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tv   Americas Newsroom  FOX News  February 6, 2024 6:00am-7:00am PST

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shirt that he saved his money for. later on life would bring me opportunities to not only meet him but sing on stage with him and sing should have ben a coy bow. he was everything that 13-year-old kid wanted him to be and more. the world is -- we're all mourning this one. this one hits really hard. >> steve: he leaves some mighty big boots. thank you very much for joining us on this sad but very busy day. >> thank you all. thanks for having me. >> ainsley: we'll miss him. he was a great. red solo cup, courtesy of the red, white and blue. should have been a cowboy. >> 40 million albums, 60 singles, 20 number one hits. god rest his soul. he was 62. >> bill: good morning, everybody. 9:00 in new york. right now in a manhattan
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courtroom we'll see alvin bragg this hour laying out evidence against migrants charged in the beating of two police officer in new york about a week ago. others throughout the country. breaking overnight a major update on the hunt for his alleged accomplices. we'll show you the picture we got. good morning. tuesday, i'm bill hemmer and good morning to you. >> dana: good morning. great to be here with you again. dana perino and this is "america's newsroom." the attack on police has fueled outrage across the country. investigators believe more than a dozen people were involved. the suspect in court this morning was the only one held on bail. >> bill: we got word last week some of the accused may have skipped town on a bus to california. we didn't know if it was true until ice confirms it arrested several suspects at a greyhound station, in phoenix, arizona. >> dana: more criticism of releasing them without bail in the first place. >> you hold people until you
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figure out exactly what happened. all we know is there were new york city police officers beaten on the ground by migrants and that's not acceptable. anywhere. i want them to go through the justice system. i want them prosecuted and convicted. i want them to do time in jail and then we deport them. >> dana: joe is here on set. cb cotton is outside the courthouse in lower manhattan. good morning. >> good morning. a big break in the case indeed. our colleagues report some of the migrants suspected in this assault on a pair of new york city police officers have been arrested in phoenix, arizona more than 24 hen miles away from new york city. a source sharing this photo with fox news. the men handcuffed on the ground after being arrested at a greyhound bus station. police sources told us investigators believe some suss peptase charged and released in
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the case were bound for california. the only suspect held on bail who was charged with robbery and felony assault is expected to be back in court today. prosecutors requested his bail set at $15,000 and cited his previous arrest record and lack of strong community ties. prosecutors say he was the man in the yellow jacket who resisted arrest causing the brawl to begin. this case starting a political firestorm with some new york lawmakers calling on the city to resume cooperation with ice so migrants who commit crimes can be more easily deported. new york city mayor eric adams says the city council will have to take it up. >> i don't have the power. there is a law in the city. you know my rule, follow the law. a law in the city that states what we can do with migrants and asylum seekers and undocumented. that's a law. i didn't pass that law. >> meanwhile we could see
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indictments secured today against some of the suspects in this case with manhattan d.a. alvin bragg presenting evidence before a grand jury today. nypd tells us it is looking for seven more suspects. >> dana: thank you. >> bill: joe is a new york city council minority leader. we're looking for more. 14 in total involved in all this. what do we understand how they got out of town and who helped them? >> this isn't the bug of the system. this is the feature. the feature is we don't necessarily cooperate with ice. the mayor in the clip is legally right. the city has laws in place that were passed in 2011, 2014, 2017 and 2022. the net result is new york city police department and the new york city department of corrections cannot cooperate or communicate with ice. that's how these guys got away. they were either beat the system and got away quickly or were arrested and released on their own recognizance that poses a
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greater challenge. alvin bragg admitted they have criminal history and few if any ties to the communities. >> bill: sounds like a bad system. >> it's terrible. it needs overhaul. unfortunately with the progressive woke city council it is probably not going to happen. it will probably have to get done through a court system or through a change in state law. if the governor is so confident these people should be in jail and deported she has some of the power and some of the authority to make this a priority this year. go to the state legislature and make sure we cooperate with ice. >> dana: the one who could fire alvin bragg who let them go in the first place. >> he came in on day one. didn't mince words. in fairness ran for office on the fact he would make these changes. day one he put his post-it note on the church wall saying i'm not going to prosecute for these crimes any longer. no surprise to anyone who follows criminals, criminals took advantage of this situation and now they are running amuck
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whether migrants or home grown criminals. >> bill: here is the new york city field office director for ice that you just had strong words for. listen. >> there are hundreds of people a week being arrested throughout the city and if we can't determine which one is being, you know, the most violent, we have to find out unfortunately through the media, through the newspapers, through the television outlets. it alerts us to start digging deeper. >> what he is saying. he said in that clip before those words he said that he found out about this assault on the police department from watching news reports of what happened. there is no communication. the nypd was issued about 105, 110 ice detainers every year from immigration enforcement. the number of ice detainers we processed and gave the people is
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0, not one single person in 2022 and not one single person in 2021. this is the fundamental problem. these are people that even the governor will now admit should not be here, should be deported. bad people and yet we now have legal prohibitions on cooperating with the federal law enforcement agency tasked with removing these people from our streets. >> dana: i just want you to listen to nichole malliotakis from staten island. on our show yesterday about additional crimes bringing down quality of life in the city. >> another incident about a woman who has been arrested eight times for pick pocketing. that individual has been repeatedly released back onto the street because of the ridiculous bail laws of our state. and then she goes back to the luxury hotel room that the taxpayers of the city are paying for. >> dana: i would love to know what you hear from constituents.
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are they calling you? are they upset? >> they're frustrated. not just republicans like we represent who are mad. people who live on the upper west side of manhattan and everywhere. people are getting sick and tired of seeing these people violate our laws. the vast majority come for the right reasons but there are a chunk of them that flout our laws consistently and repeatedly and commit petty crimes on mow pedestrians and assaulting police officers. we have no ability to turn them over to ice and get rid of them. >> bill: it's remarkable. >> we'll end up paying for legal fees, jailing, so on and so forth. >> as of january 7th, the city had 69,000 migrants in their care which i'm assuming most of them living in shelters, right, under the city's jurisdiction. how do we either absorb them or -- what is the endgame here, joe? >> the mayor implemented a 60
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day eviction process. it started to work for the first time in a year. >> bill: where do they go? >> some qualify for other programs. some will do paperwork to become citizens. most people will work off the books, find an apartment, go on with their life without ever coming in contact with u.s. immigration and customs. >> they're absorbed in the day-to-day life of the city's population in new york. the city, new jersey or somewhere else in the state of new york. >> dana: crazy. joe, thank you. the proposed senate deal for border security is getting mixed reaction to say the least. jeff paul live in eagle pass, texas. >> while lawmakers in d.c. continue debating the merits of this new border deal as you can see the actual work here at the southern border continues and so does the flow of migrants. but we are learning that the man who represents roughly 18,000 border agents, well, he says he
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supports this new bill. brandon judd, the president of the national border council, says he is endorsing at least the section that deals with the border crisis. he says it's not perfect. it is a step in the right direction and far better than the current status quo. the border union believes the deal would drop illegal boarding crossings nationwide and judd said he hopes for its quick passage. fox news also obtained an internal memo where the acting cbp commissioner called the deal the strongest set of tools they have had in decades. when you talk to some of the folks who live on the rio grande they feel differently. one family we talked with along the border in del rio says the deal simply doesn't go far enough. >> for us on the river, it will not affect us, security, help, make us feel better, communication. that's not going to help any of us. right here in del rio.
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>> they don't care about us, especially since we're on the river. you chose to live there so you suck it up. >> state of texas, however, is not waiting around. this is new video of a border fence the state is building right there in del rio. governor greg abbott says texas is the first and ever state to build its own barrier like this. we haven't seen quite amount of traffic we've seen in the last couple of years at the border right now, you can probably hear and see the barriers and all the razor wire that the texas national guard is putting up, that work continues. >> dana: jeff paul in eagle pass. >> bill: back in washington we go now where the republican led house rules committee voting to advance impeachment proceedings against alejandro mayorkas yesterday. a vote may go before the full chamber as early as today. cameras are rolling and we'll get you the updates as they come in. a long time since we've been in
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this territory. king charles cancer diagnosis rocking the u.k. what those close to the monarch are said to be saying about his current frame of mind and how he is doing today. plus this. >> we looked outside and there is a foot and a half running water outside the house. it started seeping through the doors. my car is in five feet of mud. >> too much rain and not enough places for it to go. >> dana: a live report from los angeles in an extremely dangerous situation unfolding right now. >> bill: sad day in the world of country music mourning the loss of 62-year-old toby keith. he struggled for 18 months with cancer. now we have lost him to the heavens above. how his fellow musicians are paying tribute today. ♪ 27 vitamins and minerals,
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♪ ♪ i love this bar, it's my kind of place ♪ ♪ just walking through -- >> bill: spotify list during the commercial break here. dana, you've got -- >> dana: memories. >> bill: a good dozen songs >> dana: in college i was a d.j. and should have been a cowboy was one of the top hits. one of my favorite songs ever. he was a giant of a man, a wonderful person. >> bill: william la jeunesse looks at the life of toby keith this morning in los angeles. >> good morning, bill and dana. that was the most played country song of the 90s that you just mentioned.
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you were probably part of that, right? keith said in a recent interview his christian faith helped him get through several rounds of radiation, chemotherapy and surgery after that stomach cancer diagnosis two years ago. he is survived by his wife of who years tricia and three children. larger than life country star friends called him the big dog. hits include i want to talk about me, beer for my horses. red solo cup and should have been a cowboy. here he is on "fox & friends" in 2011. ♪ >> a workaholic and cancer knocked him off stage for two years but returned for his final concerts in las vegas in december. keith wrote or co-wrote most of his songs including 20 number one hits. he sold more than 40 million
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albums worldwide and was inducted into the songwriter's hall of fame and that for him was a big deal. >> it's the big one. being recognized while you are alive and to enjoy it with your family. this is the only one i care about. i don't do award shows very often. they are all organizations and politically you have to go kiss everybody's rear and all that. >> courtesy of the red, white and blue keith wrote in response to 9/11 and the death of his father who was killed in an automobile accident earlier that year who was a vet. ♪ ♪ brought to you courtesy of the red, white and blue ♪ >> born and raised in oklahoma, keith worked alongside his father as a rough neck in the oil fields out of high school. he was a rodeo hand, played semi
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pro football to support his family. started a band with friends around age 20 and played local bars. tried to get into nashville and didn't until a flight attendant slipped a cassette to the right music producer and his career took off. according to his family keith passed away peacefully last night. he fought with fight, courage and grace and built a cancer center for children. he will be remembered more as just a musician. a legend is lost. he was 62. >> bill: great life. remembering toby keith. dead at the age of 62, thank you. >> it's sad. i think it's something the families have experience with. >> i imagine when they release the news means he will probably be okay. overall, i hope he is all right. >> bill: a bit of a stunner. london expressing sadness and
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well wishes as buckingham palace as they announce king charles has cancer. prince harry flies out of los angeles to london to see his father today. greg palkot live in london with reaction and maybe a prognosis of sorts. greg, good morning to you. >> hi, bill. the front page of our sister newspaper the sun typical of every paper here. sun saying king, i have cancer. as king charles iii and the rest of us entered day two of the new reality he was diagnosed with some form of cancer. encouraging news. we were already hearing the cancer was caught early. friends of the king quoted saying he and his doctors are very positive. remember the cancer was discovered last month when being treated for an enlarged prostate. he had his first out patient treatment yesterday. he is doing royal paperwork and seeing visitors today. all the royal family is
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gathering around prince harry putting ill feelings aside flew in from california and already here on the ground. queen camilla will stand in for him for public duties as well as prince william as always. he is also tending to his wife recovering from abdominal surgery. reaction was fast and farm around the world. president biden posting in part navigating a cancer diagnosis takes hope and absolute courage. former president trump sending his wishes for a fast and full recovery. wishes shared in a lot of quarters right now. >> bill: more to come from london. thank you. >> dana: more on this let's bring in daily mail's u.s. associated tore -- he remains positive about his treatment and looks forward to returning to
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public duty as soon as as possible. >> we understand everyone is feeling as hopeful as you can when it comes to a cancer diagnosis. buckingham palace has been very careful with their statement to insure they're putting forward very hopeful and positive vibes. no doom and gloom and no panic and avoided sharing specifics about his cancer. they haven't said the type and that their attempt to prevent people from speculating about survival statistics and things like that. >> bill: eventually that leaks out or is announced, correct? >> absolutely. the truth of the matter is they're giving charles the autonomy to take control of the matter. he is a very private person. he only really speaks about his health conditions when he feels it will help others. so they will give him an opportunity to get through his treatment. to really come out on the other side feeling healthier and happier than he does right now then he will have the opportunity to share more details about what he has been through when he feels ready.
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>> dana: maureen callahan wrote that prince harry, in america but on his way there, he said isn't just needed at this moment. he is very much wanted. let's hope the self-proclaimed -- recognizes how important he is and all that he can be to his family and country if he is allowed. not a story about prince harry but the drama there is real. >> absolutely. the one silver lining that may come out of this whole thing is that harry is able to reconcile at least some of his relationship with his father. we know they are not in a good place. they have not been in a good place for a long time. situations like this are things that help us to really see what's important. what really matters. i think harry getting on a plane, flying to london. he landed an hour or so ago hopefully is an indication he realized his own personal vendetta about the royal family isn't what matters.
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>> he said my father and brother are trapped. they don't get to leave and i have huge compassion for that. things change when reality likes this happens. i think the last point to be made here is that there is a focus on william yet again and i think it really started during his grandmother's funeral. >> absolutely. charles has ascended to the throne at a very old age. we hope he remains on the throne for many, many years to come. everyone is looking ahead to william. what he will be as a king and situations like this where a lot of pressure is on his shoulders really gives him an opportunity to shine as awful as that sounds. because he is really bearing almost all of the burden of the monarchy right now. charles is out of action, kate is out of action. william is the only sole remaining person to carry the monarchy through what is a very tough time. >> bill: well done, charlie. nice to see you in person. so the alleged long island serial killer set to appear in court any moment now.
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we're watching that for developments here locally. plus now you see him and now you don't. where exactly is joe biden? as major events swirl around him at home and overseas, some suggest the disappearing presidency. others suggest a new strategy. we'll find out which one is right next. >> he will be 82 day of the next election, 86 if you are successful and elected and finish that term. does it give you any concern? >> watch me. that's all i can say. oung man wanna be - a cowboy or a gangster. and a gangster's outta style. i got back to my roots... we come from a long line of cowboys. my grandfather, my great-grandfather, my aunt even rode horses. when i see all of us out here on this ranch, i see how far our legacy can go.
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>> dana: torrential rain triggering landslides and flooding around los angeles. max gordon is there and as the sun comes up, it might not look too pretty. >> absolutely not, dana. we're on the scene of a landslide in beverly glen in los angeles where there is steep terrain. right now the ground is absolutely soaked. it is giving way in some areas. there have been more than 300 landslides throughout los angeles, a state of emergency is in place. you can see the destruction here in beverly glen. this home has been red tagged. four others across los angeles have been red tagged as well. seven other homes have been damaged. people are allowed to go in and get belongings. luckily here no one has been hurt by these landslides but this truly has been a statewide disaster after inches of rain have fallen in some areas of the state. in northern california, 150,000 customers are without power
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there after trees fell into power lines knocking out electricity. three people are dead in northern california, this after trees fell on people. one person in santa cruz county had a tree fall on their home killing him. two others in the sack are men tow area killed by falling trees. in southern california the rain does continue to come down. there is good news. in ventura and santa barbara counties evacuation orders have been lifted and people can go back to their homes. in l.a. the landslide risk remains. the soil is so saturated that even after the rain leaves the region, there will be a significant risk that the land could still slip away. back to you. >> dana: max gordon. thank you. fox weather is your winter storm headquarters, stream it on your favorite connected device. free and on 24/seven. i love it. >> bill: a great app. check it out. momentous events have r
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happening in the u.s. and around the world. where is biden? bit off stage from the main attraction. karl rove talks about it. nice to see you today in austin, texas. you have no super bowl interview, bombings overseas, the south carolina primary where he was invisible. how do you see this strategy? is it the right one? >> well, i see part of it. look, if you've got no contest on the democratic presidential primary side winning 96% of the vote in south carolina. no need to jump up and down about that. let the process go. but there are big things that the american people want to hear from their president about. they want to hear what we're doing to respond abroad to the attacks on american service personnel in jordan. they want to know what's going on in the middle east, what is going on with ukraine. they want to know what the
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priorities are of the president. so him being silent about all of these things is a little unusual. missing the opportunity to sort of set a big message with his interview in the super bowl, which has been sort of an historic norm for past presidents is really unusual. so i don't expect him to be out there every day and i don't expect him to be talking about everything but he ought to pick out the things most important for advancing his own cause and for the country understanding what is going on in this dangerous world in which we live. >> dana: not sure he is capable of doing that, karl. do you think he is setting the ground work to not debate the republican nominee especially if it is president trump? >> well first of all, you put your finger on it. by not doing these things it raises questions of why you aren't doing them. the most easy explanation for us is he is too old and not up to it. remember, 3/four of the american people think he is too old to be president. and nearly 2/three of the
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american people think he lacks the stamina and mental acuity to do an effective job as president. this is a problem. his absence from the stage explaining what he wants to do and why he wants to do it adds to the doubts about him. maybe he is laying the predicate for not debating donald trump. maybe he is laying the predicate for stepping aside. i don't know. but the fact of the matter is when the president sort of disappears, as he has disappeared over the last couple of weeks or lowered his profile, people wonder why in a presidential year, you would think the president would seize the moment to lay out his message to the voters. >> bill: you have to think if this is the longest campaign in presidential history, you have to think what's biden's strategy going to be? if trump beats nikki haley in quick order, what is his strategy going to be? here is what has biden done to date. the media was talking about this. you never hear about it anymore.
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the number of press conferences he has held, 33 compared to trump 53, obama 66. you have the moment and maybe it goes to your first answer, karl. you had this moment in las vegas on sunday. watch. >> president biden: right after i was electsed i went to a g7 meeting all the nato leaders and sat down and said america is back. and the prime minister of france looked at me and said -- said -- you know -- what -- how long are you back for? >> so there were a lot of moments in that speech that >> he is having a conversation with a guy who has been dead since 1996. the former head of france. this is strange. >> bill: maybe that's the reason why you see the press
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conferences so low. they are protecting him. that's the only thing that makes sense. >> absolutely. that's why you pick and choose. it's one thing to put him into a press conference where he will mess it up. another thing to put him out there in a political speech where he tends to get out of control and say things like that. i had a conversation who died in 1996 when i became president in 2021. you can put him in -- have him make remarks to the country. you can have him make a prepared speech. you can issue a prepared statement. you can have him answer a few questions from a reporter. but this is -- the absence from the stage is just going to simply raise doubts about his ability to do the job. that's the biggest problem he has got. he is seen as weak and feckless because he doesn't explain what he is doing and when he does he
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said he had a conversation with somebody who died in 1996 when he became president in 2021. >> bill: thank you, karl. nice to see you. >> dana reads sports. >> dana: san francisco 49ers interest in tom brady last off season was very real apparently. the head coach revealing the team was serious in pursuing the future hall of fame quarterback following the injury of brock purdy in the nfc championship game last january. that's mute at this point. purdy will take the snaps behind center -- when the 49ers play the kansas city chiefs in the super bowl this sunday from the -- >> bill: i wonder if there was a conversation or did brady respond to that? >> dana: probably. >> bill: do you like mahomes or purdy? mahomes has been there, won before. purdy was the last player drafted in the nfl draft.
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third string quarterback in san francisco. >> dana: i don't know. i know that you are going for -- i know who you are going for so i'll pick what mobiles. >> bill: we're cheering for players, not teams. >> dana: okay. there is a lot of rules to these games. >> bill: it's fun. i'm cheering for a play and brock purdy. see how it goes. biden team trying plan b on student loans to skirt last year's supreme court ruling. testing the new apple vision pro. is this the next big thing? carley shimkus and tom shillue here to share their thoughts. come on in. ♪ because there are places you'd rather be. farxiga can cause serious side effects, including ketoacidosis that may be fatal, dehydration, urinary tract, or genital yeast infections, and low blood sugar. a rare, life-threatening bacterial infection
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>> bill: so the white house will
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take another bite of the apple announcing it will use a new regulatory process to cancel student debt for people experiencing financial hardship. warren and others advocating to the plan to direct relief to the most vulnerable borrowers. how will it work? we have a look at that. >> the biden administration is moving forward with their plan b for student loan forgiveness. the new plan is being established under the higher education act and it will consider hardship as a basis for forgiveness. to survive a legal challenge they're trying to stay in compliance with rules and hold a rulemaking session with public comments later this month. they'll discuss what qualifies as hardship. some of the things that could be discussed are being in bankruptcy, being a pell grant recipient. a history of earning minimum income. those in opposition to this move say the supreme court rules that student loan forgiveness is
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unlawful without congressional authorization. that's exactly what the president is pursuing. >> if the president is going out and trying to cancel the principle balance of anybody deeming to be in financial hardship he will be running afoul with the law. the pre-existing law does not allow cancellation of any amount of principle balance. >> even without this next step the biden administration has been able to forgive over $136 billion in student loan debt through various measures. this new move could be the latest and largest. after the rulemaking session concludes the education department is expected to release their final regulations on student loan forgiveness this may. >> bill: madison, thank you, nice to see you in new york. >> apple rolls out the vr and mixed reality headset. social media influencers are getting a first look at the
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apple vision pro. carley shimkus and tom shillue are here with us. johnny was wearing one yesterday in the office and i walked by and i said how is it going? he said i'm a little dizzy but able to see you and curb your enthusiasm at the same time. it's a little clunky. >> until an hour ago this is crazy, who would want to wear these? this is sci-fi and never take off. then i conducted non-scientific poll in the "fox & friends" green rooms and spoke to brian kelly, 25 years old. he says this is the future. i've already set up an appointment at apple to try them on to see if i want to spend the money. lawrence jones walks in and said i already bought them on friday. he can't wait to go home today to put them back on. other corner of the room sean duffy gets curious about this and asks lawrence if you can watch a movie on them. he said i watched a whole season
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of chicago tv. sean duffy is interested in it. i think it is the next cell phone. we aren't going to be grabbing for these. we'll be putting a contact lens in our eye one day and cell phone will be there. >> bill: might be the next tv, too. >> the next everything. >> bill: $35 hundred right now. high level executives at apple who believe this is the single best device they've ever produced. >> i love what we're doing here. i totally disagree with carley. it's a big loser. these things will inhuman. people are tired of it. i don't like covering the face in any way and people had a visceral reaction when we had the mask thing. covering the face is an inhuman thing to do. when you see people with these on they become less human. also, i understand that there is a place in the world for virtual reality. i've worn the goggles when i go to an air show and they put you behind the cockpit.
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that's fun and go for training. they're great in medical training. technology, things like that. this augmented reality is a loser. there is a reason that mark zuckerberg went down in flames with meta because there is no real consumer applications for the meta verse. people want to contact family on facebook, meta verse is a loser. augmented reality. look at that inhuman person. it is horrible. steve jobs first of all these things are ugly. steve jobs had a great aesthetic. he wouldn't have fallen for this. he was a very human person and believed in human and reality. when you look at the applications that they push for this they talk about people taking them on hikes and then they can examine the trees and do bird watching. nobody wants that garbage. nobody wants it. >> i agree with you in that my initial reaction is i hate this because it does take you away from reality. at the same time, i do think that the reality is that this
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will be what will be coming down the road in the next ten or 20 years. i think it is what our kids will be doing. it won't look like this. smaller glasses and become a contact lens that you can't even see. so you have your cell phone in your eye, watch tv with another eye and -- this is the concern here is that this scans your face. the good news is that if somebody feels these you can't wear them. the bad news is it scans your face. the company has a full digital scan of your eye and are we going down the -- >> bill: the debbie downer with the rebuttal. >> guys like me, cabin in the woods, shotguns, killing my own food. >> bill: thank you, tom. thank you, carley. >> we shall see. >> bill: the worsening border crisis has consumed the nation's attention from the hill to big
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>> dana: thousands of employees in the nation's capital being forced to cut back on remote work. rampant crime in d.c. makes that a dangerous move. >> summer of 2021 many city workers in d.c. have been working from home for two days a week. starting next month the mayor's policy cuts it down to once a week. city's h.r. department me to enhance community engagement and boost local economy. unions representing city employees are saying this isn't going to fly. any increase of time spent in d.c.'s downtown increases the chances of workers falling victim to violent crime.
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>> i would have to come into an area where they really are worrying about, you know, will they be affected by crime, especially violent crime. it is an issue. i hear about it daily when i talk to my members. >> in 2023 carjackings doubled in the district. homicides increased by 35% with violent crime up 39%. this afternoon d.c. city council holds their first vote on a massive crime bill called secure d.c. increase penalties for gun-related crimes. adds new felony classifications for organized retail theft and expands the amount of time violent offenders, including juveniles, are held before trial. the initial vote comes on the heels of a deadly carjacking spree that claimed the lives of two fathers, mike gill, a former trump and obama official. >> bill: tourism officials
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jamaica and bahamas are upset that they're issue level three advisories because of rampant gang violence and high homicide rates. they insist they're safe for the tourist hot spots which they have been known to be. so you have that. >> dana: high risk travel advisory for nothing. >> bill: off we ride. >> dana: speaker mike johnson said to hold a weekly press conference with the push to impeach homeland security secretary alejandro mayorkas over the border crisis. front and center of vote is expected today in the house. welcome a again to another hour of "america's newsroom." i'm dana perino. >> bill: good morning. how are you doing? >> dana: great. how are you? >> bill: i'm bill hemmer. good morning at home. house floor now open for the day paving the way for votes on two articles of impeachment. time is of the essence. in the last week alone, illegal immigrants overwhelming cities with chaos and crime. one of those migrants charged in

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