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tv   America Reports  FOXNEWSW  June 6, 2024 11:00am-12:00pm PDT

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♪ ♪ >> you are about to embark upon a great crusade toward which we have striven these many months. the eyes of the world are upon you. the hopes and prayers of liberty loving people everywhere march with you. >> across the english channel, the allied armada of ships and
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crafts steam. >> these are the men who took the cliffs. these are the champions who helped create continent. these are the heroes who helped end a war. >> the beaches of normandy were consecrated by the blood of our heroes, british, canadian, polls, free french, and can canadian. >> allied forces move forward and were eventually victorious. and then swept across europe. >> over a stretch of 60 miles, the battles raged. >> on these beaches, the forces of freedom turned the tide of the 20th century. >> never relenting even as comrades died all around them. when they had reached the top, the rangers radioed back the code for success. praise the lord.
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>> 80 years ago today more than 73,000 courageous americans join allied forces to storm the beaches of normandy. the largest amphibious invasion in history where the world honors those brave soldiers for more than 10 nations who both their lives to drive out those forces of nazi germany. hello and welcome everyone. i am sandra smith. live here in new york. but a look back that was. >> john: more solemn ceremonies being observed today. this is "america reports." earlier today in france, president biden stood by world leaders to commemorate the anniversary. a full day of ceremony. gun salute and flyovers. many surviving veterans there to honor their fallen comrades and reflect on that they have pivotal moment in 1944 when their bravery reshaped history. >> the coast of normandy. the battle between freedom and tyranny would be joined.
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here on that june morning. ♪ ♪ >> your actions. a continent and build a better world. >> canada and the world will keep commemorating this significant day for decades and generations to come. >> here you came to join with our own soldiers and to make france a free nation. and you are back here today at home. >> sandra: let's bring in martha maccallum now, anger and executive editor of "the story." she has been anchoring that show from there all week. welcome to you. just an incredible morning it was. what is it been like for you on
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the ground covering this? >> and kestan to be with you. it has been amazing to be back in normandie. i covered the 7,010th anniversary 5 years ago. that was referred to at that time as the final reunion. these men are incredibly resilient. there are men that we have met this week who are 100, 102, 104 even. many of them walked across the stage today. one of the most dramatic moments to me was the way that they represented. they walked up with their escorts with the ocean behind them. it felt as if they were coming up over the cliff as they joined their brothers in arms on the podium. they were just so many moving moments. i think when i listen to those speeches by world leaders, one of the biggest questions that i think it raises for all of us -- it has raised actually in the initial scenes in "saving private ryan" which have always made me tear up in the
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first 30 seconds of the film. this gentleman who lost a lot of his close colleagues in the war basically says, you know, am i worth your sacrifice? i think that is a question that is raised a lot today. and i think that many of the veterans that we spoke to, they would never do anything differently. they are not so sure that the world that they see today is the same one that they fought so hard to fight for in many respects. that is what they said. >> john: you mentioned there mentioned their resilience. you don't survive the day in the beaches of normandy without being resented. you have the opportunity to talk so many. play a little bit about what you found when you spoke with them. >> there's not many of us left especially combat men. what it means to me, i established a mission for my myself. when i come here, i talk to people like you, but i also talk
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to kids. people all up and down the scale. they are going to be here to tell the story when we are all gone. >> 3 months, i was gone at 16. as long as that people remember that the events are still around. you know, some of the memories are good. some are bad. some are happy. some are sad. that is all part of life. >> john: what is really remarkable, he will tell you he was 16 when he was there. i have another story of others who are 16 his parents lied about their age to allow them to sign up. to think of what they could do as teenagers backbend to help save the world is just remarkable. >> the second man from the navy, i actually met in iwo jima. he drove a higgins boat onto the beach at 16 years old because
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the driver of that boat had been killed in a previous operation in the day. his superiors said, do you think you can get in there and steer the boat for us? he lied. he stole a baptismal certificate from his church in order to put a date on it that would get him into the military. they kept sending him away. that is how much he wanted to join the fight. he said i didn't really like high school that much. i was looking for something else to do. these men are so humble. i think humility is something that we don't see enough. that is why people are so drawn to them. for the most part, they are warm and humble like reagents and they are quite straightforward and frank in their approach to the world. what really matters to them. >> sandra: so true. you bring out the best in them. we have enjoyed hearing from them. >> that is not hard to do. >> sandra: they are heroes and
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they are unbelievable. you have been having some really great conversations on the ground about foreign policy and happenings all over the world. in fact, coming up we are going to see and hear more from this interview. you just had with john kirby. i want to play this out and get your thoughts on what you heard. >> the united states plans to back them with whatever they need to achieve that goal. what time frame? >> we have been doing that for the last 2 plus years. how long is not going to go on? i don't know if anybody can know the answer to that. there's pieces coming up in switzerland and a couple of weeks. the vice president will be representing the united states. we have been represented at every single piece summit. the president believes that we are doing it again with serious representation by the vice president. >> the president has other things on his schedule. >> sandra: that is a preview
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about what we are about to hear. can you tell us about what you heard from john kirby when you sat down with him? >> he sat down with me literally fresh off of president biden speech. we spoke moments after. the speech was very forceful on the principles of democracy and protecting it. president biden essentially said we will never stop fighting to defend democracy in the world. that is what we are called to do. we kind of adjustment back and forth on whether or not the policy matches up with what we heard on that stage today. we know that there has been a lot of hesitancy in different weapons programs that have been asked for. i asked him at one point, did roosevelt ever say, you know, you can only use that ship's for or that? in the context of sitting here in normandie. it is an interesting conversation. i think it goes to the larger issue of who we are and what we stand for as a nation. you see the leaders of canada and france and the u.k. and the u.s. all here.
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what does this alliance look like? what does it need? why does it stand for in the world is an open question? >> john: it highlights the biden foreign policy. here is what politico said about his foreign policy on wednesday. the headline was foreign policy becomes a liability for biden's campaign as he heads to france. a month of high-stakes international meetings. he's got the g7 coming up. 2 bloody wars in ukraine and gaza have complicated the president's job. she contributed to the shakiness of his political standing at home. remember, robert gates who is the secretary of defense under obama and bush 43 said about biden, i think he has been wrong on nearly every foreign policy and national security issue over the past 4 decades. as we look toward the conventions beginning next month, where do biden said when it comes to foreign policy? >> that is the question.
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it often feels like he sits a little bit on the fence. i say that just based on what we have actually seen play out in policy. the request for weapons from ukraine and request for money from ukraine. always a little bit later than they say they needed it. they are under enormous pressure in the eastern and northern france in ukraine. it is a question of the commitment in the drive for the policy you say you stand for. if we are not going to support ukraine, that is another question. we want them to win? we want them to succeed. it gets to the heart of what foreign policy is. the same could be said for gaza. i'll end with support for israel and claims he still is. at the same time, suggesting that the icc should invest in leadership for war crimes. a little bit of s and a little bit of that. he leads people questioning where he actually stands. >> sandra: incredible coverage five on the ground in normandy.
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thank you so much for bringing us all that you have. >> great to be with you both. >> john: see you at 3:00. at the border doesn't look all that different than it did before president biden unveiled his executive action yesterday. is the eo having any impact on the ground? >> that is happening live right there. plus the white house and damage control mode after that scathing report on president biden's mental health. brian kilmeade is here to break down the latest gaps in how democrats are trying to hide them. >> i think the big questions that americans are starting to have is in their cognitive impairment that would potentially inhibit his ability to be commander in chief. imagine a future where plastic is not wasted... but instead remade over and over... into the things that keep our food fresher, our families safer, and our planet cleaner. to help us get there, america's plastic makers are investing billions of dollars
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>> sandra: it has been 48 hours since president biden enacted the executive action at our southern border trying to stem the flow of migrants coming over. a certain limit. new data shows it has had no impact on border crossing so far. bill melugin is live at the port of entry at california for us. we have been watching this live shot of exactly what's happening behind you. we have seen the constant flow. you have been reporting that this is turkish, egyptians, the chinese. how many were apprehended yesterday alone for example? >> here in the san diego sector, about 1,100 just yesterday with the asylum been in effect which appears to be having little to zero impact of any think of it is getting busy around here. this is a group that crossed in one big mess and legally a short time ago.
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i was talking with guys from egypt, from turkey and china and india and central and south american countries. they are in the sun. they are waiting for border patrol to pick them up. agents are overwhelmed elsewhere because there are other crossings going on. take a look at this video a few hours ago completely other side of town. an even bigger group of 200 people that crossed illegally once again from all over the world. single adults. the asylum band is in effect. president biden's order. these migrants will tell you on camera, they are not even here for asylum a lot of them. i chatted with some of these guys as they were coming in. take a listen. where you from? mauritania. where you from? what country? china? where you guys from? mexico, guatemala? china? guatemala. where you from? india. >> from brazil.
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>> india. >> that's not all. this was yet another mass illegal crossing down by the border wall in a different location. this group predominately colombians, venezuelans and mostly single adults again. i talk with this group. none of them told me they are here for asylum. they told me they are planning to travel all across the united states and they are here for work or family. take a listen. >> california. [speaking in a global language] >> san diego. [speaking in a global language] >> guys, the bottom line is even with as asylum ban in full effect, there is little to no fear of consequences or deportation. they have good reason to think
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so. we have a cameraman in downtown san diego who is currently shooting video of border patrol buses mass releasing migrants to city streets right now. more catch and release in full effect. president biden threatened with few crossed illegally, you are banned from asylum and quickly remove around the united states. these can have a chance to put his money where his mouth is. a lot of people flowing in. they believe they are not going anywhere. these numbers are spiking out here. >> real quick follow up with that live shot behind you for our viewers who have been watching this throughout the day, what exactly is happening? what is the process behind you there? >> brian, we will pan real quick. there is no border patrol and as far as the eye can see. they are waiting for border patrol. got it. they are just waiting. they might have to wait hours for border patrol because they are busy processing other gr groups.
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>> sandra: we appreciate your reporting. incredible what we just heard. thank you. >> by looking at where air force one has touched down moments ago. as a dan gladden and the first lady jill biden back from the ceremonies at the american cemetery and down on the sands of omaha beach. the president stay overnight in paris. he has more meetings tomorrow. we will be following all of his actions. peter doocy is there and will bring us all of what happens during the president's visit. so that "wall street journal" report that came out talking about the president's cognitive ability and mental acuity, while the administration is now urging democrats to push back on the so-called false narrative, let's bring in brian kilmeade and host of "one nation was slow. playing a little sound from president biden from earlier today. he was interviewed by abc's
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david muir. we asked him about vladimir putin. listen here. >> president biden: i have known him for 40 years. he has concerned me for 40 years. he's not a decent man. he's a dictator. he is struggling to make sure that he holds this country together while still keeping this assault going. we are not -- to strike the kremlin. just across the border. receiving significant fire from conventional weapons used by the russians to go into ukraine to kill ukrainians. >> john: first of all, what'd you think of the president's appearance in an air interview? he said he is known about putin for 40 years and been concerned about over 40 years. 40 years ago, putin was allegedly working at a shoe store in new zealand as covered when he was a kgb agent. how could biden have possibly known him back then? >> in that shoe store, i used to
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go there all the time in new zealand. and it's amazing. he was raised in the black puerto rican church and spent his moment of years at delaware state. now he has known vladimir putin for 40 years. i thought the speech was good today. i thought it was delivered fine. it wasn't ronald reagan. he never will be a never was. when you sit down, he had no energy for that interview. to say something that is so blatantly wrong, there is a shot of ronald reagan sitting in moscow. vladimir putin pretending to be a photographer. that is 40 years ago. i don't know what he's talking about. the other thing he's overstated the damage done to russia. the problem is in this very conflict, he is the most vital thing going on internationally. he said the russians have sustained heavy losses. they are selling oil in their economy is pivoted. there are base economy. they are having drones coming in from iran and weapons coming in
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from china or flat out weapons coming in from china. he is not pushed back on that at all. he has not gotten to reinforce sanctions. if you look at "the wall street journal" article, they talk about him going into a meeting and moving so slow to an emergency meeting on ukraine that it took 10 minutes to actually start that meeting in which time he was so disengaged, he would pass it up to somebody else. when he had a chance to talk, no i could hear what he was saying. i think this is a pretty good deal. front and center, confused a hostage in gaza. was actually at the white house. he confused his cabinet secretaries. he claimed to have talked to someone who died in 2017. and one who died in 19 -- this is stuff we see. "the wall street journal" article have to be the least surprised person on the planet that this actually has happened behind closed doors. is 45 people that were interviewed. i know this push back.
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they probably don't want to talk about the things we are all s seen. >> sandra: fair enough. voters are being asked about it. we are looking at the latest fox news power ratings. voters looking at trump or biden who is more mentally and physically fit to be president. the higher marks definitely go to the former president donald trump. will this benefit him come november? >> no doubt about it. sean hannity, and i guys did. the last thing he wants is to lower the bar to the fact when joe biden shows up like the state of the union and delivers okay or is able to finish standing up, they look at it as a victory. i think president trump is going to go out of his way to say he's fine. they talk about him going up and down. big day good days and bad days. we saw that today. we saw a speech where he seemed confused a few times on stage. by the time he gets to the interview, he's not able to keep the energy up.
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how could you do the toughest job in the world and not have the energy to work all day when you land yesterday and you put the lid on right away and a three-day event, i think that if someone alarming for people who want to know, and you do the job for another four years? >> john: one last point. there's a lot of pushback from democrats on this "wall street journal" article. some of it coming from nancy pelosi who posted this on x. "many of us spent time with "the wall street journal" to share our first-hand experience where we see his wisdom, experience, and strategic thinking. the journal ignored testimony by democrats and focus on attacks by republicans and printed a hit piece. after they talk to democrats initially, some of them called back to say, by the way, i want to remind you of president biden strengths. clearly the message went out from the white house to shoot this thing down before he got out. >> new york congressman said i
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want to call you back to straighten a few things out. what about "the wall street journal" being opened up to say in the white house called to say who are you talking to? i told him. they called back and said i want to make sure you know the president hears the president's message. he's very engaged and loqu loquacious. it seems to me, if you want to interview, the next step would talk to the wall street reporter. did use" from people that talk about how energetic joe biden is? thank you jon stewart. first week back on the daily show. he said basically, we keep hearing a great job on closed doors. and we see that guy? america wants to see that guy. >> sandra: "one nation" coming up this weekend. >> we sat down with him before a big event in the phenomenon of trump in that audience of 18,000 plus. how can you explain how he resonates there? i think people like to see that
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interview is so much more saturday night. >> sandra: 9:00 p.m. eastern time. >> john: looking forward to it. we will see you tomorrow morning. >> sandra: chicago democrat addressing crime but not the way many locals were hoping. why her new plan is being called bogus. >> john: many virginians breathing a sigh of new comic relief. robert wolfenden greathouse while the low demand very ev is dropping even more. awkward question... is there going to be anything left... —left over? —yeah. oh, absolutely. (inner monologue) my kids don't know what they want. you know who knows what she wants? me! i want a massage, in amalfi, from someone named giancarlo. and i didn't live in that shoebox for years. not just— with empower, we get all of our financial questions answered. so you don't have to worry. i guess i'll get the caviar... just kidding. join 18 million americans and take control of your financial future with a real time dashboard and real live conversations. empower. what's next.
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citizens. >> she argues that sending out crime alerts to her community and letting them know about things like shootings and carjackings and robberies can create a bad perception and make people feel less safe than they actually are. the timing of this policy change is getting some blowback. so far this year, crime in that area is skyrocketing. robberies are up 78%. sexual assaults have more than doubled the rhythm number of shooting victims has quadrupled in a part of the city that hasn't seen a ton of crime and recent years. residents will now have to opt in to receive crime alerts. this is a change they pushed f for. an explanation was surprising to the nearly dozen or so folks we spoke to in that neighborhood just down the road from her office. they are not happy about it. >> is not a good decision to me. it's been rougher. why would she do that? >> i don't feel safe walking
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outside anymore. >> you have to let people know what's going on in the area. better to let people know. >> that is bogus. that is bogus. don't do that one. she is going to get herself out of office. >> scheduled to sit down with us to explain your reasoning behind this change but a few minutes after she arrived at the studio, her aim seemed to realize that we were a fox news channel and not local fox station. we were told an emergency had just come up, and they walked out and have not been available to reschedule since then. the invitation is always open of course. >> john: then invitation is always open. have people completely abandon common sense? thank you. sandra. >> sandra: do you want to know the answer to that? i don't know parallel white house meanwhile is continuing to push evs. some states are pushing back.
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virginia republican glenn youngkin is reversing a mandate in his state that would have phased out the sale of gas-powered cars bringing in our econ panel robert wolf and dan greenhaus. i've been looking forward to this conversational date. where do you stand with evs? should they be mandated? >> no, they shouldn't be mandated. we had a great growth spurt a few years ago. that growth spurt slowed down dramatically. i think it is off by 15%. even though ford showed great earnings on the evs yesterday, they are losing a ton of money on it. getting rid of most of their ev fleet. kind of having its fits and starts. >> sandra: you sound like glenn youngkin in his announcement. keep it up. >> i don't have anything against electric vehicles. if you want up by macklin, buy one.
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9% of automobiles in virginia that are purchased are electric vehicles do turn around and mandate that 35% of them have to be electric vehicles imposes an extraordinary economic burden. >> sandra: that sounds like common sense. he says i'm not against the evs, but when you only have a certain percentage of the market that wants them, where are we talking about double-digit mandates in some states? >> if you are the government and trying to push people and new technology going to get people to do that, you do that through the use of tax incentives. to your point about glenn youngkin, it is common sense to say if you want to buy and ev, last month, the last couple of months, evs represent somewhere around 8% of sales or so. high single digit of sales. there is demand for it. not as much as people wanted. the result is what we are seeing now. >> sandra: you have a democratic senator in oregon
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hammering the biden administration on the lack of ev charging stations. calling them pathetic. that is part of the problem with those who want and ev. here is the latest gallup polling on the issue of americans ev ownership. currently only 7% owning evs. 7% after all this talk in all disciplines. though seriously considering 9%. those who might consider is in the double digits. those who say they would never buy one is almost half of respondents. okay, that number seems to be climbing, by the way. last year it was at 41%. now it is at 48%. >> with respect to the charging stations is what we in the industry call range anxiety. a lot of people are concerned that they will be with her car not be able to find a charging station and they will be stranded. over time, that is why you are seeing simple back now. to your point, the other number
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that is going up, the people who are buying a car used to be three or 4% by evs. now it is 6% or 8%. over time, that number should drift up where the demand is nowhere near what anybody expected. >> sandra: calling the chargers rolled out pathetic. >> that is pathetic. 3 years into this. the fact that we pass this bill years ago and not one charging station has been built in my state and only seven as you put it, seven sites around the country. that is a vast administrative failure. >> sandra: ouch. >> he's a big guy with climate action. i think we all agree it would be great if carbon emissions decreased. i think you can't for something a 6% or 7% that says everyone needs to buy it with 10 years. the nervousness of ranging but insurance premiums up for evs. >> sandra: how about the cost.
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the car itself. the evs themselves. i appreciate this and have you both back soon. john. >> john: sandra, the jury doesn't have that case yet and hunter biden's gun trial. go to the defense be working on winning on appeal? andy mccarthy joins us to talk about the potential strategy coming up next. ght and keeping it off? same. discover the power of wegovy®. ♪ ♪ with wegovy®, i lost 35 pounds. and some lost over 46 pounds. ♪ ♪ and i'm keeping the weight off. wegovy® helps you lose weight and keep it off. i'm reducing my risk. wegovy® is the only fda-approved weight-management medicine that's proven to reduce risk of major cardiovascular events in adults with known heart disease and with either obesity or overweight. wegovy® shouldn't be used with semaglutide or glp-1 medicines. don't take wegovy® if you or your family had medullary thyroid cancer,
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's >> john: more bombshell testimony in the hunter biden gun trial. sister-in-law who was briefly linked to him romantically. help bolster the prosecution's case that hunter lied about his drug addiction on an application. andy mccarthy is a former assistant u.s. attorney in fox news contributor. we will get to some of the testimony in a minute. in terms of theories of how
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hunter biden could wins case, yesterday we were talking about jury nullification as a possible route out for him. you are suggesting that he could win it on appeal potentially based on second amendment. "the federal prohibition on gun possession by users up addicted to illegal drugs goes back half a century to 1968. half a century seems like a long time till about the meaning of the second amendment protection is honestly developed many decades earlier. there simply is not a deeply rooted historic tradition in the united states of banning drug users from possessing guns." you suggesting that the bill of rights may trump a federal regulation. >> that is the defense, i think him and john. this is not mutually exclusive from jury nullification. hunter hopes that even though the evidence seems daunting and he can convince a juror to
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perhaps resist conviction. i don't know an acquittal may be out of his reach. really, they are teeing up there appeal here. they have lost the second amendment claim in the district court with the judge. i think they are expecting that we are going to get another supreme court case this term. perhaps with more clarity about the viability of long-standing federal restrictions on people who are allowed to have firearms based on certain disabilities like narcotics addiction. i think they hope that they can take that and convince the court of appeals that the judge was wrong in her interpretation of the second amendment. >> john: in terms of testimony, we have hallie biden on the stage today who testified she didn't see him doing drugs during the time. period in question. when she went to search his car, she found the gun and drugs. that would seem to be a
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connection. there was testimony from the gun store employee. here is how foxnews.com discovered what he said. "cleveland said he gave biden the form. "the federal form to fill out. "a form of identification. cleveland also testified that he was 2 feet from biden as he filled out the form. he further testified that he personally saw biden fill out question 11 east, which asked whether he was an unlawful user or attic to drugs. fees and saying he personally watched biden check the "no" box. that is direct testimony from a witness, credible witness. >> evidently from everything we have heard regular reporting, certainly he didn't match up the scary description that abbe lowell had.
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that testimony is very important, because even if hunter somehow where to prevail on the second amendment claim, that would basically affect the charges against him for illegally possessing the weapon. but it doesn't help them with the false statements on the farm and the false statement to the federal firearms dealer. that is 15 years of statutory liability just in those those 2 counts. >> john: on the trial continues this afternoon in delaware. we will be requiring our presence in the days ahead. we thank you, sir. speak to the needs truckers more than ever. is he about to become one? wait for it. he is live inside an 18-wheeler at the driving academy in pennsylvania. looking good. >> it could be very scary. if i may answer the truckers shortage, they are teaching you how to back up. maybe soon, they will teach me
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how to drive forward. maybe in just a second. for over. he's got so many life experiences that he can share. finding the exact date on ancestry that our family business was founded, was special to share with my grandfather. you don't get that moment every day. i brought in ensure max protein with 30 grams of protein! those who tried me felt more energy in just two weeks. -ugh. -here, i'll take that. woo hoo! ensure max protein, 30 grams protein, 1 gram sugar, 25 vitamins and minerals. and a new fiber blend with a prebiotic. (♪) everywhere but the seat. the seat is leather. alan, we get it. you love your bike. we do, too. that's why we're america's number-one motorcycle insurer. but do you have to wedge it into everything? what? i don't do that. this reminds me of my bike. the wolf was about the size of my new motorcycle. have you seen it, by the way? happy birthday, grandma! really? look how the brushstrokes follow the line of the gas tank. -hey! -hey!
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>> sandra: you see them all the time delivering everything you can think of. the u.s. doesn't have enough drivers for trucks to keep the
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economy going. live behind the wheel of a big rig in pennsylvania. jeff kellogg what exactly is causing that shortage? i've hereunto anything yet? >> i don't think i am the answer for the shortage. i am getting a real education, sandra. you can hear -- i did it wrong again. i will try it again. you can get, by the way, a cdl and 5 weeks at the roadmaster facility. 23 of these around the country. this is the one in bethlehem, pennsylvania. we will try to go back again. to my right. all right. hold on. at any rate, there's not a truckers shortage out there. in fact, because of the economy, the weakened economy, there's not as much going by truck these days. am i good now? let me try to go back again and not square up this time.
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we talked to the president of roadmaster's, and he says, you know, the problem is that the trucker fleet is aging. consequently, people are going to be dropping out. and we need more people. >> hopefully we are at the later stages. that shortage is muted at this time. likely to come back and ultimately, we probably need a million drivers over the next 1. >> a million drivers. i don't know that i'm going to be one of them. it looks like you can drive it just like a car. it's kind of cool. this is an automatic transmission. i can tell you, it's not an easy -- stop. wrecked it again. but i i tell you? >> john: you know, i've got a great idea for the outfit where
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you are. there are places where you could take little kids, little diggers and those things. this would be a great place to have an adult birthday party. let everyone go drive the 18-wheelers and see how they do. >> i will recommend that to the staff. i think that is an excellent idea. it's probably drive drive better than i'm driving. >> another question for you. i tried to launch our whiteboards mode. you can see the back end of the boat. you've got a 40-foot trailer behind you. how do you know where the end of the trailer is? >> it is 53 feet. an 18-wheeler. freightliner. you've got big mirrors. that helps. slow down, he says. let's drive fast. >> sandra: look at you go. this is incredible. >> john: i can kind of drive.
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>> nobody brings it to us like you. that is amazing. be safe. >> john: have fun, jeff. don't get on the road. >> sandra: we will be right back.
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>> some more pictures of jeff flock with the cdl license plate. he is not quite versatile at that yet." will tell you though i've seen some truck drivers are unbelievable and could pull up to a warehouse with a foot on either side of the trailer and in 1 fell swoop back at all the way in. >> sandra: look at him go, jeff great job. i think i'd be amazing at this by the way. >> john: that would be a lot of fun at thank it'd be a great place to go for a birthday party. >> sandra: at lovett we should set it up. christmas party is set your dvr number missus. thank you for joining us and sandra smith. >> john: i'm john roberts. the story begins number back tomorrow liv

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