthy, that means they're paying less than now. i am not talking about increasing from this point, i am talking about increasing from my tax proposal. >> reporter: and on immigration, he proposed a wall along the southern border. >> we will build the wall. who is going to pay for the wall? who? >> reporter: trump insists building a wall is not open for negotiation. but other parts of his immigration plan might be. >> things are negotiable, i'm be honest with you, make the wall two feet shorter or something. everything is negotiable. >> reporter: all of this makes trump vulnerable to claims that he, too, is a flip flopper. it also reveals he is well aware of a basic political reality. primaries may be won by strong positions on the left and right, but the white house is usually won in the middle. anderson? >> thanks very much. charlie sykes is talk radio host from paul ryan's stomping grounds. great to have you on again. these shifts from trump, there seem to be a pattern, throws out a provocative statement, then indicates flexibility, ne goeshability which makes it hard to pin him down. >> makes it difficult to rely on him. this is the problem the republicans have. there's a lot of happy talk, but two big problems. donald trump's character and principles or lack of principles. i think you see that illustrated. republicans may be in a room with him 45 minutes, he will tell them how he stands on a variety of issues, but they have no idea how long that will stick, whether that will change. if paul ryan wants to find out if donald trump is able to campaign as an adult and as a conservative, and this is going to be tricky, the man isn't going to change character in 48 hours or 24 hours, and in terms of position, he is a blank slate. the reason he is all over the map, maybe he is being clever, maybe there is no fixed course. paul ryan with bedroom principles and donald trump says what he thinks he needs to say in the moment. >> today on the meeting with ryan, did it seem to you it is basically speaker ryan before he gets on the trump train? trying to figure out where things are going? >> this will be the most complicat complicated bromance. the dilemma for paul ryan, he knows who donald trump is, but he has a job. he has to be, as speaker of the house of representatives, he has to make the best of a bad situation. maybe there's a possibility that he can draw donald trump toward conservatism, maybe provide some policy guidelines to do this. maybe he can heal some of those wounds. you want to talk about two different guys, last week you had donald trump who is releasing flying monkeys on paul ryan. paul ryan trying to be conciliatory, trying to be persuasive. again, a lot of happy talk, huge gaps remain. >> where do you go as somebody who was part of the never trump movement? >> still there. >> still there. >> very much so. i can't say that the man is a liar, a con man that makes fun of the disabled, women, emotional stability of a nine-year-old playground bully, but yes, let's give him nuclear codes. i don't know how you do that. i don't know you say that, the man is a racist, misogynist, but make him president because of party loyalty. that's a difficult move and i think a lot of republicans are counting on either the public having complete amnesia or the anti-hillary thing being that strong. the reality is that at some point you have to draw the line and say i can't be part of this. >> charles sykes, appreciate you being on the program tonight. just ahead, with donald trump turning fire on hillary clinton, she's facing a crucial strategy decision, fire back in the same fashion or try to stay above it all. others tried both tactics and failed. look at what her campaign seems to be wanting to do next. sir, this alien life form at an alarming rate. growing fast, you say? we can't contain it any long... oh! you know, that reminds me of how geico's been the fastest-growing auto insurer for over 10 years straight. over ten years? mhm, geico's the company your friends and neighbors trust. and deservedly so. indeed. geico. expect great savings and a whole lot more. customer service!d. ma'am. this isn't a computer... wait. you're real? with discover card, you can talk to a real person in the u.s., like me, anytime. wow. this is a recording. really? no, i'm kidding. 100% u.s.-based customer service. here to help, not to sell. oudairy or artificial flavors., so we invented a word that means that. shmorange! and it rhymes with the color of our bottle. to help spread the word, we made t-shirts! reach for the orange, it's 100% shmorange! we don't want to think about it. but i had to. because, you see i was traveling, i was enjoying life, i was working... it was too long since my last pap. when i was finally tested, we thought i might have cervical cancer. after worrying - no cancer. i was lucky. women... please get a pap test to check for cervical cancer. and get the inside knowledge about gynecologic cancers. for you and the people who care about you. tempur-pedic mattresses is that they contour to your body. i just have to lay back in my tempur-pedic and it just kind of forms to my body. that's what i love about it. the tempur-pedic comes up to you and it's like, "hey, there you are!" "hey, there you are!" "i'm going to put you to sleep now." here you go. okay! sleepy time! it keeps us comfortable and asleep at night. can i take a nap now? (vo) change your sleep, change your life, change to tempur-pedic. [ boss ] it is a very smart plan. so we're all on board? [ paul ] no. this is a stupid plan. hate drama? go to cars.com. research. price. find. only cars.com helps you get the right car without all the drama. donald trump is blasting hillary clinton with intensely personal attacks, same kind used against republican opponents. it is a strategy that worked in the primary. secretary clinton working to clinch the democratic nomination has been hitting back. here's some of the back and forth they've been having. >> she was an unbelievably nasty, mean enabler. >> i don't want anybody in our country or anywhere in the world to think he speaks for anybody but himself. >> her whole life has been a big, fat beautiful lie. it has been a terrible, terrible lie. >> the kind of language coming from donald trump is hateful. >> if i had a contest between crooked hillary clinton and the media, i'm not sure, folks! >> trump keeps saying things like well, you know, i didn't really mean it. it was all part of my reality tv show. if we buy that, shame on us. >> you saw secretary clinton hasn't shied from mixing it up with trump, though her style is less scorched earth. she recently said she's focusing on policy, not respond to insults. sounds familiar. that strategy didn't work out well for the 16 candidates that ran against trump. back with the panel. alex, do you think she's damned if she does, damned if she doesn't? she said she's going to focus just on running her race. lot of republicans tried to do that. marco rubio tried to fight back, didn't work well for him either. >> i think there's no obvious right answer for how to deal with personal attacks on this level which are truly unprecedented in presidential politics at this level. i think clearly what the clinton campaign decided to prioritize is trying to pin down trump on policy pronouncements before he can use the etch a sketch them away. doesn't want to find out in july they forgot about the muslim ban, propose some immigration deal. i think the rationale on some level is personal attacks are coming no matter what she does now, so if you try to pin him down on some issues where he is clearly on the wrong side of public opinion in a general election, maybe that serves you better in the long term, but it is a big risk. >> one of the things she kept saying in the interview was loose cannon, we heard that on the campaign trail. that's one of the things they're running up the flagpole. >> listening to that is depressing to think of what kind of election we face. the country has serious problems to address. donald trump is dragging the election down into the gutter in a way that will make it a bitter, ugly election. whether it is hillary or bernie, the strategy is to point out contradictions as alex said. secondly, i think baked in the cake for trump is the fact he alienated women and latinos. republicans need 40% of the latino vote to win the white house. i don't think they'll get 20%. that's baked in the cake no matter where the polls are and how it looks election day. i think if we democrats continue to talk to voters, independent voters, this isn't the primary, we're going to win the election. >> mark, do you think hillary clinton or bernie sanders know how to run against donald trump? >> i think they do, and there are lessons to be learned by the primary. no one was effective fighting back with donald trump on a personal level. carly fiorina got a different response when he beat up on her, attacked her. hillary clinton may have benefitted from that. he performs as a sexist, whether he is is not relevant. voters read him sexist with carly fiorina and talked about her appearance. with marco rubio, that wasn't the case. he has to be careful. she can play the loose cannon card. >> do you think him run differently against hillary clinton and bernie sanders than he ran against the gop? >> i think he has to. mark has a point that there's a gender dynamic at play. she's trying to say trump is anti-woman. you can't play into that. he has to treat her differently than others. but that doesn't mean insulating her from very real questions like the clinton foundation and her e-mail setup. she has to answer those. staying silent won't be an option. >> she doesn't have to push the narrative, they have to run the ad that the super pac attacked trump. these are things he said about women. >> he has to address those. >> we have to take a break. offer time travel back to the '80s. we will preview cnn's original series next. actions speak louder. something we'll show you. through small things, big things, and spur of the moment things. her long day as anne. hair stylist starts big things, with shoulder pain when... hey joanne, want to trade the all day relief of 2 aleve with 6 tylenol? give up my 2 aleve for 6 tylenol? no thanks. for me... it's aleve. in a few minutes, the series the eighties. we head to the floor of the new york stock exchange, when ronald reagan gave a pep talk as the nation tried to bounce back from hard economic times. take a look. >> in the last five years, we've moved from malaise to hope, confidence, and opportunity. and the volume of shares traded hitting record highs and more americans than ever before participating in the market. we are bullish on the american economy. >> ronnie! ronnie! ronnie! >> reagan shows up at the stock exchange, yelling ronnie, ronnie is a way of saying america is back, that was ronald reagan's genius, he was able to link economic faith with faith in america. >> incredible moment. that does it for us. hope you enjoy the cnn original series the eighties which starts now. in money matters this morning, wall street, where leaping stocks have investors jumping. >> we're going to turn the bull loose. >> one of the great things about this nation is that we can seek profit. >> is money the number one goal? >> yes. >> you've had 29-year-olds making a million dollars a year, expecting to make two million the year after that. >> if you have plastic money, nothing is holding you back. >> history will show the bakers were honest people. >> insider trading could be wall street's watergate. >> i am afraid recently

New-york
United-states
Brookdale
Germany
Florida
California
Syria
Washington
District-of-columbia
Syrian
Americans
America

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.