tv Outnumbered FOX News June 12, 2024 9:00am-10:00am PDT
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here with kayleigh mceany and emily compagno. joining us today, host of the tudor dixion podcasts, tudor dixion. and call and cut of america's bill hemmer. nationals from should take a stand has ties to isis terrace and they are now in federal custody. we think the fbi and local authorities of where they were picked up. because they crossed over our southern border at some point. they arrested these potential killers during a coordinator sting operation in new york, philadelphia, and los angeles. so, how did these dangerous individuals end up in our country? they crossed into america. and now, we ask how do people like those men make it through innocent areas that have blown
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up since executive action last week. according to the department of homeland security, the eight men each received a "full vetting close." because we don't know what that means. no consenting information was flat. fox news was told that the ties to terrorism and security concerns came to light after all eight were released into the united states. do i have to shout that? is that a shock? in a joint statement to fox news, the fbi said "as the fbi of dhs has recently described, the united states has been in a heightened threat and environment" the fbi will continue to work around the clock with our partners to identify and investigate and disrupt any potential threats to national security. over the past 14th months, there
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has been in the usual high number of terrorist attacks, including the one in moscow. the concert hall, and march. where 145 people died, and hundreds of others were wounded. so, when dhs told tells us that they fully vetted these people who just got arrested, again, we do not know what that means. how many dangers nationals are living in the united states right now, that we fully "vetted." we need answers. >> bill: this was the number, three years ago. of people who got away from the border. 387,398. and, if there are those in that group, they are now in our communities.
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223,670,000, 674. but the truth is, we do not know who is here. you mentioned that attacked this past spring in moscow, bella's low-tech care. all they did was cage of the joint, they waited for the concert to begin. and they were using semiautomatic weapons. so if you are plotting and planning and thinking. and i thought this for several years now, if you are a member of isis, and donald trump runs you out of that place, and then you have a change of administration here and you know that the borders are open, why will you not go ahead and test the system? there is a reason why -- you have all of these members of the administration who are flashing right now. mike, you can read his piece today, merrick garland, christopher wray, they are all saying the same thing, they are
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seen warning signs out there they haven't seen in some time. >> harris: let's listen to the congressional testimony from just last week. >> we have seen the threat from foreign terrorist rise to a whole 'nother level, this is by no means a time to let up, or dial back. now, on top of that, increasingly concerning is the potential for coordinated attached here in the homeland. not unlike the isis attack we saw at the russian concert hall back in march. speak to so, basically, to boil it down, how do we not know? >> kayleigh: the list of administration officials who are warning and we are hearing this repeatedly. and 111 is in the back of our mind, no longer do i think about these attacks when i go to big events until recently when i was going to a concert in multiple times across my mind my goodness, what happened in
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moscow and for the cia director, for the fbi director to bring up that specific example, it is terrifying. it is in the back of everyone's mind. the fine affairs, they wrote an article before these tajikistan individuals were caught. there was a warning light that was blinking again and they analogous this to george tenet who used to be the head of ca, and the confirmation hearing in 19971 specifically about al qaeda. that was in 1997, long before 2001, whining about al qaeda. that was ten times over t the yr before 9/11 happened, so we must take this seriously. >> harris: we were on the same page, because i read that article as well, and there, he says the u.s. central command, they have pointed to the terrorist capabilities of groups that al qaeda, isis, and the afghanistan affiliates.
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they say despite the threats, dissent and border remains defenseless. when i got to that line, i scratch my head. he is not protecting us. >> tudor: you think about these big event you go to, these guys are talking about the boston marathon, they are planning something like that that is why we are getting these warnings, but if you beat deeply into that, that article is saying that joe biden does not have the ability to return these people. he doesn't have the relationship with these countries to send them back, they will not accept them back. so will we talk about border patrol, we realize we have these bad guys who are coming in, thee is no way to return them. what do we do with them? >> harris: guantanamo bay -- they cannot stay among us. and if we know they are here, where do we put them? fox news contributor joined me on "the faulkner focus" and this is what he told me.
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>> in 2021, they were a number of russians accounted for, since october over 30,000 chinese nationals, people from russia and north korea, syria, turkey, iran, and this happens by the thousands every month. we are releasing them. and they keep saying that we vet them before we release them but it is poor, we can only vet with the information that is available to us. but if you think russia, syria, turkey, iran, and sharing any national security information, no. they are not. this will be the last. unless they take action to secure the border, something is coming. >> emily: president biden is having a continued for escalation, and we defenseless approach to global relationships, it has resulted in not only the erosion of relationships with our allies, but also the elevation of our weakness as perceived by our enemies. so number one we do not have the
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intel which is why when the government perpetuated by the mainstream media, these people were fully vetted, i really appreciate the director's point, fully vetted on a slim iota, that piece of information. if not the whole picture. when anything happens in our own lives, stick your home or your car. you mitigate the risks. you taking your car and make sure your bricks are solved. why in this administration, against the red flags that have been founded by the fbi director, the attorney general just last week, and internet searching threats and global capabilities that they have, the outgoing national counterterrorism and doctor who said they set elevated global threat environment. isis -- the list goes on. why would the president if you are there? just like he ignored all of the advice before the plot of afghanistan. we can mitigate the risk by closing the seven border and the northern one since anyone is
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coming over that as well. we cannot mitigate the risk right now because this president has eroded all of those relationships in our capabilities, but we need to mitigate the risks and he is ignoring them. >> quick follow-up for you emily. so, does he even all those things and why doesn't he take action? i don't know. i don't know if they're telling him everything, i don't have the confidence anymore our lives are at stake. i don't know. >> emily: even if his closest advisors have tried to shield or protect his mentality from this and try to whitewash with the southern border of the fact that these public statements by these officials that we have cited today, those are clear, those monies are clear. anyone would have to open their eyes and listened to know that the third israel and the risk is high. >> bill: started with latinos right? speed to the normal border crossings we have seen.
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>> that would upset the progressive left, it would offend them and you look up to this point will be can list off all these countries and build illusions down there with a group of people from these places, day after day after day. >> harris: and also people from haiti are among them as well, and i will say then that he is losing people of color, he is not in a push against black or hispanic center political year. the vetting should be irrespective of what they should look like. where you come from matters especially if you are in a list of countries that have terrorist activities going on. okay. we are getting new reactions not from the white house on hunter biden and his conviction. the press secretary told reporters moments ago, that the biden administration, a potential commutation is being considered for hunter. more on that breaking news. remember he said he wasn't in a part in him, but this would shorten his sentence, it is like
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a pardon, but not exactly. it's not a clean record, but makes it look like he has already been wiped with the law and has paid his penalty. mark, coming up next. now, how about something to put a smile on your face? aspen dental provides complete, affordable care with dentists and labs in one place plus free exams and x-rays for new patients without insurance... and 20% off treatment plans for everyone. quality care at a price worth celebrating. it's one more way aspen dental is in your corner. i'm jonathan lawson, here to tell you about life insurance through the colonial penn program. if you're age 50 to 85 and looking to buy life insurance on a fixed budget, remember the three p's. what are the three p's? the three p's of life insurance on a fixed budget are price, price, and price.
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>> this just in, white house press secretary said that president biden is not ruling out a possible commutation. but she has not spoken to the president, but she said he has ruled that a pardon, but the answer is a little bit different. this is where she had to say. >> what i am saying is that the president -- i have not spoken to the president about this, but he was asked about
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apartment, and asked about the trial specifically, and he entered it very cle really and forthright, as we know the sentencing has not even been scheduled yet. i don't have anything beyond what the president said, but he has been very clear about this. >> kayleigh: reading between the lines here, this is just conjecture, but she says she has not spoken to the president and has nothing on a commutation and it's fair to say, she did it will let up because it could be a case of not having spoken to the principal, her boss, the president. >> bill: i really think, we are going to get five months of twist and turns. and we will have a national verdict before this is all over. i think we will get drips and drops of the stuff and it will take us in different directions. i was confronted with this earlier today on america's newsroom. i do not know what it means, but no jurors was identified.
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no one has even given a comment. not even off the record. and yesterday, i think the jury reacted the normal way jury people react. they found him guilty after looking at the evidence and this will be decided. one person said politics played no part in this whatsoever. a year ago, you know the law, david's involvement of august of last year, a year ago, hunter biden had her probation deal and he walked away from it. a year ago. hunter biden apparently had a deal at least on paper that would give him immunity from any further prosecution. the whole thing blew up. especially for the judge. and now you have a guilty thing on the gun. you are going to have the tax evasion case go to court in los angeles in early september. and -- the addiction issues, they were rather pronounced i thought publicly in this trial.
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and a lot of americans can relate to that, understand, have a level of sympathy for her, but the tax deal has a whole different connotation for a lotf americans. >> i think you are right. he clearly overplayed his hand the first time around, they are embarrassing details with the tax, for his whole family, not just him. but your point of the addiction, the biden campaign, believes that one of the strongest moments that joe biden had in the 2020 debate was the first one, when he set up for his son hunter and pointed out that his son was an addict and millions of people are addicts in this country and he overcame and he conquered and i thought that was a strong moment but it seems as though president trump might have taken note of that because i read this at the very bottom of "the new york times" today. that behind all of this trump who attacked hunter biden changed his mind about the political value of doing so now at least over the younger bite and personal issues. according to people close to the former president in a meeting
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last year he acknowledged privately to an associate attacks against the president's son had a potential to backfire. now listen, besides attacking hunter more than five dozen times in the months to the election listen to how trump talks about addiction with sean hannity. >> is another aspect of it. and it is something that if you look like the fentanyl, that is killing our children in massive numbers and opioids killing our children in massive numbers, there's this issue that is very real and i guarantee you there's not a person that is watching this show that does not know somebody, family member or friend or neighbor that has not had to do with addiction. you will have to deal with it in your life you do not drink. never have. >> no. never had a drink. but i had a brother who suffer tremendously from alcoholism. and, it was a terrible thing to
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watch. he was a incredible guy. but the best personality, the best looking person you had ever seen, everything was perfect, but he had an addiction, and i understand addiction because he was very close to me. >> kayleigh: i don't think he will attack -- e humor here hear that and how powerful that it is. >> harris: you know what was not adjudicated and something that is not separate many americans. they are glad that you want to get sympathy to people who have a disease. i did do i do not think that divides many people. but you know what else is also true, not everyone commits a crime who is an addict. the president promised, promised, no one is above the law. including i would imagine, since his son is someone, it would be his son. if you commute, and wipe away the sentence, and time potentially for his son, because it is not a pardon is a
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commutation. if you fix it for hunter, are you going to fix it for every other addict out there who went to jail, using drugs, for whatever crimes they committed as head of violent crimes of course? is that his son, obtaining a weapon in the state of which we know he was from the witnesses in the case, including ex-girlfriends, one of whom went through the truck and found the gun and try to hide it from the public unsuccessfully? do you think in that situation that the president can stand out from god and say i will fix it for hunter but not for anybody else, i think he hudson politically and he must keep his mouth shut, and must act like he trust the justice system because 48 hours ago he did. >> there were articles saying that people are fearing that president biden will be distracted by the legal battle. katie rogers from "the new york times," was on cnn last night, listen specifically to her recording on this
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distraction, vis-a-vis a war that is going on in asia. >> more than anything else, he wakes up, if he is briefed by people from gaza, the next thing is about his son or he is in constant contact with his son. they speak at least once a day, so this is something that i think is going to add more weight, to the president's mind-set. he has been quite worried about these legal problems never having eight and for his son. and it adds to that. >> kayleigh: he goes into briefings about the war in gaza and then comes out and asks about hunter biden. this is a president who has a personal matter on his mind. >> emily: just this hour we've had hundreds of rockets being struck into northern israel, i wonder at this hour what the president's thoughts are consumed by, to me it is a
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hallmark of another colossal selfishness that is hunter biden. he did not end any of this early enough. the president in this regard we are talking about, as a father, it is natural to be consumed by worry for a trial of yours. i appreciate your trial so much, but the criminal retribution and accountability is not for an additive before criminal behavior that this person engaged in. many of us who know all of the people who have suffered from addiction will pretty much each season be held accountable for any criminal behavior. it doesn't matter if they intended. there's no such thing as a victim and crime. and at such a childless argument. because you are then participating in a hughes imagination that increases human smuggling, and violence on the streets. an currency being used -- there is no such thing as a victimless or woe is me, or even any type
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of separate empathy or compassion and state that we hold, that is unrelated to the accountability that hunter biden had occurred yesterday. as we know the vast majority of incarcerated federal prisoners, drug offenses or fire offenses. >> tudor: what we have seen over the last four years, what we have watched as sweet seen his life unraveled before our eyes. there is a massive amount of sympathy, and they say if i was jill biden i would consider it. >> that is here we why we were here at hear a empathetic tone. it will be very powerful. they are trotting out celebrities and handing out free beer. — the good stuff — and you don't need a satellite dish?
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>> emily: the age concern will not go away. there are growing concerns amongst voters about the president's ability to lead our country. here's what we seen from the leader of the free world, and just the past two days. >> instead of trying to's stop our band, they are working hard to stop it. -- our freedom can never be secured. ♪ ♪ >> emily: it seems like young voters are taking notice. recent polling shows that his approvals with photos h18-29, standing at 24%. so what is the plan? try to make him look cool. dieting is set to hold a second
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fund-raiser with obama, george clooney, julia roberts, and jimmy kimmel in los angeles later this week. president biden allies are also launching a new super pac aimed at the young voters. won't back down. it is hired millennials and gen z writers producers and directors, to have bill hemmer contact to sell the 81-year-old to voters. in a group of democratic donors are trying out, new party events to court young adults. they include free beer, manicures, birth control pills, and a sweepstakes to win a month's worth of rent. but what about the policy? you do not need to hand out free beer if you have good policy that helps all americans so you think the shenanigans, do you think this will work? >> bill: they will see over the next couple of months. but here's the goal, pennsylvania, arizona that's
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where they're starting. they want to find a hundred thousand young voters, young is probably 35 and under, or 30 and under? if you get a hundred thousand people to vote in pennsylvania, who have never participated in politics before, you win that that state. is that close. in phoenix they went around with the group for abortion handing out conscious options as you mentioned there, president biden was not central to this pitch. what is central to the pitch was the student loan giveaway. they concluded that 4 out of 10 americans disapprove of that move. that is no good when you are trying to convince people to vote for you. >> emily: 45% field that if one of your kids came home with birth control in one hand and a check for rent, and says i'm going to vote for "outnumbered" five what does that say to you
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>> tudor: they are going straight from the event to vote. they say go out and vote. they cannot say go vote for president biden, though, and vote. they are incredibly effective and preying on everything these kids are worried about. they're giving them contraception's and weighed about loans and giving them free rent. they are giving or buying the votes. it is not a legal, that is the scary thing. it is effective. where are we with this? where are we? i will tell you, we are not there. we are on instagram or snapchat, they're having producers who make us cry or sad or make us happy, but make us feel these emotions, they are now going out to these people aren't instagram or snapchat and making the ads and making them vote. >> harris: so these people are being manipulated through addictions?
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i don't know if dental dams is on this one, but this sounds like the protesters list over columbia university and all the swank east coast schools, that were trafficking and protest. it's like they cultivated that movement and decided they would pay them to vote and i will tell you, if they become the majority, we're in trouble. do you want people whose motto is, and they took this right out of the 50s and 60s, battle by day, love by night. which means birth control and dental dams. and food. the people at columbia, they needed food and water. forget about asking for the cause of palestinians, they were not doing that. they needed to be sustained on the hundred thousand dollar a year tuition. that is what this looks like. so through their addiction to social media they will be manipulated.
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>> emily: if the target of the free swag, these young voters, who is president biden trying to capture with people who are of much older demographic, young people do not know these names or have not seen these movies or am interested in them. but that is being trotted out in a separate group, is he trying to win back the establishment voters or recharge the wealthy? what is he feeling there? and is in contrast with what he keeps saying to learn the progressive such as being supportive of pro-hamas. >> they want to pick up that hollywood big bucks. they make a really important point these elections are won with the some majority. so with the slim majority it makes in a difference. we make an excellent point you have to meet motors where they are. democrats are taking these young voters to only vote. the ball where it is legal. it is effective. donald trump is tied which makes
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it incredible and shows there's energy behind him but they have to be operational into a ground game or an early vote in order to make that difference and that narrow margin. one thing i will say is donald trump is going on on tiktok which is a great move because that is where young people consume news, and he should ask people do you want beer or contraception, or do we want a house? because it's -- the average salary -- do you want to dance party? or living your parents basement. finesse the language the hold ownership, the american dream, that's what these are young want more. >> emily: coming up, a blow to kamala harris, as americans reveal how they feel about her election chances and if she would make a good president despite her so-called reboot. that is coming up next.
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♪ ♪ >> it is not even friday, but that feels like it. americans are not holding out much hope for a kamala harris, if she were to become president. a new political report claims that voters have ruled out about kamala harris. and this, the latest polling shows that 55% of americans hold up unfavorable opinion of the vice president. that is a lot of people to agree on anything. and they do not like her. but it seems like the liberal
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media cannot stop fawning over her. they say that biden is under utilizing kamala harris. she has like nine jobs, so what else can he give her? and where could she have her for success? the independent is asking is kamala harris the democrat's secret weapon? yes, it is a real secret -- she has a glow of a new feature out, with rolling stone. here's a quote. strengths are often ponderous ones, her thoughtfulness can look like indecision, her link of potential solutions, can lead to unexpected changes of course, her policies may be progressive, but her ways of tackling them, they have often been incremental. in the understudy rolled that is the vice presidency, especially such pragmatism, it cannot fl flash. >> bill: i've heard that song, a thousand times. and i never knew the words where if you are not into yoga, and if
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you have, half a brain. i had no clue. i will make it quick, they did a pool, a third of voters -- believe that she would prevail, that means 2 out of 5 think she cannot win. she has the border, attached to her. and when you sit down, you have to say what have you done lately? it is the old spot from the 1980s, where's the beef? >> harris: or janet jackson's, what have you done lately? >> bill: the russian clothing asking where's the beef? i think, kamala harris, is yet to be able to make her case as vice president. >> tudor: they could be no better running mate for joe biden, what a perfect situation, no one wanted to be president and he is a disaster,
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for them, it is fantastic. she can go out there and talk about abortion and cackle and people will say i agree she will he reach young women. and she's still no him. it is kind of a deal. >> emily: i am struck by the contthe false narrative we've hd this entire time. including in the "vanity fair" article for saying that for all she might've meant, the first years were marred by more than disrespect. they don't want to list them but always explain why a series of gaps, but anyone's first time in wash d.c. can give them the bands. impossible assignments -- they don't mention the board about fixing the economy in central america and talk about on the other side of them out how she held eye contact during the interview so they are doing and shoving her in the same box that she was trying to get out of in their words. i know that they discussed this, that the hubris that she has at all times, that defiant
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indignant, how dare you not respect me, but she hasn't earned it. they talk about how she has declined all the invitations extended to her by other heads of state spouses and that she will say, i am not a spouse, i am the second most powerful leader and she has declined them. talking about erosion of the animated relationships because they cannot see further than their own position. >> harris: that is like me going to the super bowl and pushing patrick mahomes out of the way saying i know i have no experience but let me through a touchdown and win a game. [laughter] >> you want to qualities in a vice president, help you to cross the finish line, and someone who can be president next if possible. she fails at number two, even democrats do not think to a number five that she could become the next president. counterpoint, he may be cut or number one here's what i mean, she does well on abortion and has 67% amongst black voters and
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she is at least like performing him and latino voters, she may just help them with those key groups. >> harris: my advice to anyone who has to debate here, because she reportedly is already practicing and we do not know who the republican vice vice presidential canada is doable for the debate. okay, crime is so bad that police are telling people to take their valuables into the water with them. so if you are wearing diamonds, swim with the sharks, and do not take them off. ♪ ♪ tired muscles and joints were keeping me from doing the things i loved most. not anymore. blue-emu gave me my freedom back. it supports healthy muscles and joints. shop our expanded family of products at major online retailers.
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>> bit questions about national security after people were picked up by the fbi, worried that the vetting process go wrong if they were ever allowed into the country. while hunter biden proceed to trial on tax evasion charges over or will he plead out and a president biden thinking about commuting his sentence on gun charges. minnesota hasn't gotten rent since the day of richard nixon but donald trump is within striking distance as mobility and has a up to support them.
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a story of four-footed heroism, the dog that ran 4 miles to get help after his owner crashed into a deep ravine. gillian turner joins me at the top of the hour for "america reports," we will see you then. >> emily: pictured us, you are on a dream vacation in hawaii, beautiful blue skies, stunning beaches, nothing brings you down, except someone sneaking over to your chair, and stealing your stuff. that is right, america's crime crisis has made its way to paradise. two democratic red hawaii. the police department knows that this is a problem so they came up with a solution that is par for the course for a blue city. for those enjoying the beach they say not leave valuables on the stand. use a waterproof bag that you can take it to the water with you. nothing like those timelines. >> bill: swim with a knife on roadies. i have been to hawaii once, i
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would love to go back, it is a long way from new york, i know it's a little free in terms of society, and i guess if you are a local you can leave your stuff at home, but there's a lot of tourism on those beaches. packed with tourists. what are they going to do? take the bags into the water? i don't see it as practical, but good luck. >> back in the day you could put it into a little zip lock bag, but now there is so much more, iphones -- >> bill: how about you fix the crime problem. >> consequences are good thing because i think about it as a mother of four. my kids are running into the ocean and i have to run after them and i say wait a minute, let me get my ziploc bag. and then we can run after these four kids. and i want to make sure their safety is first but i also need mike harkey and probably can any of my phone, when we got to the beach in michigan all the time, i think about all the stuff i take there and i want to focus on my kids. >> emily: it remember that back the clips to your chair and
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locks, i don't think they invested in it, but hawaii could have used that. >> i thought this was common sense. i have this conundrum and when i go for a blessing, my husband goes up for communion do you leave your bag in the sea or not? you should be able to but i never have the guts to do it. so i will not go for a swim and leave my valuable on the beach. this people think this is a normal piece of advice? >> this provides the people who can afford private beach club -- versus people who go toe free public beach you cannot afford that -- >> harris: this makes me feel oe i remember there was an unwritten rule that your stuff on the beach, is safe. i wouldn't touch somebody else's, but it's like, you don't so no one as well. it is a unwritten rule. and i went to school and barbara, i went to l.a., i think to every beach in this hemisphere, i have a country
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with the beach, as a correspondent, i often times would have my security badge or whatever, but i never worried that it would get stolen l is more concerned that it would get wet. thanks to the crime that they can't knock down. >> i lived there and how is the code as well but times have definitely changed. >> nothing says paradise like swimming with a handbag. >> more "outnumbered" in just a moment 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...
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and that's a big deal. [music playing] ah, these bills are crazy. she has no idea she's sitting on a goldmine. well she doesn't know that if she owns a life insurance policy of $100,000 or more she can sell all or part of it to coventry for cash. even a term policy. even a term policy? even a term policy! find out if you're sitting on a goldmine. call coventry direct today at the number on your screen, or visit coventrydirect.com. ♪ ♪ >> last but not least, do you text people before you call them? always! but if not, you may be breaking an important unwritten will be
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of "the wall street journal" claims etiquette around unexpected phone calls is dividing friends, families, and coworkers. so we asked the coach: do you send a warning text or go straight to the dial button? tutor, i feel like you should always text before calling unless it is work and you are rushing. >> tudor: that is so funny. never. if i want to call you, i'm going to call you and generally i would rather talk than text you. i want to hear your voice, i care about you. the funny thing is people think i don't care because i called you directly. i'm like, what is happening? people have time anxiety now, that's a word, what? >> harris: time anxiety? >> kayleigh: my millennial friends, we just text. >> emily: there's a couple people that can always call me and i will call them. everyone else, don't you call me. don't you ever call me without warning. a couple of people on that short-list come a close family, and that's it. >> kayleigh: and bill hemmer is on the short list. >> bill: you attitude or are not going to get along.
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my first thought is there is something wrong. >> emily: exactly! >> bill: i choose to answer or what do you need, slide them to voice mail. >> harris: it is very, very rare that i call somebody. it's very rare. >> bill: very modern. >> harris: i prefer to have conversations quickly. so if i'm going to go on and on, it's somebody who i know, and that means if i'm not calling them, they generally don't call me because we either have that relationship or we don't. my family come always. or you see mom call, pick up. i see them, pick up. >> kayleigh: gen zers are even worse, they put his silent mode. stop doing that, gen z. onto "america reports." >> we have seen, over the last come i think five years, an increase in the number of key sds, known or suspected terrorists, attempting to cross
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