Fox Guest EXPLODES: Will You SHUP UP? You're a MORON
LIVE on Air:
Wayne Rogers Calls
Michelle Fields Moron on
Fox News. ‘
Will You Shut Up?!’: Fox
Guest Goes Ballistic on ‘Moron’ Michelle Fields'.
WATCH: Wayne Rogers Calls Michelle Fields Moron on Fox '
The Cost of Freedom' in a HEATED Debate over Should US negotiate with terrorists?
ISIS demands $6.6M ransom for
American woman held hostage.
Eric Bolling’s
Saturday morning Fox News show
Cashin’ In got off to a heated start this week as former
M*A*S*H cast member and frequent guest Wayne Rogers threw down with Fox contributor Michelle Fields over the question of paying ransom to terrorists.
Rogers chimed in that he did not believe swapping prisoners counts as “negotiating” with terrorists. “Let me finish, for God’s sake!” he shouted at
Fields, throwing papers at the camera, as she tried to talk over him. “
Will you shut up?
What is the matter with you? Why do you have to talk all the time?”
Fields continued to make her case, but ultimately Rogers got the last word. “It is not negotiating, but you’re a moron because you talk to much and you don’t think through it,” he told her, pulling out his earpiece as the segment came to an end.
ISIS Demands $6.6M
Ransom for 26-Year-Old
American Woman
(
ABC) A third American hostage held by ISIS has been identified as a 26-year-old American woman who was kidnapped a year ago while doing humanitarian relief work in
Syria.
The terror group is demanding $6.6 million and the release of
U.S. prisoners for the life of the young woman, whom a representative for the family requested not be identified.
She is the third of at least four
Americans who were known to be held by ISIS, the
Islamic State of Iraq and Syria. American journalist
James Foley was executed by the group in a video that appeared online last week. Another writer,
Steven Sotloff, was seen alive but under duress in the same footage.
In addition to the multi-million dollar ransom, the terror group has also demanded that the U.S. release
Aafia Siddiqui, an MIT-trained neuroscientist who was convicted by the U.S. in
2010 of trying to kill U.S. officials two years before, according to a supporter of Siddiqui who has been in contact with the hostage’s family.
Siddiqui’s release has been a regular demand of groups critical of
U.S. policy in the
Middle East and
Southwest Asia, but Monday Siddiqui’s family spoke out through supporters to say they were “very distraught” Siddiqui’s name was invoked with the ransom request and sought to distance themselves from ISIS
.
“If the issue is true, we would like to state that our family does not have any connections to such groups or actions,” reads a letter written by Siddiqui’s family. “We believe in a struggle that is peaceful and dignified. Associating Aafia’s name with acts of violence is against everything we are struggling for.”
“While we deeply appreciate the sincere feelings of those who, like us, wish to see the freedom of our beloved Aafia, we cannot agree with a ‘by any means necessary’ approach to Aafia’s freedom. Nor can we accept that someone else’s daughter or sister suffer like Aafia is suffering,” the letter says.
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Unit.
The Siddiqui family has been “traumatized by the thoughts that someone else could be harmed in the name of Aafia,” said
Mauri Saalakhan of the
Peace and
Justice Foundation, who held a sparsely attended press conference Monday and spoke on behalf of the Siddiqui family.
“They’re opposed to it. In their letter to ISIS they made it very clear, this is not the way, these are not the conditions under which we want our loved ones released,” Saalakhan said. “Nor did they want harm to come to anyone else’s loved one in the name of Aafia… They conveyed that message loud and clear.
“The most important message that I could convey to ISIS or whoever it is that’s holding these innocent people captive abroad is that at the end of the day, this type of approach in response to an injustice that you feel, is not only not the inappropriate way to go, but, properly understood, it is a violation of the tenets of the faith that we claim to believe in,” he said. “We just have to do the right thing because it is the right thing, without any strings attached
.. And the right thing would be to let this young woman go back to her family, go back to her life. And the right thing for
America to do, for our government… would be to do the same with Dr. Aafia Siddiqui.”
The details of the ISIS ransom demand and the abduction of the young aid worker were disclosed by Saalakhan and a close friend of the unnamed hostage family in statements to
ABC News Monday.
live on air tv camera footage video