tv America Reports FOXNEWSW March 4, 2024 10:00am-11:00am PST
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got to what he wants to do next. >> kayleigh: and the american people are given a contrast. the contrast between trump and this moment and biden in reaction to the robert hur report, he was angry and defiant and got in tiffs with reporters and then scurried off. who do you want as commander in chief, you certainly have a contrast. >> harris: some of the argument has been well, you get chaos with trump. what do you think we have now? if this isn't chaotic, definition of, go to the southern border and when you go, take your full heart with you. you are gonna need it. it's a disaster. thank you for watching. glad we were able to cover the breaking news with and for you. "america reports" now. >> i want to start by thanking the supreme court for its unanimous decision today. it was a very important
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decision. very well-crafted, and i think it will go a long way toward bringing our country together, which our country needs. you cannot take somebody out of a race. the voters can take the person out of the race very quickly. but a court shouldn't be doing that and the supreme court saw that very well. >> sandra: all right, moments ago former president donald trump riding high into super tuesday, both in his electoral and legal battles. reacted to the massive win from the supreme court that blocks nationwide efforts to keep him off the presidential ballot. hello, welcome everyone, i'm sandra smith in new york. and john, a brand-new week, here we go. >> john: and this is a big week. so much going on this week. i'm john roberts in washington and this is "america reports". trump celebrating the unanimous ruling moments ago calling it an inspirational and unifying moment to bring the country together. >> sandra: fox team coverage, kerri urbahn is here, fox news
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legal editor and former counselor to attorney general bill barr. jonathan turley, professor and fox news contributor. jonathan, supreme court decision reversing the colorado trump ballot ban. what do we need to know right now? >> well, the most important take-away is that there was only one voice you heard from the court today. and that was a voice that spoke, i think, for a lot of americans, in saying that this is not what we are about. this was an anti-democratic effort to remove a candidate from the ballot to prevent voters from casting their votes. but it would also allow for an incredible sort of tit for tat process in states and we are the most successful oldest democracy in the world and at this late day you had people trying to introduce something that would be dangerous and destabilizing. the entire court spoke against it. all nine. there was a little disagreement as to how far the opinion had to
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go, but on the actual colorado decision, on the disqualification, the court spoke as one voice. >> john: so we have colorado had already made the decision to kick him off, along with maine and illinois, pending cases in california, new mexico, new york, south carolina, north carolina, virginia and wisconsin. does this render all those cases moot now? >> i think so, certainly looks like that. and john, one thing i was struck by when reading through the opinion, repeated a lot of the stuff that you and i have been talking about and sandra for months here, that if this was allowed to go forward, colorado, the decision to unilaterally remove the choice from the people that it would create an untenable patch work across the country and the supreme court specifically addressed what would be the standard, you know, who decides whether someone is guilty of insurrection, how you take someone off the ballot and on and on and something we had
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discussed at length on the show. >> john: before you decide somebody should be guilty of insurrection, shouldn't be first be charged with the crime? >> nor has he been convicted and the supreme court seemed to take great lengths where this was untenable situation and very struck by a point at the end and i don't think this has gotten enough attention so far, and they said this. the disruption would be all the more acute and could nullify the votes of millions and change the election result, the key right here, if section 3 enforcement were attempted after the nation has voted. nothing in the constitution requires that we endure such chaos arriving at any time or different time up to and perhaps beyond the inauguration. so this is the supreme court addressing the elephant in the room saying hey, and by the way, if you think this decision gives you license, the states license to maybe do something should donald trump win the election, we are saying otherwise.
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>> sandra: it appears, jonathan, the colorado secretary of state is doubling down, even after this unanimous decision. remember, she's had some pretty harsh words for the former president in the past. but she says this in a tweet, i'm disappointed in the u.s. supreme court's decision stripping states of the authority to enforce section 3 of the 14th amendment for federal candidates. colorado should be able to bar oath-breaking insurrections from our ballot. she's doubling down, jonathan. >> she is, and she is unrepenitent. this theory has been given unrelenting coverage by many outlets with very little consideration of the opposing view. it was called unassailable on many networks and yet it could not garner a single vote on the supreme court. all nine, including three liberal justices said no. and i think that from that we
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could take a unifying message that this is a court that's deeply divided along ideological grounds. they believe deeply in their views of the constitution and their vision of the country, but part of that vision is this common article of faith we have in the constitution itself. and all nine of them said this is wrong. during the debate, justice jackson asked why should i look at some ambiguity and adopt the most anti-democratic interpretation, and it was a devastating question at the time. now the court has two other cases that could impact the election. one is obviously the immunity decision, which will come out likely soon, but perhaps the most significant one is a challenge not by president trump, but by a january 6th defendant to the use of the obstruction statute in hundreds of cases. if the court were to agree with that defendant that you cannot
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use that provision, it would also impact the president's case as well as hundreds of others. >> john: the meantime, decision upholding the principle of one person, one vote, a lot of people will take heart in because that's the democratic process and that's the way this country is operated since inception. you brought up the issue of immunity, jonathan, and kerri, your thoughts on this, but play what former president trump said about that particular issue. >> while we are on the subject and another thing that will be coming up very soon will be immunity for a president, and not immunity for me, but for any president. if a president doesn't have fu fully immunity, nobody serving in the office would have the decision to make the right decision or the wrong decision. >> john: the former was a slam
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dunk but this one not so much, i think. >> i was surprised whether they took it up at all, don't know who voted yes, give us indication as where their heads are at in this particular case. arguments are in april. i would think a decision and normally a decision in any of these cases late june but they seem to be sensitive to the fact the stakes are high given november, maybe earlier. but sweeping rejection of the former president's absolute immunity claims by the d.c. federal appeals court i'm just not sure where the supreme court will land on that. >> sandra: a few moments ago you heard from the former president himself, he reacted there at mar-a-lago, and he said this suggesting perhaps this could be a unifying factor. listen. >> so just to finish, i have great respect for the supreme court and i want to just thank them for working so quickly and so diligently and so brilliantly
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and again this is a unifying factor, everybody together, and they can go after me as a politician, they can go after me with votes. but they are not going to go after me with that kind of lawsuit that takes somebody out of a race. >> sandra: the unifying factor that might be wishful thinking, jonathan, what we heard from media a sampling of the reaction after the ruling. listen. >> it seems as though trump, whatever you want to say about him, has sort of played the legal system like a fiddle over the last couple of years. >> started to gain faith as sunny would tell us like this is going to get him, and oh, oh, oh. >> if he is found to be an insurrectionist the way i read this, he could still be the president of the united states and i thought the 14th amendment and our framers knew better. >> sandra: the media, they thought it was gonna get 'em, jonathan. >> well, yeah, and the funny thing is, tomorrow they'll say next, you know, let's go on to
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the next effort here. the court cases, etc. but just the day before this opinion people were still saying that this was not theory, and only the republicans would vote against it. a lot of those people went silent after the oral argument because i think they were quite shocked by hearing some of the toughest questions coming from the left. but this is the moment that the supreme court was designed for. it was this moment, it was when the country is divided and when you have all of the hate and all of the rage, this is the institution that was designed to transcend the politics of the moment and they did it and a huge credit to every one of them, all nine of them, and i think that we can take a great deal of satisfaction as citizens that we have this working part of government, that can see beyond the next election, beyond personalities and look at a
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horizon that the framers saw for this constitution of this country. >> sandra: well said as usual. jonathan, thank you for joining us. kerri, great to have you as well. >> thank you. >> the other thing i say to president biden, close the borders now. this is not sustainable for our country, it's not sustainable for our cities. our country is under siege. >> john: former president trump with that stark warning for president biden. this is a battle over border control setting up the supreme court showdown. fifth circuit court of appeals overturning a lower court ruling that stopped texas from implementing the proposed border law, to make illegally crossing the southern border from mexico a state crime. griff jenkins, live at eagle pass, texas. what's it like today and what impact does the ruling have? >> john, another court case that
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texans are talking about, this ruling right now and you can go to the drone in the sky and see the miles of razor wire here in shelby park in eagle pass, texas. governor abbott's efforts to try and stop the migrant crisis and surge in numbers. and what the latest ruling, you remember back in december, governor abbott signed sb4 which did a couple of things, john. it made it a criminal offense to cross illegally into texas. first time offenders, class b misdemeanor, up to six months. second time offenders, second degree felony. also required texas state judges to remove migrants and send them back to mexico. lower court case went against texas governor abbott's law but the fifth circuit court of appeals out of new orleans has stood behind texas. that will almost certainly be appealed and head to the supreme court. when that is filed, a briefing
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schedule set. find out whether or not scotus will move quickly and pick it up but it is stayed, the court of appeals has stayed it for seven days. if by weekend the supreme court is not moving it or stay it, it will indeed go into effect and we could see texas dps law enforcement officers arresting everyone that crosses into the state of texas. a part of governor abbott's efforts to try to bring it under control. i want to show you some other video, apprehensions continuing to happen here in eagle pass. there were two large groups of about 50 or 60 that crossed here midday and late yesterday. there was another group today. we are working to get you video of that. but just an indication that it still continues to happen in texas. although we just got a little while ago the latest numbers and we are learning there were more than 21,000 crossings across the entire southwest border in the last 72 hours, most of them, the largest numbers out west, in
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arizona, and in the san diego sector, 5400 in tucson, about 3600 plus in san diego. so, clearly it is a big continuing surge as we head into spring, a traditional uptick that we see in the numbers we are seeing now suggest it's going to be a significant spring uptick. meanwhile, back to this texas case, a lot of texans are talking about it they are happy governor abbott has taken the hard stance to get it under control. so, will we see people arrested for crossed border, not until the weekend at the earliest, but i will say we have not gotten official word from doj but almost certain as early as today the federal government appealing this ruling out of the new orleans fifth circuit court of appeals. >> john: interesting to watch, if the courts uphold the texas right to enforce the law, it could completely change what happens down where you are. appreciate it. sandra. >> sandra: president biden getting failing grades from voters in several new polls.
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we are going to ask juan williams and chris bedford whether biden supporters can keep ignoring all the red flags. plus this. >> mistakes in job interviews. >> i would be delighted to answer that inquiry. three months on october 18th i was in the company offices when i encountered a client. >> john: avoiding gen z workers. are they making simple mistakes that stop them from getting hired? we will talk to a tiktok star who coaches them how to get that gig. coming up. wondering if you might want to pray with us. well, not the actual jesus. obviously, but let's spend some time with the real one. lord jesus. we take this moment today to simply be with you. we are lost. we are broken. but we are not alone. help us to grow closer to you. this lent, jesus name we pray. amen. join us in prayer. this lent on hallow.
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juan, how do you spin that today? >> it's not a matter of spin. i think i trust the numbers. but i think that we are clearly in a season of republican primaries, you know. biden is running as you pointed out, he's going to do very well tomorrow. that's just not the story, locked in on how trump is doing, what's going on with nikki haley, a lot of conversation there. and the polls i think are right in terms of concern about
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biden's age. that's a very real concern. but what if you look at the numbers, look at the tabs, what do you see? a lot of that is driven by concern among democrats and those are democrats who say they voted for biden in 2020 but they have a high level of concern about his age. and i think those people are likely to come home in the fall, in the november election. so i don't think that that concern is one that's going to cripple him if you are talking about his chances of winning. >> john: you wonder where else might they go, they might just stay home. a couple of other findings were troubling for the president when asked, have these policies helped you or hurt you or no difference? 18% said biden helped, 40% said trump policies helped. 43% said biden policies hurt, 25% said trump policies hurt. so trump wins on that and then look at the demographic breakdown, biden's policies helped, trump policies help,
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among whites, trump is in front, and also in front of african american and hispanic voters. he's losing everybody here. >> he is, and not just an image problem. the white house has tried to tackle joe biden's problems, something about image, or reach the youth vote if they have social media stars on, go out there and put -- place articles and how incredibly sharp joe biden is, how he isn't suffering at all from the effects of age and the american people are not convinced of that. and some of the border results, the american people are very sour on the border with president biden, but this is after a pretty good attempt by washington, d.c. democrats to try to pin the border dispute on republicans not willing to get along and congress, something that mitch mcconnell and some have fallen for. were they going to be able to message on that to move the spotlight off democrats, so far no. >> john: when you have blacks
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and hispanics saying trump helped them more than biden did, and then arab americans and muslim americans in important states and say we are angry with biden and rather vote uncommitted than vote for him. what does that say about the general election? >> not much, it's march. >> john: you are think they are going to change their minds? say we have been hard on joe, cut him a break. >> would i prefer joe to donald trump who wanted a ban on muslims in this country? would i prefer joe biden to donald trump who moved the embassy in terms of the middle east and offended much of the muslim population in the middle east? i think there's a contrast, and so right now everything is about, well, maybe i'm a little grumpy about the economy or about this foreign policy, i see what's going on in gaza and i'm
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blaming the incumbent. but when it's the incumbent versus an option and the option is donald trump and he has a record and you start to compare if you are an arab living in michigan, i think if you are a black person living anywhere, you start to say oh, gee, i think there's a real reason to say i'm going to go back to the path i took in 2020. and also talking about age, state of the union is coming up. we'll see how he does. he did great last time. >> john: or maybe arab american and muslim voters, we are staying home here. >> i don't think donald trump would have a significant different foreign policy with israel than what the biden administration had, although you see the vice president trying to walk back that policy. the one thing that points out the fallacy, republican criticisms, whether it's nikki haley or mitt romney, say if donald trump is the nominee, you have lost the support of the
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arab and black americans. that's not the case. >> john: as we saw in the "new york times" poll, we see whose policies these groups like better. great to see you guys. thanks so much. kicking off a big week. a lot to talk about. super tuesday, state of the union, a lot of work ahead of us. >> have fun, have fun. >> sandra: good discussion, gentlemen. thank you. firefighters battling the largest wildfire in texas history and the conditions on the ground are making it even tougher for crews to contain it. plus this. >> so let's start out with you walking me through your resume. not really asking walk through the resume, tell them the story of your career thus far and at the end think of course you are in this interview, this is a perfect natural next step in your career. >> john: tiktok influencer offering tips to gen z workers as employers avoid hiring them. why they are having such a hard time and what they can do differently. with so many choices on booking.com there are so many tina feys i could be.
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>> john: firefighters in the texas panhandle battling wildfires, including the largest in the state's history. they say texas is already facing a lengthy recovery, we already joined in the next hour here on "america reports" but first casey stegall is live in dallas, he's covering this. how are the weather conditions impacting efforts to fight the fires? >> john, they are finally able to get a little bit of an upper hand on the situation. the critical fire danger weather is moving its way out of the region across much of the texas panhandle today and they hope to get more containment of the blazes with the cooler temperatures and also the lower winds speeds that will help them in order to continue fighting on the front lines. a new fire did break out over the weekend taking aim at
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sanford, but evacuation orders have been lifted, east of amarillo, the fire is 50% contained according to text a and m, and smokehouse creek is partially contained, burning over 1 million acres, 500 structures have been lost since the fires broke out early last week. >> by the time i got there, and got back over here, everything was gone. things can be replaced. my service animal i will miss the most. >> fire crous from across texas have been deployed to the panhandle. additional equipment also surged to the area, like air tankers, were able to fly despite heavy winds, dropping water and fire retardant. historic fires also taking a major toll on the ranching industry, i know you are going
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to talk to the agriculture commissioner later. estimated that thousands of cattle are among the things lost with these deadly fires. john. >> john: casey stegall, thank you. sandra. >> sandra: all right. there are more than 9 million job openings in the united states right now, according to the latest labor department data and the youngest members of the workforce are not filling those jobs at the rate that you might expect. 38% of employers avoid hiring recent graduates and 58% say they are unprepared for the office. the next guest is a tiktok star with more than 2 million followers helping gen zers get back in the office -- i shouldn't say get back, when you look at the generation, those born in the mid to late 90s to
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the 2010s, they could be 14, 15, but in the 20s. >> you have to think about them as them, and what they went through. they are a product of their environment. imagine graduating high school and college in the middle of a pandemic, living the life through the zoom screen and i don't believe they are just competing with each other but with millennials as well and everybody is shuffling and looking for new jobs and a lot of gen z's are getting jobs. >> sandra: i would be curious what you are hearing from them, a simple observation. i know there was sort of this -- this hurdle to get over with the work from home, all of a sudden a workforce felt entitled to have a work from home position. is that part of the problem? >> i wouldn't say the gen zs that i have spoken to, many of them are willing to go into an
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office or work hybrid. they are going through tons and tons of interviews and ghosted over and over and over again. >> sandra: for our audience, ghosted, applying for the job and then just never hearing back. >> more than that. they are applying, they are getting interviews, some of them as many as seven interviews and then no clue did they fill the job or not. >> sandra: some of the suggestions you make, garnering you subscribers, followers, on your tiktok, but you talk about setting the right tone in an interview. listen here. >> so can you tell me a little about yourself? >> i went to the college of university of maryland and internship and then -- first of all, gemini, vegetarian. they are asking you to set the tone for the whole interview and think wow, they are a great fit for this role. >> sandra: tell us more. >> i hate being on the spot,
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erin, you are so good and articulate, yeah, because i'm filming alone in my room. >> sandra: you are alive on tv. people want advice. >> people struggle with the inner personal, they want to know what to say and how to say it and people are struggling with and really, really want direction on that, i'm not sure if it's because a lack of working in the office and microinteractions and seeing how other people navigate in a personal relationship and connection but they are certainly struggling and why any videos give examples how to answer questions or resonate your job experience. >> sandra: and don't always try to get the best job out there, climb the ladder, right? some companies are waiving under graduate college requirement, they want experience and they are championing that over
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education in some cases. so remember that, just get the experience, get the job, right. start working and then try to climb the ladder. this is you explaining how to answer what you say are behavioral type questions in an interview. listen. >> tell me about a time you showed leadership. >> well. >> what about a time you disagreed with your boss. >> erin, i need your hope. don't worry, i got you. these are called behavioral job interview questions and they are difficult to answer, they want a specific story on the spot. they are not going to fact check the story, they want a sense of your character and professionalism. >> sandra: i agree with that last point, trying to get to know you better. behavioral type questions. i'm trying to show who you are, and who that person might be hiring. >> absolutely. you've got to prepare for these questions. star method, situation tack and
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result, the key is to be prepared because if you are put on the spot and don't have a question, or don't have a story to tell, it can be difficult. >> sandra: looking at the ages here and the economic future of america and those in the workforce, bls stats, ages 25 to 34, 35.7 million workers. 35 to 44, 35.8 million workers. you have to set yourself apart. thanks for coming in. >> thanks for having me. >> sandra: good stuff, john. >> john: always have a story to tell. three and a half hours, how long harvard has to respond to a subpoena about the rise of antisemitism on campus. are universities doing enough to address jewish students' fears? leo terrell has a few thoughts. he'll be with us. >> sandra: unintended consequence of not enforcing marijuana laws. william is in los angeles for us, so, william, who is behind the new surge in illegal growing operations? >> well, from california to
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maine, police now say chinese nationals are operating, running the illegal pot business in several states, sandra, and congress wants to know if the chinese government is involved. that story coming up. if you're a veteran wife, homeowner, and the family bookkeeper, you're the first to know when high rate debt is stressing your budget. but your family's service has earned you a big advantage. the va home loan benefit. with the lower rate newday 100 va cash out loan, you can pay off high rate credit cards and car loans. that's real money you can use to take care of your family and home. hey. you seein' this? wait... where's the dish? there ain't one. you're tellin' me you can get directv — the good stuff — and you don't need a satellite dish? oh, i used to love doin' my business on those things! you're one sick pigeon. them dishes kept the rain off our beaks! we just have different priorities is all.
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with clearer skin movie night, is a groovy night (♪) live in the moment. ask your doctor about otezla. >> sandra: fox news alert, spring, texas, looking live at nikki haley at a campaign event there, holding a rally ahead of super tuesday. we want to show this happening, we are monitoring it for news and will bring any from there as it comes in. she'll also be joining martha at 3:00 today. >> john: increase of illegal marijuana operations in the united states by chinese investors, it's happening in states like california that have relaxed their drug laws in recent years.
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william is following this for us, live in los angeles. how exactly, william, is china pulling off this scheme? >> well, john, businessmen in china and wealthy investors want to get their money out of china and set up a protected cash flow here in the united states. so buying up raw land, houses and warehouses like this one in los angeles. then shell companies to hide their ownership, bring in chinese nationals over the border illegally to grow the pot, and then use organized crime or gangs to deliver it around the u.s. for staggering profits. >> this i had a little over 4,000 marijuana plants, somewhere at today's yield, somewhere around 2 to $3 million. >> friday deputies hit three chinese-operated warehouses in los angeles protected by multiple steel doors. grows typically happen in states you mentioned where pot is legal
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and penalties are lax, like maine. 270 chinese-owned homes there growing pot. oklahoma, 2000 chinese-owned farms, according to police and here in california, chinese nationals control about 75% of the production in many areas. >> we have seen quite an increase in the amount of chinese, asian owned, operated. >> explosion of chinese folks coming in and buying land and then growing illegal marijuana. >> up near the oregon border, 8,000 grow houses, the white dots dominate the landscape, near 0 penalties, workers living in shacks are out the next day. >> essentially they are trafficking in labor to do the cultivation. 75% or more are undocumented individuals that we are running into and in the last few years
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those numbers have increased dramatically. >> so 50 members of congress have now asked the doj for a briefing, john, for the extent of chinese government involvement here and the chinese communist party to how much they involved, how much do they know, what are they doing about it. back to you. >> john: all of this tied to the recent increase in chinese nationals across the border illegally? >> yeah, there's definitely -- the police i've talked to state, local, federal, both here in california and elsewhere, they are seeing these individuals coming over the border, they are keeping quiet, right, they want to pay off their smuggling debt, working in these farms and get cut loose the next day to continue working for several years, they call it like indentured service. >> just admit.
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say yes, i'm bad with names and walk like a toddler with a full diaper. [laughter] >> sandra: oh, oh, questions about president biden's age becoming unavoidable as the white house struggles to deny the obvious. chris anderson and daron shaw ahead with the undeniable numbers. >> john: folks in austin, texas left pretty much on their own as crime in the city goes up and police staffing levels plummet. lauren kleinfelter will tell us what happened when she tried calling 911 for help. stay with us. he hits his mark —center stage—and is crushed by a baby grand piano. you're replacing me? customize and save with liberty bibberty. he doesn't even have a mustache. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪
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join the millions of people taking back their privacy by downloading duckduckgo on all your devices today. democrats agree. jo conservative republicane taking steve garveyrivacy is the wrong choice for the senate. ...our republican opponent here on this stage has voted for donald trump twice. mr. garvey, you voted for him twice... as your own man, what is your decision? garvey is wrong for california. but garvey's surging in the polls. fox news says garvey would be a boost to republican control of the senate. stop garvey. adam schiff for senate. i'm adam schiff, and i approve this message. i'm katie porter and i approve this message. he's the hundred-percent pro-trump candidate for u.s. senate: republican eric early. always supports trump and the maga agenda. republican eric early. endorsed by the california pro-life council... ...opposed to all abortion. and eric early loves the second amendment. eric early. way more dangerous than steve garvey.
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he dodges trump. garvey even said he might vote for biden. republican eric early for u.s. senate. too maga. too trump. too dangerous. >> john: outrage in austin, texas as ongoing police staffing shortages become a crisis there. just last month, part of the city was left without a single patrol officer in one section for several hours. thanks in part to the city council vote to defund the police back in 2020. lauren kleinfelter joins us now. the austin police union says the staffing shortage is at a critical level here. you had experience with this yourself. what happened? >> well, february of 2022, me and my children were in a pretty bad car accident. i called 911.
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i was routed to 311, which is austin's nonemergency. they threw me back to 911 and i was kind of in a roundabout circle of going back and forth, back and forth for about an hour. my children were visibly injured, my car was totaled, we ended up having to get an uber service actually to get medical care. we never got followed up with. nothing ever came about it. my mother works for 311 now, and she says it's incredible how many calls that are supposed to be classified as 911 emergencies are routed to them and they are to tell the callers they are nonemergencies. so it was just really scary. >> john: headline from fox 7 in austin, from just the last couple days, murders on the rise in austin as police deal with
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staffing shortage. are people there in austin feeling less safe? i spent a lot of time in austin back in the early 2000s when george bush was president. thought it was a great place to visit. >> it's a scary place right now. >> john: wow. i mean, you think about all of the music and all the clubs on 6th street, tourists would go and they would go hear good texas blues and it seemed to be a very family-friendly place to live. but the police union president said this, i think the bottom line is that over the last three years we have seen the highest homicide rates we have ever seen in the city, so either way, no matter which way we look at it, we are not on a good trend. we are heading in the wrong direction. are city leaders taking any of this into account? are they listening to anybody about this? >> it doesn't feel that way. >> john: what can you and your fellow residents do about this
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to get this in front of them and say look, you know, we know this big -- there was this big move to defund the police several years ago, but look at what that's brought. >> we are just trying to band together as a community, trying to be heard because this has been going on for years. >> john: and you know, we have the problem in austin as well, intersecting graphs, the number of police officers is on the decline, whereas in the last two and a half years, the city population has increased by 250,000. and it's not just here -- there, i mean here in washington, d.c., 800 police officers short of where we are supposed to be. new york city, expecting to lose 4500 officers over the next 18 months. is this a result, do you believe, lauren, this whole move to defund the police and really put police on the hot seat and in the cross hairs? >> absolutely. >> john: lauren, we look forward to hearing from you and your fellow residents there in austin
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to see if you can get the attention of city leaders and maybe get something done about this. appreciate you being with us. >> thank you. >> john: sandra. >> sandra: a massive prison break in the caribbean, thousands freed by gangs in haiti. could it lead to a coup. >> john: and waiting on a subpoena from harvard over antisemitism on campus. leo terrell ahead with reaction to the investigation and what harvard has said so far. asy, but starting it eight months pregnant... that's a different story. with the chase ink card, we got up and running in no time. earn unlimited 1.5% cash back on every purchase with the chase ink business unlimited card. make more of what's yours. here's to getting better with age. here's to beating these two every thursday. help fuel today with boost high protein, complete nutrition you need... ...without the stuff you don't. so, here's to now. boost. [ applause ]
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(♪) my plaque psoriasis was so bad... i couldn't get my hair done. my psoriasis was all over. then my joints started hurting, found out it was psoriatic arthritis. who knew they could be connected? for me, cosentyx works on both. 5 years and counting. did you know people with psoriasis on the scalp have a 4 times higher risk of developing psoriatic arthritis, which if left untreated can lead to permanent joint damage?
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cosentyx works on all of this and helps stop further joint damage. talk to your doctor. find something that works for you. serious allergic reactions. severe skin reactions that look like eczema and an increased risk of infections, some fatal, have occurred. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms, had a vaccine or plan to, or if ibd symptoms develop or worsen. cosentyx. still workin' for me. ♪see me♪ find relief that can last. ask your dermatologist about cosentyx. >> john: it was rumored for a while and now long time philadelphia eagles center jason kelce has announced retirement after 13 seasons in the nfl. making it official just moments ago. >> thanks for coming, guys. see how long this lasts.
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the nfl is truly like no other place. and at the same time, represents america as a whole like no other. >> john: wow. very emotional good-bye, and sandra, you know, we remember him having so much fun at his brother travis's playoff game against the bills. now that he's leaving the nfl, i mean, clearly it's a very bittersweet moment for him. >> sandra: it was. i believe as that went on there were many, many tearful moments as one would expect. he thanked his wife and remember this moment, remember we had that little girl on who he lifted up so she could see taylor swift up there in the box, but we wish him the best. making it official. >> john: absolutely. what a career he had. >> sandra: a state of emergency in haiti as armed gangs break thousands of prisoners out of
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jail saying they are ready to overthrow the government. alex hogan is reporting right now. what do we know? >> hi, sandra, the government has issued a curfew to crack down on violent crime over the weekend and declared a state of emergency after gunmen stormed multiple prisons over the weekend creating a mass prison break. one prison alone, as many as 4,000 inmates were released, and another prison, about 1400 inmates living in that facility. so, all of this comes heightened tension among those behind bars were criminals charged with the murder of the former president in 2021. corpses were found inside the prison and some in the streets with their hands tied behind their back. on top of all of that, the internet was out because of a fiberoptic cable connection cut during this rampage and this comes as other attacks took place on an
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