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tv   Americas Newsroom  FOX News  November 1, 2023 6:00am-7:00am PDT

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we'll set records, record lows overnight tonight 247 million below average. we'll warm up the temperatures over the next couple days. it is fairly quiet. although the northwest is starting to get wet for the next few days. flooding will be an issue. steve doocy, this afternoon i'm going to make tomato soup with your grilled cheese sandwiches. oh my goodness. it's so good. the best. >> brian: camp bells makes it. >> i will add my own grilled cheese. >> brian: five annual patriot awards november 16th. grand old opri in nashville. you can be part of "fox & friends" live audience show. >> thursday and friday. >> dana: fox news alert. could another 9/11 be looming on
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the horizon? a stark warning about the growing danger of terrorism at home as a result of the war in the middle east. good morning, i'm dana perino and good morning to you in d.c., bret. >> bret: i'm bret baier for bill hemmer. f.b.i. director christopher wray and alejandro mayokas delivering an assessment of the safety of american people on u.s. soil. wray says the increase in terror threats against america now at dire levels. >> we definitely believe there is a heightened risk of potential violence here in the u.s. especially from lone actors inspired by any number of foreign terrorist organizations or by domestic ideologies. i am concerned, as i said in my opening statement, that foreign terrorist organizations, traditional formal terrorist organizations, whether they be al qaeda, isis, or hezbollah,
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have all made statements that would indicate a greater risk of potential attack here by them. it is something we think heightened vigilance is warranted for. >> bret: fox team coverage. first eric shawn live from the new york newsroom. good morning, eric. >> good morning. warnings iran could launch a terrorist attack right here at home. they've tried it before. the regime in tehran has not only called for death to america but death to their opponents even if they're on u.s. soil. in 2013 an american iranian admitted he did plan with iranian officials to kill the saudi arabian ambassador to the united states by bombing a popular washington, d.c. restaurant in georgetown when the ambassador was dining there. three years ago. two iranian california men were sentenced for conducting surveillance and targeting u.s. officials at the national council of resistance of iran
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meetings in new york city and also a jewish group in chicago. last year the feds busted up an iranian plot to assassinate john bollton and tear rain has threatened the lives of former top federal u.s. officials. >> it is important for americans to understand that even before this conflict, we're dealing with an adversary that just in the past couple years has tried to kill a former u.s. national security advisor on u.s. soil, tried to kidnap and kill an american journalist smack in the middle of new york city, conducted a cyberattack against a children's hospital, and tried to interfere in the last presidential election as ratcliffe and i called out. >> there are fears hezbollah could strike because that's been heightened by the increased number of illegal aliens and immigrants caught at the
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southern border. those who have been on the department of homeland security terror watch list. so far this year this fiscal year, 160 have been nabbed. four iranians were caught and special interest aliens. no public confirmation any of them could be a member of a terrorist group. last week at the united nations listen to the iranian foreign minister. he hinted the u.s. could be tehran's target. >> i say frankly to the american statesmen who are now managing the genocide in palestinian that we do not welcome to expansion of the war in the region, but i vow if the genocide in gaza continues, they will not be spared from this fire. >> u.s. officials would not be spared from the fire, he said. one of the americans the regime tar guested was u.s. citizen,
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who is an american that lives in washington, the head of the national council of resistance of iran office and told me that yes, iran can strike anywhere they want and he says that does include right here in the united states. >> bret: eric shawn in new york. thank you. >> dana: bring in fran townsend, you were there on 9/11 and that worry about another 9/11 has been in existence from there. how much closer are we to that moment than we were even on september 10th? >> we really have always worried about the hezbollah presence in central and south america. 1992 they committed the bombing against a jewish site in argentina. they've always had a presence. when you see the rise in illegal immigration on the southern border that's part of what director wray is talking about. with what's going on in the middle east, these groups use these images, this propaganda,
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to inspire others who might either cross our southern border or already here to pull off an attack. anything from what we used to call a lone wolf, an individual inspired, to a group. and so with the iranian calls for it, the terror groups call for attacks against americans, with the increased attacks against our forces, 28 attacks against our forces overseas by iranians, we should be worried that there could be another attack here at home. >> dana: listen to admiral kirby and peter doocy yesterday at the white house. >> has the white house considered the possible that a terrorist could be in the country now after crossing the southern border snow >> we're always concerned about the potential presence on u.s. soil of terrorists coming from overseas. >> is it possible somebody who wants to commit a terrorist attack during a time of elevated threat crossed the southern
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border into the united states already? >> i couldn't possibly answer that question, peter. all i can do is tell you that we have remained vigilant to that potential threat. >> dana: you would have to be, right? look at the numbers. released into the united states after crossing illegally 900,000. total of 2 million. so we have that number. then on the terror watch list suspects caught at the southern border in fiscal year 23 alone 169. we do know that many are coming from venezuela. we also know as you just explained that hezbollah has a presence in south america including venezuela? >> that's right. they established this presence over a long period of time. i mentioned venezuela, argentina, we work with our allies throughout the region, but when you see this mass influx across our border, you realize how difficult it is to sort out who may be the biggest threats and who are just crossing economic migrants.
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>> dana: put your old hat back on, the top three things you would say we have to do right now? >> first you have to work with state and locals. we have the best police department in the country here in new york. but you have to give state and locals as much intelligence as they can to focus their resources. you have to talk to local synagogues and jewish centers to increase their own security. that is happening in new york all over the city. we have to be honest about talking about it. i think we have to be honest about the problem at the southern border. we have to really understand who are these more than 160 -- those on the terror watch list. >> dana: they're there for a reason. >> we ought to know where they all are and account for them but we don't. >> dana: thank you for being on with us today. we'll stay in touch with you as well. >> bret: federal agents have arrested a suspect in the disturbing case of threats made against cornell university's jewish community as anti-semitism surges on college campuses throughout the u.s.
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a lot of these stories. alexis mcadams is live outsued the jewish student center at cornell with more. good morning. >> good morning. you can see over my shoulder a police presence in front of one of those buildings. the student suspect in the case reportedly threatened according to law enforcement. this junior at cornell university is facing federal charges after he posted several online threats saying he would kill jewish students on this campus here. police have been on alert here, we've been talking with jewish students who are happy someone is in custody and hope it sends a strong message. >> since they caught them so quick people will not be emboldened and not do something like this in the future. >> cornell university in ithaca has been on high alert since investigators say a junior at the school posted online threats to shoot up the kosher dining hall.
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that was just one. he also wrote he would slit the throats of jewish students on cornell's campus. the f.b.i. and state police stepped in immediately. they used his i.p. address to track it down matching it to a dozen posts. one student tells me jewish students are concerned and worried for their long-term safety. >> they want new security mesh us on their windows. you know, we're installing here new security systems and locks on our doors to help protect our building. >> it's not just cornell dealing with the rise in anti-semitic threats. since the hamas attacks on israel on october 7th anti-semitic incidents in the united states have increased 400% according to the anti-defamation league. the american jewish committee saying schools can't try to appease everyone. they have to condemn these acts. >> it is not a matter of, you know, if there is going to be a future attack against jewish students on a campus, it is a matter of when and until they
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really step up and change the rhetoric and change their response, jewish students aren't going to feel safe on campus. >> finding out moments ago patrick dye will be in a federal courthouse in new york at 2:30 this afternoon. keep you posted on all the charges that will be talked about inside that courtroom. he could face up to five years behind bars for the threats. his dad said his son suffers from depression and said he had to take some breaks from school. they are talking about his mental fitness as well. >> bret: alexis, thanks. >> dana: israel hammering. >> bret: team biden reporting putin will win if they cut it for ukraine. >> dana: exposing government employees with a history of vile and anti-semitic remarks.
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why do they still have jobs on your dime? >> you have employees who are celebrating genocide and you are saying it's despicable for me to ask the question? has she been fired? >> that individual has been placed on administrative leave. >> she hasn't been fired. llo 12. 12 hours!! not coughing? hashtag still not coughing?! mucinex dm gives you 12 hours of relief from chest congestion and any type of cough, day or night. mucinex dm. it's comeback season. veteran homeowners. car payments are getting out of control. not long ago, you could pay off a car in a few years. now, car loan rates have climbed to 15% and can take five years to pay off. so get this, the newday 100 va cash out loan. our lower rates let you use the equity in your home to pay off high rate car and truck loans. and you can save $500 a month.
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>> bret: senior pentagon officials say the u.s. will deploy 300 more troops to the middle east on top of the 900 that were sent last week. this move is in response to increased strikes by iranian backed militia proxy groups on u.s. forces. there have been 28 individual attacks on u.s. forces in iraq and syria since october 17th. >> putin will not stop in ukraine. we know that. we all know that. so i think it's important to do what's necessary to support ukraine and israel and to help them defend their sovereign territory. >> dana: cautionary warning from defense secretary austin on cutting military aid to ukraine. president biden is requesting 106 billion security package from ukraine, israel, taiwan. congress is on a collision course over the proposed plan.
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let's bring in bridget brink. is what the president is asking for for ukraine, is that enough to help ukraine finish the job, meaning pushing back putin's troops permanently? >> dana, thank you so much for having me. i would just say that i completely agree with the president, our administration and i'm on the ground watching what is happening and supporting ukraine together with my team. helping ukraine push russia out and push russia back to the 1991 borders is a question for ukraine but it is in u.s. strategic interest that we help them do that. and we are there on the ground fighting with ukraine to help support this effort but without boots on the ground. we're doing it through provision of military assistance, security assistance, not money but arms and weapons to help the
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ukrainians fight. >> dana: secretary blinken talked about moscow using hamas to distract from ukraine. >> putin is trying to take advantage of the hamas attack on israel in the hopes it will distract us and will result in the united states pulling back its resources, pulling back its support and at the same time he is alied with the exact elements that are trying to wreak havoc in israel. >> dana: is that how the ukrainians see it? >> i think what we're seeing with russia is attacks on multiple front. there is a territorial attack in ukraine, a disinformation attack in europe and america, there is using energy as a weapon. there is using food as a weapon. so i think through a multiple kinds of ways russia is a serious adversary of the united states and all democratic nations and why it's critically important we support the
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supplemental and support ukraine. it is clear and simple from my perspective. if we don't continue to support ukraine, russia will win. with very serious negative consequences to u.s. security, to nato, european partners and allies and that's our fundamental number one trading partner in the world. >> dana: seems like there are two roadblocks. one is that you have members of congress, some members of congress, just a portion saying that americans if we are going to put money into other wars it should be israel at this point and let the european nations help support ukraine. are the european nations capable of doing that and willing to do that? >> yes, the european nations are doing more to support ukraine than america. we have provided a huge amount of support very importantly, not with boots on the ground but through security and other types of assistance, that amounts to $73 billion. european union has provided $82
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billion plus other partners and allies. we aren't doing this alone but with other allies around the world that strongly support freedom, that strongly support democracy. it is critically important from my view that the u.s. lead. i have been working in this region for almost 30 years and have found when the u.s. leads, europe and other democracies come with us and this is critically important to ukraine and also for israel. >> dana: one of the problems for ukraine has been this reputational damage about corruption. and sluggish efforts to combat corruption. what have you seen the zelensky administration do in ukraine to try to combat the actual corruption and can they overcome this reputational issue? >> i'll say three things. a long history of challenge of corruption in ukraine. frankly in the whole region. it's a soviet legacy issue that affects many countries. number one, the war in ukraine, russia's brutal, terrible aggression has really changed
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public perception about corruption and it is not tolerated. that is one reason why we are seeing and hearing more about it. i see that as a good thing. number two, the ukrainian president zelensky, his government and parliament have been doing many steps he have inwhile fighting this war to fight corruption, including now prosecuting a number of very senior officials and members of parliament. number 3, 1 of my core priorities as u.s. ambassador overseeing this assistance we're providing. i take that very seriously and solemnly. we have a third of our staff on the ground focused on oversight. we have the office of the inspector general from three different agencies also on the ground with us. i can say that not one piece of equipment has been diverted in a way that it hasn't been intended to be used. not one piece of humanitarian aid or any other direct budget support or other types of assistance. we're watching this like a hawk and we need to keep working
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closely but the ukrainians have been incredibly open with all of the security and other types of assistance so that we could have eyes on the ground on what's happening. >> dana: ambassador, thank you for joining us today. let you get back to your busy day. thank you. >> thank you. >> bret: egypt opens its border in rafah, southern gaza for the first foreign nationals trapped inside the gaza strip. we're live on the ground in israel with those new developments. plus this. >> i think they are. and you are seeing those fractures publicly and rashida tlaib flying the pal is tinian flag at her office and helped incite a riot and enraged those forces. >> bret: the white house breaking with the progressive wing of the democratic party over support for israel. could this risk biden's support from muslim-americans in 2024? that's next.
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>> dana: first group of foreign nationals allowed to leave gaza, among them critically wounded gaza civilians. mike tobin is keeping an eye on it and is in central israel with more. >> what i want to first show you is over my shoulder one of the iron dome batteries. you've seen countless interceptions. if a rocket is launched from the gaza strip and heads in this direction you will see a launch. all automatic. a lot of a.i. involved. you may see a rocket launch if it's triggered at this point. the rafah crossing is something we're very concerned with. hundreds of foreign nationals have crowded in the southern end of the gaza strip hoping to get out to egypt. some 80 people wounded or sick were getting out in ambulances that showed up at the crossing this morning. as far as the list of people who can get out, there is one
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reportedly circulating in the gaza strip but americans and british nationals are not on that list. you have a lot of people hopeful they will get out. not a lot of reason for optimism. a lot of fallout from the big strike that went in the refugee camp in the northern end of the gaza strip. hamas issued a statement claiming hostages were killed in the strike. they're part of the collateral damage. i was told that's a lie. israel is still paying a price for the combat inside the gaza strip. additional combat they lost two soldiers fighting two days ago. lost nine soldiers everynight. seven from one brigade and two from the seventh armored corp. >> bret: the war in israel splintering the democratic party. progressive democrats lambasting the biden administration for its staunch support for israel and it's right to defend itself. that divide potentially
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isolating the president from a major voting block in 2024. with us now fox news contributor guy benson and radio host leslie marshall. good morning, guys. leslie, what do you make of this? obviously there is a part of the democratic party and the progressive wing that is very vocal right now. is the president with his current support somehow alienating that voting block? >> temporarily. just when you look at the numbers you see arab american voter support in the democratic party has just plummeted for the president right now. we've even seen up to 17 percentage points within my party generally. decrease for the president. but president biden, his approval rating overall is not good. it is not just within the parity within the faction of this party. we've seen nancy pelosi in the past rein in people. hakeem jeffries can do the same
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whether defund the police, climate change. student loan debt. the list goes on. this is much more personal and much more emotional but some of these legislators are echoing the sentiments of some of especially the youth of their constituents growing more and more against the way israel is handling this. a lot of people are saying send in special forces, get the hostages out. target hamas, enough killing especially the children who comprise more than half of the gaza population. >> bret: a "politico" report yesterday, the headline. it said harris campaign aloams want her to call israel's gaza campaign a genocide. the vice president like other democrats is feeling some heat from her base. we should point out "politico" changed the headline today saying she had a contingency plan for campus protests over israel. that's the essence of it. there is pressure on the inside even from aloom --
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>> supporting israel is the right thing to do and glad they're doing it. politically speaking. most democrats are still for now in favor of israel but these key voting blocks, young people, muslim-americans are very much on the other side and some of them anti-israel. in some cases pro-hamas. especially among younger people, they are being fed this information that israel is prosecuting a genocide or israel represents an apartheid states. those are lies but they believe them deeply and reinforced on social media and angry at the president. they see him and the united states as complicit. i'm sure the white house and campaign are looking at those groups with a concerned eye while trying to follow u.s. interests and help the israelis.
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politically speaking, that it is a tricky situation with them. they're pleased we're a year away from an election. >> bret: we have a long time to go before the election. we forget how close everything was and even in this particular group muslim-americans support for president biden, then candidate biden, was 69%. if you do a breakdown, 69% of muslim-american voters backed in 2020. in arizona biden won by 10,500 votes, there is 110,000 muslim residents there. georgia biden wins by 12,000 votes, 123 muslim residents there. wisconsin 21,000, 69,000 muslim residents there. again then vice president biden candidate won 69% of them, leslie. >> yeah, but when you look at what's probably going to happen and who the choices are going to be for the muslim community, people of color whether native americans, african-americans
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also on the same side of this issue more pro-palestinians than they are pro-israeli will come down to a choice between most likely donald trump and joe biden. that won't even be a choice. if there is going to be any kind of push for a two-state solution which the president spoke to. if there will be any type of aid even trying to make right now corridors so that they can get supplies in over to the united states is a part of. i just don't see it being any contest between those two. so i'm not worried yet as a democrat that this would unseat joe biden for a second term. >> bret: no group is monolithic in how they look at elections. we have a long way to go. that's the caveat. it is interesting as the democratic party has this split. >> it is not necessarily a
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phenomenon 13 months down the road where a bunch of people in the voting groups flip over and support donald trump suddenly. it just takes a small but significant number of them deciding to vote for a third party or to stay home to be fed up with the democrats to give a real problem to the democratic party. part of the mentality here as well as democrats try to navigate this. >> bret: thank you. dana. >> the middle east region is quieter today than it has been in two decades. >> dana: that was u.s. national security advisor jake sullivan a month ago. now a very different story as intel leaders are warning about how the growing danger of terrorism is here at home. we're waiting for donald trump junior to enter the courtroom today. as you might remember, donald trump has been dealing with this lawsuit that the new york
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attorney general has brought against him in business practices that she said were fraudulent. president trump has been vase i have rousely denying that. the family gets dragged into it today and donald trump junior will arrive to court today. he will be seated this afternoon.
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the state department, secretary of state antony blinken meeting with the african union chairperson taking a lot of questions in french. the secretary of state sometimes has been talking about the situation in israel as they go into gaza. the secretary of state is going to israel this friday. expected to make a stop there as well as other places throughout the region as he has done before. we'll monitor this and see if there is any news about what is happening on the ground. dana. >> dana: bret, this is right up your alley. fox news power rankings out this hour. gop hopefuls stand one week out from the third debate. mark meredith is live in washington with the latest. has there been much movement, mark? >> not a ton of movement. interesting details in here. the latest fox news power ranksings reaffirming many of the polls. president trump dominating ahead
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of next year's primary. he is the frontrunner followed by florida governor ron desantis and former u.n. ambassador nikki haley. haley is seeing a rise in support coming tatty expense of someone she challenged on the debate stage, ramaswamy. he and two other candidates are experiencing what we're calling growing pains essentially struggling to break out and find a path to the nomination including governor chris christie and senator tim scott. trump is expected to do well in iowa, the first contest 75 days from today, if someone comes in as a strong second it could become a two-person race. governor desantis is confident his multiple trips to the hawkeye state will pay off. >> a lot of this stuff hasn't been glamorous or not gotten a lot of headlines. we go to small counties and meeting people and shaking their hand and answering questions. thats the way these things are won and lost. >> the former president remains busy on the trail while dealing with cases.
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tomorrow in house toon for a campaign event and skip the debate in miami but hold an alternative event in florida. five candidates have qualified to appear on stage one week from tonight. dana. >> dana: i got my stop watch ready. thank you. >> do you believe -- is the united states safer from foreign terror threats today, are we safer than when joe biden took office? >> i would say the terror threats have elevated but i also think there are a lot of things the country has done throughout law enforcement to be better prepared to deal with them. >> bill: christopher wray warning there is an elevated terror threat in the fallout of the mideast war as a new "wall street journal" report says the u.s. all but stopped spying on hamas in the years after 9/11. so did america take its eye off the ball? dan hoffman is a former cia station chief and joins us now.
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what about that question? did we take the eye off the ball when it comes to hamas specifically? >> i'm not quite sure that we did. i think we probably outsourced collection on hamas. that is, human source collection and perhaps signals intelligence, israel's backyard and they would have a comparative advantage. u.s. analysts, collection and analysis, u.s. intelligence community analysts should have been reviewing israel's raw human intelligence collection and then asking good questions like, for example, would israel's diplomatic engagement with saudi arabia perhaps be a trigger for hamas or hezbollah to step up attacks? they might have wanted to do a red cell where they determined whether israel's deterrence of hamas was something that would carry on and what would be the factors that might change that? u.s. intelligence community was
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on the hook for analytical product for the president to review. i think we'll certainly see during the hearings when they happen with the director of national intelligence whether they were able to do that or not. >> bret: a lot of focus on jake sullivan back in september and this sound bite about what he says during that time. >> we want to depressurize, de-escalate and integrate the middle east region. the war in yemen is in its 19 month truce. for now the iranian attacks against u.s. forces have stopped. our presence in iraq has stable. the middle east region is quieter today than it has been in two decades. >> bret: he did have the carve yet that all can change and it did change. a lot of focus on israel's lack or mistake or failure in intelligence. but we are a part of that, aren't we?
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in the not seeing the extent of this attack, and working with israel as you pointed out. >> right. i think i point out the tactical intelligence. there is a strategic intelligence failure as well where the policy, israel's policy and the united states policy was to work with our arab, sunni arab partners following up on the abraham accords rather than focusing on the palestinian issue. and that may have been a policy error. ultimately for israel, prime minister benjamin netanyahu will be the one on the hot seat for this for the policy failure as well as intelligence failure. >> bret: this is important. the post-war, post-hamas effort what it looks like with gaza seems like an important part of this puzzle. whether arab states are involved in what that looks like.
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>> they need to be involved. right now we're losing -- we're not losing the kinetic war but losing the information war. hamas and iran own the narrative. 1 way to drive a wedge between innocent palestinian civilians and hamas which has hijacked the palestinians in gaza is to have a post-hamas plan for gaza. and that has to involve regional neighbors like egypt and jordan, not to mention saudi arabia. we need to be talking about that right now or else we will face the consequences similar to what we faced in iraq with no post conflict reconstruction plan and we saw the birth of al qaeda and isis. it made reconstruction just about impossible for us. >> bret: dan hoffman, thank you. >> quite frankly, mr. secretary, i think that your performance is
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despicable and not willing to provide answers to this committee is at trocheous. >> dana: he called out mayokas for not firing a worker who praised hamas. jewish high schools are expressing fears about anti-semitism on university campuses. >> it's beyond me. it is really beyond me. the propaganda has become so insidious. this is what happens when you have your education and information on instagram and tiktok and on other forms of social media. struggle with cpap. you should check out inspire. no mask. no hose. just sleep. learn more and view important safety information at inspiresleep.com i was stuck. unresolved depression symptoms were in my way. i needed more from my antidepressant. vraylar helped give it a lift. adding vraylar to an antidepressant...
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so many hotels... [yells] [yells] [yells] trouble booking the family vacay? come on. comfort has free hot breakfast for the whole fam! they have waffles! and splendid pools! cannonball! >> dana: welcome back. fox news alert. vice president kamala harris is in london now giving a speech on artificial intelligence following the biden administration release of several point bulletin you could call it. executive order on artificial intelligence as the world grapples with how or whether to
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regulate it in the future. we'll monitor it for any news. >> bret: jewish new yorkers protecting flyers of hamas hostages from a man trying to tear them down. check this out. >> don't touch me. don't touch me. no, don't touch me. no, don't touch me. >> bret: that confrontation yesterday afternoon on manhattan's upper east side. police arrested the man charging him with harassment, disorderly conduct. resisting arrest. the incident may be investigated by the nypd hate crimes task force. >> dana: a jewish high school in new jersey will no longer allow college representatives to speak with their students unless the university has plans to insure the safety of jewish kids on campus. this comes amid a spike in anti-semitic activity on college campuses and a rise in threats against jewish students. let's bring in rabbi joshua
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khan. it is good to have you here. i imagine that this is a memo you never thought at the beginning of the school year that you would have to write. what have you wanted colleges to know since october 7th? >> thank you so much for having me on. it is not something we plan for but something that is of critical importance to us. we view our students like our children and need to know we'll send them to safe places that will care for them. >> dana: and i would imagine that you have heard some horror stories from students, alumni of the high school? >> we have heard feedback from students. what i would stress is there are two motivators from us. one we're deeply committed to education. we're an all-boys jewish high school in new jersey where all of our students go on to higher education. there is a quote in my office that hangs on my office from rob i jonathan sax. the chief rabbi of great
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britain. it says to defend the land, you need an army. to defend freedom you need a school. you need education. when the institutions of higher learning are under attack is scary to us. another factor, a week from now we'll commemorate 85 years since the night of broken glass when jews throughout europe were attacked. windows broken, houses of worship, businesses, homes, and we always say never again. we need to be able to take action to insure never again is a very real point of action, not just a slogan. so for us to take this stance was critically important. >> dana: i interviewed a young woman yesterday, a first year graduate school students at columbia and said it has been disorienting to her to see what has happened over the last month. listen to her here. >> is it strange to be in class and feel unsafe?
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>> absolutely. devastating. i personally don't know that i have the words really to convey this to people who are not immediately in it. but just as a sense it is -- i mean, i am in my home and i've been told now that this acceptance that i was feeling is conditional. >> dana: when colleges want to come to speak to your students, what will you look for? when they say they will protect your jewish students, what will make you think yeah, they understand it and get it? >> yeah, we're looking for a process by which a, they articulate a commitment from the school administration to protecting our students as well as an action plan. our statement stays clear of politics intentionally and focuses purely on safety. which is a topic that is universal and basic to value an
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education. we're looking for a school to explain to us how they will ensure the safety of our students and heartened by seeing some of the positive steps. governor hochul has been a leader in arresting the individual in cornell who had put out hateful and dangerous statements. very encouraging to us that hopefully higher education is moving in the right direction. >> dana: your students will know that you are in their corner and fighting for them. we appreciate you coming on the show today. thank you. >> thank you so much. >> the actions of hamas and its allies will serve as an inspiration the likes of which we haven't seen since isis launched it's so-called caliphate several years ago. >> dana: the head of the f.b.i. warning the hamas terror attack against israel has raised the attacks by violent extremists against americans here in the united states and around the world. welcome to a new hour of

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