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tv   Hannity  FOX News  September 30, 2014 10:00pm-11:01pm PDT

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capable of causing significant damage. 31-year-old eric frein has been on the run since september 12th, accused of killing one state trooper and wounding another one. hong kong's top leader refusing to meet with pro-democracy protesters before a deadline they had been set. tens of thousands of people took to the streets. they want a reversal of china's decision to screen all candidates in the territory's first elective elections. i'm kelly wright, hannity is next, for all of your headlines log onto foxnews.com. welcome to "hannity" tonight, this is a fox news alert, the cdc has confirmed the first case of ebola has been diagnosed here in the united states.
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now, fox's own john roberts is standing by with breaking details. >> reporter: sean, certainly this case is going to raise a lot of questions as to whether or not the public health screening procedures are strong enough to prevent somebody from getting on an aircraft in one of the infected west african nations and ending up here in the united states. we know it was a liberia national who came here to visit family, traveled and arrived on the 20th of september, didn't show symptoms until the 24th. it is good, because they say it is not likely you will transmit it to somebody else. he got sick on the 26th and went into the hospital. on the 28th he was admitted to the hospital, placed in strict isolation, based on the fact he had traveled to africa. there was quite a bit of time where he could have come into contact with people when he was ill and maybe transmitted the virus to them then.
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the director at the cdc says he believes they can get a lid on this thing but that other people could indeed become sick. >> it is certainly possible that somebody who had contact with this individual, a family member or other individual could develop ebola in the coming weeks. but there is no doubt in my mind that we will stop it here. >> now, as far as screening people that this person may or may not have come in contact with, they're not recommending the people on the aircraft get screened. it has been almost ten days. the people he came in contact with here in the united states, likely they will be screened as necessary. >> john, thank you, we'll have more on the program with this. we turn to washington where the intelligence community is striking back now against president obama after being blamed for underestimating the threat posed by isis. also developing, the new information on the breach at the white house, after they grilled the director at the house
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earlier today. fox's own ed henry has more details on both breaking stories, ed? >> sean, good to see you, you're right, intelligence officials not happy about the "60 minutes" program, that they suggested that the rest of the intelligence community had screwed this up and underestimated the threat from isis and overestimated the ability of the iraqi army to push back against these terrorists. that is why a scathing article was put in "the new york times," they said no, we were putting up alarm bells and the officials were ignoring it. >> the white house did not pay attention to it. they were preoccupied with other crises. sounds a lot different from what the intelligence community is saying and the white house is saying. >> the leader, james clapper,
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put out a message in direct conflict with the other message put out in "the new york times." >> they say while they were aware of the threat from isis they did not know it was going to grow. republican lindsey graham fired a letter to the president demanding he turn over some of the letters, of the daily brief, the intelligence issues he is briefed on every morning. our own catherine herridge reported that the information was in the daily brief, graham saying if you're going to say on 60 minutes that the intelligence committee failed here you should turn over this intelligence to tell us what you were really being tell old. he said it was unlikely it would be turned over because it is a highly classified document. >> number one, the president is under fire saying we're not at war with isis.
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are we at war? the fbi won't rule what happened in oklahoma as an act of terror, then of course there was the analysis that obama spent more time playing golf than in these intelligence briefings and only went to 42% of the meetings in his term as president. >> what they push back on that, they say most of the time what the president does is get an electronic version of the daily briefing, he is not skipping the meetings. he is just not getting them face to face. the question will be moving forward as lindsey graham pursues this as well as others i mentioned, saying look, can they pursue this classified information? yes, but is he missing something when he is skipping a one-on-one briefing, he and other intelligence officials where they may be able to ask questions on whether or not the isis is a true threat. if you're just reading it you may miss some of the nuances.
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>> remember, catherine herridge said she was given granular information on isis, but that no action was taken. they discussed if they pulled out too soon, you know washington better than i do, might be leaking back as payback. >> they may be pushing back. and there is information in the public record. you don't even have to dig for anonymous information. we found a quote today from jay carney who when he was press secretary a year ago, last halloween, he said right at the podium, nouri maliki was coming the next day, saying we're aware of isis, they're a threat, growing, they're launching attacks, this was jay carney a year ago talking about the threat from isis. he didn't just pop off from the podium. that was probably in his briefing, something in the intelligence community. in terms of what they knew a year ago it is clear they knew publicly at least they had some
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inkling of the threat. >> and in the past they would take the briefing and ask people questions, the president has decided not to do it. >> sure, and the former cia director said look back in the clinton administration got frustrated because president clinton also liked to take a copy himself and not be briefed directly. and woolsey said he still wanted to have that back and forth. and he said today, the former cia director, president obama may have missed some nuance or details by not having it directed to him. >> all right, thank you. meanwhile, the suspect in the oklahoma beheading has been charged with murder and also two other charges. more on the very latest. >> reporter: sean, good evening, tonight we have a clearer picture of the horrors that went on inside that food processing
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facility here in oklahoma last week. the district attorney says that the suspect had been in some kind of an altercation with some of his co-workers earlier in the day over race. and that is when those co-workers allegedly turned him in to human resources. and when hr confronted 30-year-old alten nolen and suspended him for a few days, authorities say he was escorted off the property, went home, got a knife and exacted revenge on the people he felt betrayed him. officials have backed off their official story that they had been turned in for trying to convert people to islam. however, listen to this bit of information that came out earlier in a press conference today. >> my understanding, he was using some arabic terms during the attacks. and certainly, that is one of the many reasons why the fbi is involved at this point in time. >> republican congressman frank
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wolf of virginia has now sent a letter to u.s. attorney general eric holder asking that this be investigated as an act of terrorism as opposed to work place violence. the investigate is continuing, the fbi on the ground here in oklahoma. sean? >> and casey, thank you, but despite our entire nation being at war with radical islam, the fbi is refusing to call the brutal beheading what it is, an act of terror, instead labelling this work place violence, now, there is minimal coverage on this beheading, the question remains why was the government so quick to jump into to figuhe ferguson case of michael brown but it is mia when it comes to an act of terrorism here on the ground. is it the administration's yet another failure to recognize radical islam? colonel, the president only attending 42% of his
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intelligence briefings. he spends more time playing golf than at his intel briefings. and now we're hearing that he missed the entire rise of isis even though he was warned babou it repeatedly and he was warned repeatedly about what would happen in iraq if they pulled out. >> yeah, but sean, his golf game has really improved. what i can tell you from my own intelligence, there is nothing like a face to face briefing. you can really make eye contact whether it is a president or a general, you can make the eye contact and tell when you're losing them. they can ask questions. and not only doesn't obama ask questions, which is vital, but he just doesn't seem interested. and trying to blame, to lay the blame for his inattention, for
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his disinterest on the intel community made a lot of people very, very angry. because the intelligence community is not perfect. but i will tell you it is vastly better than when i left it in the 1990s. war made us better. we have got some incredibly skilled intelligence personnel working. and i can also tell you that starting with the former head of dia who was basically crowded out because he was telling the truth to congress about isis and trying to tell the president, starting with him on down, there are a lot of people in the intelligence community who have been concerned about this group and other groups for two or more years. and they couldn't make progress with the white house, the white house didn't want to hear it. >> the president was provided, we're told, granular detail for over a year. and when all the cities that 4,000 americans fought, bled and died for started falling he didn't lift a finger. he was warned about what would happen in iraq, warned about the
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rise of isis, didn't lift a finger, the beheading in oklahoma is not an act of terror, it is workplace violence, and we're not at war with isis, we're just dropping bombs on them. there is something radically wrong with here in the workplace violence, missing contingency, there is a missing chip. >> when the president says he is not at war with isis he is telling the truth, because the pin prick airstrikes we're doing are for political purposes. we're hitting empty buildings, pickup there way, very expensive way to take though out with precision weapons. my contact with the chain of command, people involved in this operation are furious that obama has put incredible targeting restrictions on them. doesn't want any civilian casualties. this is war, dude, people are going to die. he is even uneasy with running
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up the isis body count. he doesn't want dead bodies but at the same time this president is perfectly comfortable sending 3,000 troops to deal with ebola. >> the president says it is not a state, they have more territory than other countries, their vision is the caliphate. tell me i'm totally wrong and i'll feel better about the state of our country. i see isis growing in syria, in land mass, they're growing in numbers and with every nut case around them. we see the rise. radicalism in north africa and the continent of africa, what makes him think we're not next in. >> well, if you live in a dream world. something that people are
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missing, these tiny airstrikes, in a serious air campaign that is one or two days of airstrikes. you're also missing the fact that by going so lightly, but not really hitting isis with all we have the president is allowing isis to say see, we can take everything americans they dish out. we're standing up to the americans and they can't defeat us. it is a great recruiting tool. unless we get serious and really go to war with isis this group is really going to get stronger and stronger. there will be rival groups rise up. islamics will spread across the area, helping the kurds fight isis -- >> by the way -- >> they're now attacking -- >> they're a mile and a half away from baghdad. and the kurds are now saying it is nowhere near enough to have any major impact. >> and the kurds are right. we've helped the iraqi kurds and
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did protect the yazidis and other minorities, that is worth doing. but if you talk about degrading isis as the president has you have to wallop those suckers. another army base just fell near baghdad. they're within a mile and a half of the turkish border. and president obama just wants the problem to go away. >> it's not going to go away. >> it's not going to disappear. it's not. ebola is in the united states, we'll have a report coming up. also coming up, israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu delivered a strong speech, regarding isis. so how does his leadership style compare to our commander in chief? that and coming up next, arizona senator john mccain and joe lieberman here to weigh in all of this, straight ahead.
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female announcer: recycle your old fridge and get $50. schedule your free pickup at: ♪ i'll stop the world and melt with you ♪ >> welcome back to welcome back to "hannity," the president's recent refusal to take any blame regarding the isis threat is just one example of him leading from behind. he too learn a thing or two from prime minister benjamin netanyahu. watch this. >> are you saying this is really not a war? >> what i'm saying is that we are assisting iraq in a very real battle. >> isis must be defeated. but to defeat isis and leave
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iran as a threshold nuclear power is to win the battle and lose the war. >> so rather than play whackamo and send u.s. troops, wherever this occurs we have to build strong partnerships. >> when militant islam succeeds anywhere, it is emboldenned sha. >> if we make the mistake of sending u.s. troops back in we can maintain peace for a while. >> once iran produces atomic bombs, all the charms and all the smiles will suddenly disappear. and it is then that the ayatollahs will show their true face and unleash their aggressive fanatacism on the entire world. >> joining me now, arizona
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senator john mccain and joe lieberman who is now an advisory board member for the counterextremism project. now that i have you both here, in 2008, did you consider this man as a potential vp choice? >> oh, absolutely, absolutely. and i would -- listen, i'm grateful for sarah palin, but i'm also grateful for joe lieberman and the wonderful work he has done for this country. and i consider him one of the finest men i have ever known. >> listen, i tried to say once i was his friend i nearly got him defeated in connecticut. >> in connecticut, when john said he is my friend it used to help me. >> exactly, this is our first time on television together, john and me, we talk to each other all the time, so this is -- i don't know if it is good, like simon and garfunkel getting
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together again. >> let me ask you, senator lieberman, no shock and awe, no boots on the ground, we're not at war with isis, it is not an islamic state. and he misses briefings 60% of the time, what do you make of this? >> well, the statements you just cited, sean, to me are really disappointing. because they come after a pretty good strong speech by president obama at the united nations in which he took some positions that he had not taken for the previous years, recognizing the broader threat of militant islam, violent islam coming from the community. finally doing what john and i had asked him to do for three years, which is giving the syrians weapons to fight in damascus. and talking about cutting funding for the terrorist groups and developing social media to try to convince young muslims not to join them, which is what
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this kind of extremism project that i'm involved with is going to do now. so when he goes on the air and does the 60 minutes and says some of the things you cite, it under-cuts that and we are at war. he himself said we're at war. >> why can't he say it? >> i don't know, maybe he is concerned legalistically if he says we're in a war then the congress has to authorize whatever he does. but you have to tell it as it is. and as it is -- >> let me ask senator john mccain, he misses 60% of his intelligence briefings, and plays more golf than sit in the meetings, he is warned about the consequences of leaving iraq, we lost 4,000 americans senator john mccain, the families have to be asking why tonight. >> and joe lieberman and i were in fallujah and ramadi where hundreds of americans were
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wounded and killed. the black flags of isis fly over those cities today. it is hard to talk to the families and brave veterans that literally put everything on the line. let me just say it is a bigger problem with this predent. this the dog ate my homework routine is getting a little tiresome. it started for six years with bob, blame it on bush, and then they have turned into super bowl contestants. he fails to realize that it is his policy and decisions that led us to where we are. when ryan crocker yesterday said, yes, we could have left a stabilizing force behind. these brave americans had stabilized the situation in iraq. isis was nothing when the president of the united states announced that we were going to withdraw everybody from iraq. and by the way, if he does what
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he says he is going to in afghanistan you will see the same movie. and that is just disgraceful. >> let me ask you both this question because i think both of you recognize senator lieberman, i know you recognize that these -- isis is islamic. >> right. >> i know you understand that we're at war with isis right now. i know you understand that the president ought to be reading his intelligence briefings every day. i know that you understand what happened in oklahoma and what happened at fort hood was not workplace violence, this was terror. >> terrorism, right. >> i want you -- because you have far more credibility with the white house than i do. advise this president, give him your best counsel. >> well, i don't know why these games really -- i spent a lot of time studying what happened at fort hood with major hasan. the man stood up and shouted and killed 13 americans and wounded a bunch of others.
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do you know of any time in recent memory when there has been a murder in the united states and they -- the murderer has cut off the head of the victim? >> no. >> this has -- >> three days after the leader of isis called for lone wolves to do it. >> it is not just a coincidence as we know. this is an individual who obviously had turned toward violent islam, by his own social media. >> so what is the answer? >> the answer is we have to keep shouting out. >> go to war, if we go to war should we win it? >> yeah, that is the only way to go to war. that is why i say i'm so disappointed. because the president in me in the address to the nation and the speech at the u.n. seemed to be turning in the right direction. two steps forward, maybe one step forward and two steps back. >> senator mccain, i supported the war in iraq and believe we won the war but i don't believe we kept the intelligence and training on the ground for the
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iraqi forces. i cannot in good conscience support a war if we don't plan to win it and maintain the victory. what is your advice? >> my advice, i got greedy with ralph peters. these are minimal strikes, we're asking 5,000 young syrians to go back in the fight and yet not protect them against bashar assad's barrel bombs. you know, we warned isis days ahead of time so the buildings were empty. and i promise you, we'll have to have boots on the ground. that does not mean units, but it means special forces and others, even in syria if we're going to prevail over isis and the way that this -- these airstrikes are being conducted reminds me of a war a long time ago and far away, my friend, called the vietnam war when gradual escalation caused us to lose it. >> all right, good to see you, guys. and coming up on this
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business news night, taking heat from capitol hill after the news broke yesterday that the white house intruder made it much further into the white house than people at first thought. and ebola is here in america. we have a report with a medical team straight ahead. the lightest or nothing. the smartest or nothing. the quietest or nothing. the sleekest... ...sexiest, ...baddest, ...safest,
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you're not doing anything as fast as you used to. do you need help? [doorbell chime] what is that? swiffer dusters... and it can extend so i don't have to get on the step stool. it's like a dirt magnet, just like my kids. i think swiffer definitely gave me some of that time back. ♪ every little thing she do is welcome back to "hannity," so new details are emerging surrounding the white house breach by this man, omar gonzales, a war veteran who reportedly suffers from ptsd. he has been homeless for sometime. we now know on september 19th, gonzales was able to climb the fence, jog across the lawn and walk into the front door, pass a female member of the secret service, walk into the east room and shortly after exiting back
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out of the east room well then gonzales was apprehended by an off-duty guard. and today, there was a very tense oversight committee hearing. >> i wish to god you protected the white house like you're protecting your reputation here today. >> how much would it cost to lock the front door of the white house? >> this is just processing a crime scene, director. this is not high math. this is processing a crime scene. you actually don't need 18 weeks of training to do that. you just need to walk around. >> director pearson, let me be frank. i believe you have done a disservice to the president of the united states. >> joining me now with reaction is fox news legal analyst peter johnson jr., and dennis prager is here, peter johnson jr., we
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have got to protect our president. >> at any and all costs, director pearson should resign today. i don't understand why she has not resigned as a matter of honor and duty and service to this country. she has to go. we need to protect our president. >> this is ridiculous. >> what part? >> sure, the fact that you would say she has to resign, this is a typical right-wing kind of attack. >> peters is a democrat, did you know that? >> right, i understand that. why say she should resign when we have to look from the bottom up, when you see this man who has a life of depression. >> it is not about this man. >> don't put your hand up to me, sean. >> i'm waving. >> two people who came back from iraq and afghanistan, we're not treating these people with depression. >> we're getting closer to delusional. >> what -- >> in the obama administration, the words "i take full
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responsibility" means i will not leave nor will anyone else. it is sort of orweillian talk and needed to be translated. >> if you look at the president throwing our intelligence agencies down the stairs, he needs a roger goodell moment where he says, i was wrong, i need to take responsibility. this was not the first incident. the secret service, it took them days to determine a gun had been fired at the white house in 2011, literally striking the building at least seven times including upstairs where the residence is. >> this is not where politics is. >> not at all. >> this is about our nation's legacy, about the president of the united states. the most powerful man in the world. the person we all rely on in this country. and to somehow say this is right wing -- >> i'll tell you what is right wing, and i am on that wing. it is right wing to say people should take responsibility for the consequences of their
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actions. >> because people don't believe -- >> that is right. >> let me move on, we now -- and we're going to have dr. segel on, our medical expert on the program. we now have a patient who tested positive for ebola. this is now getting serious, as far as i'm concerned. your reaction. >> well, i may surprise you. i am not as worried as most people are. in my lifetime. i have been like you, told of many terrible outbreaks of things that have never panned out. every ebola, to the best of my knowledge, every ebola person we have been able to treat has survived. >> we have. >> yes. >> but it is growing by leaps and bounds by countries that don't even have basic medical care available. >> it is a staggering tragedy in africa, i agree, i thought you were speaking about coming to the united states. but no, no, i agree. it is terrible and it has to be treated in any way possible.
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i agree. >> it is a test of our government health officials and i hope they pass with flying colors. we're counting on it. it took a lot of time to come up with ingredients, the group of medications to help people with aids. >> they blew this, with the development of drugs, they spent dozens of millions of dollars without even investigating it. >> you're not blaming me for this? >> it is great people have access to health care so they can go to the hospital and get treated, something some people didn't believe in equal access for everyone. >> that was not true. it was illegal to send somebody away from a hospital before obama care ever got on the scene. by the way, we still spent $2 billion on a website that still doesn't work right. >> and reading the articles, talking about how the zmapp drug was not working.
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the federal government -- >> okay, blame the federal government. >> facts are facts. >> if we're talking about africa, i have been to 20 african countries, i have a particular passion for africa. i came back recently from west africa and countries affected. the tragedy of africa is corruption in politics. this has nothing to do with republican or democrat. if they don't have the ability to treat people it is not for a lack of resources or talented people. their doctors go to europe because there is so much corruption. it is the curse of africa. and worse than ebola. >> and coming up tonight, major outrage after yale university hosted this man, a radical sheik, who advocated the killing of people. coming up next. and a heated hannity debate coming up. later, breaking developments, the first case of ebola
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>> welcome back to welcome back to "hannity," the liberal bashing yale university invited a guest speaker to speak about law. sheik ganushi who is the head of an islamist movement to headline the event. the sheik was the member of a group that endorsed the murder of u.s. troops, he was banned from the u.s. for supporting hamas, of course their charter says to do away with israel. is this the type of speaker the schools should be allowing to speak. joining me, columnist author pam gellar is with us, you know, mike, this guy shouldn't be in our country, we banned him once.
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how he ever got in here shows how stupid we can be here. people are coming from pakistan and don't you think this is a dumb thing that we're allowing this person to come speak at our university? >> no, sean, freedom of speech -- >> freedom of speech to call for the murder of american troops? >> you're an enemy of the country if you call for the murder of american troops. >> if you call for one to speak, you should call for everybody. >> if i called for your murder or somebody else, that is a terroristic threat, against the law. this guy -- we should not allow the enemies of america into this country anymore. >> sean, we cannot change the character of our nation. our constitution, we cannot change our nation for someone is. >> he called for the death of american troops.
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he was at -- that, to me, is being at war with this country. now he comes here to lecture us. all right, pam -- >> we need to be consistent, sean. >> we are consistent, our enemies can stay the hell out of us. >> i have defended pamela gella -- >> she never called for -- >> it is interesting -- >> they should do it. the film -- >> it is interesting that mr. ghouse, who has attacked my free speech would be once again shilling to savages, isn't it time -- >> let mayor talk. >> the fact is, he has advocated destroying america, saying israel belongs to muslims,
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praised the mothers of suicide bombers. let's talk about this school, the exemplar of the schools. notice no students were prote protesting unlike others. the academic landscape today welcomes radicals, welcomes subversives, and never do they invite -- they never invite pro-freedom speakers, why? >> yale has never invited me. and if i did i would probably protest. >> shouting into the world is not freedom of speech, sean -- >> this guy has called for the murder of americans. is that now not somebody who is at war with this country? >> this is the norming of jihad. look, under president bush he was banned. but we have a president who is aligned with the jihad force. >> how did he get a passport?
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how did he get in here? >> the same way tarik ramidan did. a grandmother being beheaded in the work place is work place violence. >> hey, you know what, mike? wait a minute, let's say he called -- instead of calling for the murder of u.s. troops and supporting hamas, a terrorist organization. what if he called for attacking a god forbid, a mosque. what if he called for killing muslims, would you still want him to speak at yale university? >> i sean -- you and i -- >> listen to me. >> he call fooded for a war aga muslims, would you want him speaking? >> absolutely, we should hear what he has to say. we can learn more from hearing from him than by banning him. we should not change -- we are
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americans. >> we are putting people in danger, don't you get that? >> no, sean, we are americans, we should be who we are and defend our rights. >> this shows that academia is hot beds of leftist and islamic propaganda. at no time -- pro freedom voices are never invited to speak, imam raouf, tarik ramidan, these are silver-tongued snakes. >> pamela -- >> how much are they paying him? >> plenty. >> all right, we have to go. >> and coming up tonight, breaking news, yes, it has been confirmed by the cdc that the first case of ebola has been diagnosed right here in th how big a threat is this to us here on american soil. we'll check in with our fox medical team, dr. mark siegal straight ahead. fifteen percent or more on car insurance. everybody knows that.
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>> this is a fox news alert, the cdc confirmed today that the first case of ebola has been diagnosed right here on american soil. >> today, we are providing the information that an individual traveling from liberia has been
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diagnosed with ebola in the united states. >> all right, here to tell us exactly what this means for you and your family is fox news medical 18 dr. mark siegal us with us, how are you? >> great to see you. >> the one good piece of news is the cases brought to emory hospital in atlanta were taken care of. in other words, people working there as aide workers. but now, this is the case that is over here. >> i don't consider it a big threat. i know everybody out there is afraid of this. and i know why, we're following the amount of people it killed in west africa. but the truth is, the difference is it came here on a plane, he didn't have symptoms, the first question people want to know what if i was on a plane coming from west africa. sean, the answer is, if the patient doesn't have symptoms, you are not going to get ebola.
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the tb, if you don't have symptoms, you can only get ebola by very close contact with secretions. so he got sick, when he got sick, he could transfer it. so the cdc is trying to figure who he had contact with, they're going to isolate this person and break the back of this. we have the best health care infrastructure in the world here still, even with obama care. >> but the problem is not in africa. because they have no medical infrastructure. >> for every patient that gets ebola in west africa two more people get it. that will never happen here. we understand isolation. we'll isolate. >> you think we'll isolate. >> remember when we knew nothing about aids and didn't know how it was transmitted. >> let me tell you the difference, i'm really glad you brought it up. the difference with hiv is you
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can transmit is without even know you have it. it is very easy to transmit it. here, the cdc says be on the lookout for the flu symptoms for somebody who traveled to west africa and suddenly gets sick, obviously, that will be a big economic disaster for them. >> let me ask you this, real quick, what about this mystery respiratory issue with kids in 40 states, real quick. >> well, i reported on that, i'll tell you about it, that is actually a pretty serious infection for kids with asthma. now we find kids could get paralyzed from that in very small numbers, because it is a kissing cousin of virus of polio. it is not polio, but it is not a surprise it could cause that. it is a nasty bug.
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>> how long will it take to recover? >> well, just about a week to recover. and usually after now after october it starts to go down. >> yeah, all right. dr. siegal, thank you very much. >> the fear is the big virus here, sean, that is what we have to control. >> coming up, more hannity, right after this break. people with type 2 diabetes
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along with diet and exercise, farxiga helps lower blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes. with one pill a day, farxiga helps lower your a1c. and, although it's not a weight-loss or blood-pressure drug, farxiga may help you lose weight and may even lower blood pressure when used with certain diabetes medicines. do not take if allergic to farxiga or its ingredients. symptoms of a serious allergic reaction include rash, swelling or difficulty breathing or swallowing. if you have any of these symptoms, stop taking farxiga and seek medical help right away. do not take farxiga if you have severe kidney problems, are on dialysis, or have bladder cancer. tell your doctor right away if you have blood or red color in your urine or pain while you urinate. farxiga can cause serious side effects, including dehydration, genital yeast infections in women and men, low blood sugar,kidney problems, and increased bad cholesterol. common side effects include urinary tract infections, changes in urination, and runny nose. ♪do the walk of life
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start your day with "fox and friends." as always, thank you for joining us, we'll see you back here tomorrow night. rrow night.e rec now. this is a fox news alert. it is here, ebola. president obama was briefed just moments ago about a patient inside this dallas hospital testing positive for ebola. now it is the first case of this highly contagious and deadly disease right here in the u.s. and the person who was sick came in contact with those on multiple flights on his way back to the united states. now they are on a mission to track down anyone, i mean anyone who could possibly have the deadly virus. john roberts is live in atlanta with the latest. john? >> reporter: this is what public health officials, greta, expected and feared all at the same time. finally coming to pass. there have been so many false alarms in the last few months, all ofhe