tv Fox News at Night FOX News July 17, 2024 9:00pm-11:00pm PDT
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[ ♪♪ ] the new word is photoganda being dubbed by the media giving free pr to evil trump that makes people feeling comfortable and so some are suggesting they should bury the photo because if they keep sharing it it's a propaganda machine and making trump a martyr. so what say you. they're probably like to suppress the greatest work they've ever done because it might hurt some feelings. >> i saw 1 of the experts which god knows what that means anymore saying that it was dangerous to share the photo. i was a propaganda it's what
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happened. it is a photo of what happened and again it is hard to believe because like i said yesterday he made getting shot look so cool. he really did, of that photo i mean if i was being shot at you would not be able to get me up i would be unconscious just from the stress of the thing he got up and fist bumped that's what happened is not as if people are going to not want to go and look for the photo either only people say of the former president was shot it's absolutely absurd. suppressing what really happened is propaganda. >> and they never do that about photos of of rubble in gaza out of fear that might disturb people because it actually is beneficial the truth is beneficial to trump. >> making a decision whether or not to share something on your
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agenda is literally what propaganda is. >> jamie as a divorced dad who's forced to see your kids only in photos the feel this can negatively impact your relationship with the children you've never seen. >> i don't think that could get any worse. i want them to ask questions about the story. they've never seen the word photoshopped or doctored they're just saying don't show the pictures but isn't what we do show the best picture you have of an event that's the truth and trump made looking dismayed being shallow critical i would just be like could you clean up the poop before anybody sees it i don't think. or william politics is not discussed it with the headlines to came out right away that's the 1 thing where my friends
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that i talked to like how dumb do they think we are. i saw this just come out they said if cnn were to coverage of my divorce it would reported it as kind woman give us a way things to recently homeless man. and then opens her house to stranger. >> generally photos like this wins a poll at service or they saying they would rather not win an award because the damage to their relationships with their peers would be hurt? >> the new york times put this photo on the front page and cropped at the flag they tried to make it worse and it was worse. look at that photo the sky
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hadn't in blue wouldn't have been as great the secret service guy didn't have a great white shirt on. it's so good that nobody notices the ufo in the background. >> i mean take a look at it distracting. couldn't be any better. >> i don't know i see jewish space lasers. >> again it's another example where the ideology of this is infecting every part of their reporting that you shouldn't do your job. >> remember when the middleton was sick and everyone fished they produced a photo for taking magnifying glasses saying it's photoshopped look at prince louise hand photoshopped.
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this is exactly what happened it's not the photographers themselves anyone would be proud to have this is a representation of their work. the other jealous photographers who weren't they are didn't get the shot at the same time. it's like the model to did make the cover of the sports illustrated swimsuit issue are going out on a i think she likes really fat i think britney my homes is so gross and really wearing at that bikini you it's not the photographers themselves they were like 3 different photos that very moment they were standing. 1 from a new york times photographer has the bullet next to his head and the other he's on the ground 1 is at the evan photo 1 that is become so iconic. those are photographs that can make a career.
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all of media is run by the kind of jellybeans who write cnn headlines. >> and unlike the people he said it desks those journalists actually risk their lives because if there is an assassination attempt and you're holding a thing in your hand pointing it like you're hoping somebody doesn't thank you are the killer. >> your so close to the person they are trying to kill you don't know if there were more of them in those fog -- photographers did what trump did they didn't stop or cower they kept going. >> and we're going to keep going coming up it rhymes with cake.
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would be nothing about me. >> anyway i'm hearing that they're pushing to replace jd vance with you in the senate. >> a lot of people are encouraging me to do that he was a great senator and the 1 negative i mean as a complement to him of his selection as vice president is it leaves big shoes to fill in the senate so many can drive things with a fresh voice that so they had good conversation with president trump about driving the change for the executive branch and the legislative branch my passion is shutting down the deep state start with the executive branch but there's things you can do in the senate i've gave a flaw will see what's left. >> i'm curious about the relationship of trump because you guys kind of just got to know each other. i was that going because unusual guy you're an unusual guy over
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very chatty. >> we both aria i would say i got sonoma couple years ago he said it more recently we only really get to know each other after the presidential race he said the first time we met you gave me a headache actually talking too fast takes a lot for me to see has a lot of energy you had a lot of energy so jokes around with me of that we had a good relationship there but at this point 1 of the things i love about him is he's also somebody really receptive to alternative points of view and learning things about topics he's unfamiliar with and you don't get that from watching the media about donald trump he's intellectually curious. >> it's a good point because people gave him a lot of crap about the drinking bleach thing that never happened is talking about real technology he read
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about that was in the wall street journal. agenda being the 1 not to explain but things like ai or say bitcoin things like that because he's turns a corner on these things whereas before he probably didn't have time for. >> and i respect for not that he doesn't have time for a buddy as a curiosity the world is changing you have a president and joe biden who is also fighting before our eyes. calm ally harris has her own cognitive deficits. >> the cognitive deficit is called boxed wine. >> maybe than that from what we all know. with donald trump it's not an age thing he is advanced in years compared to kemal harris has a youthful curiosity about him and that is 1 of the things i've said about him that doesn't come across use him as a leader
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and that's why we've developed a friendship. >> you think he is change the way people. has he changed since the shooting people seem to think that he has might be us putting that on him. >> i think it's more that photo you i talked him 12:30 am that night after the shooting like water rolls off a duck a bullet runs off donald trump but even as the days of past it's not so much that he has changed but i think the national environment is changed people are able to see a sight of them that i know is existed for a while but people haven't really seen the guy you actually cares about uniting the country. if your vision is america first you have to have lived in america in the place to put it first is a sight of him almost the rest of the country would give themselves permission to
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see i think it's been there all along it's not so much that he's change overseeing it different dimension of who he is that's better not just for the republican party and for winning by an even larger landslide in november i think it's good for the country because people here every 4 years you have republican convention it's about party unity, okay, whatever. is there something different going on here this year you can feel it where there is a hunger for national unity. >> were tired of the splintering kicked people have tried it even the proponents of this ehrlich maybe this wasn't the best. >> my only advice to conservatives and republicans is if you put somebody in a box you don't give them a path to get out of it. as of many of them to republicans and donald trump he's found his way out of it i be careful not to do to the
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other side there are people he didn't vote for donald trump in 2016 because they held these different then in their hearts they will today give them the space to come along the more we do that the more successful we will be in rebuilding the country. >> quick question in regards to trump cabinet press secretary what's the other good what 1 do you want. >> something involving shoving stuff down good with that nasty rotation of illegals i'm in favour of that it's important i might play a role with that. >> the more important deportation as to deportation of these bureaucrats out of washington dc. >> up next a fun story about disney
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>> a live rarely is no more. jamie disney world got rid of a riven anime tronic as liver ellipses associated with alcohol abuse as a divorced dad will likely not bring your kids ever to disney world do you care about this story? >> could i see a lot of myself in liver let. whenever disney rid of thing that might be racist the usually tell her buddy just slowly make his lips smaller each year instead like nobody would notice. there was making a big deal out of it. >> i wouldn't even know this insult existed without them saying, hey, were going to stop using this thing. i just learned a new insult
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instead. >> a delivery lips. >> is not terrible insult for a man it's an awful 1 if applied to a woman though. >> i don't want to know why. >> i think he can make the opposite case it so effective she sucked the liver right out of his body. >> you know what i want to shift this walter i don't think alcoholics are that sensitive to these kinds of slights. >> that's why there alcoholics. i'm deeply offended by this fake bear spinning my phallic money in this.
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and this is how we now have to assume every thing a person belongs to an identity group and everything in your business has to be obsessed about. >> it's not as it so offensive to me. >> also alcoholics should be insulted if it gets them better. >> if this was that upsetting to alcoholics treatment would be much easier. like screw the 90 days that be the easiest thing ever. >> the only place you can drink it disney world's epcot centre everywhere else's dry alcoholics wouldn't even see those bears.
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9:30 in los angeles and this is america's late news fox news at night. fox news at night is learning that donald trump's would be assassin previously wrote on gaming platform july 13 for be my premier watch as it unfolds. they also found searches like when is the dnc convention and july 13 for trump rally on his laptop. the secret service director made a surprise appearance at the republican national convention in republican senators wanted answers. >> this is exactly what you are doing today. >> you are the people answers. >> and then there's this. >> president joe biden: the dr cain a man said he had this promo that problem. >> reporter: he added a medical condition to the list of things like to get him to step
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aside as well as hitting their skiing at by a train or the lord almighty coming down on the same day biden tested positive for covid-19 the third time coming as senate majority leader chuck schumer joined calls for biden to step down the first of the top story jd vance making his national debut as the trump vice president show candidate where it's safe to say he wowed the crowd. and we begin with aisha. think you're joining us. >> trace good evening i can't explain the excitement i felt in the arena as of the 39-year-old freshman from ohio took the stage bringing down the house talking about his upbringing how he overcame every obstacle to be now the youngest vice presidential nominee in the nation's history and it talked about why trump's policies were right for voters across america
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in a matter where they came from lunch. >> my work taught me there is so much talent and greed in the american heartland there really is for these places to fry of my friends we need a leader who can fight for the people who built this country. >> and with that it means 1 more day remains of the convention and the big night with the headliner donald trump who is getting ready for his big speech tomorrow focusing mostly on unity, uniting the party in uniting the country he's also expected to talk about the assassination attempt over the weekend maybe in a while there's drama unfolding in the convention centre today is secret service director tim cheadle -- kim cheadle was at a luxury suite and were watching the video senators marsha blackburn and john barrasso chasing her down and confronting
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her trying to get answers out of her about what went wrong saturday and i'm told she told them this was not the right time and place to talk about this but they had an all senators briefing earlier today and they say that they got no answers whatsoever the only thing they learned was about 10 minutes of their where the secret service actually knew there was somebody who is a threat but still it donald trump walk on stage. >> we will talk but the confrontation coming up thank you. spring in princeton university political scientist lauren right and elizabeth pipp go thank you for coming on. here's jd vance talking about his mom and her sobriety watch. >> it's about signal moms like mine struggled with money and addiction but never gave up compared to say tonight my mom
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is here 10 years clean and sober i love you. >> lauren to you did jd vance hit the high notes tonight. >> you talked about is compelling and his background he was very loyal to trump also showing a command of the issues and smooth communication skills that i think will serve them well. i don't think the 4 president needs a lot of help he has a lot of momentum at this point could have chosen pretty much anybody he wanted and would've been successful but it's a lot of excitement and attention and that's what republicans need now >> it's interesting because of all the speakers i was fascinated by the east palestinian mayor talking about the administrations dev is dating trained to real meant there. >> for the longest time the
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white house was silent we never heard a word from vice president harris either i guess we weren't there types of folks no hollywood elites wall street billionaires live in east palestine just hard-working americans. >> it's interesting he said they weren't those type of folks going all the way back those are the kind of people he's been talking about for 50 years. >> exactly right the convention is not about politicians for the media elite it was about the people especially after the events of last saturday everything the president trump went through in every thing we went for is a nation watching what happened and also the loss of life of a hero who lost his leg protecting his family at the rally the convention was about the speakers are president getting to talk to the american people talking about issues that matter to them this was 1 of them and showing that this administration is left people
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behind it's about raising money campaigning and lying about who's in charge messaging, rather a cannot policies that do the job for the people and redisplayed that nicely today and will do the even better when we hear from the former and future president. >> a big night in the meantime the new york times here following a gop did transformation from dysfunctional to unified going to say the shift in mood was striking. it's been decades since any republican convention felt so confident even optimistic yet the right candidate causes in the right moment. it does feel like it all kind of started coming together. >> okay did not a couple months ago i would not have been this optimistic and encouraging of republicans to keep doing what they are doing but you had a disastrous debate performance from biden that he hasn't been
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able to recover from in this intensely emotional and i would say quintessential american moment saturday from the former president as he was deaf i intend resilient and so brave in the face of this assassination attempt i don't think the polling even captures at this point how posited the numbers will be immediately after the convention may be something settle out what's democrats if they ever get their message together go out there and try to do some fighting but right now the gop is a much better position than i think they could've even anticipated themselves. >> also thought donald trump's granddaughter was great i don't want to talk about her too much but i wanted to mention that the biting campaign now is saying that jd vance is unwilling to debate connolly harris saying the debate was discussed for 2 months now these unwilling to
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defend the record on the debate stage she should just say so of course the trump campaign had a different take on this what's your take. >> my take is it's just more rhetoric instead of the truth that jd vance much like donald trump is no fear of debating we saw that with the former president on stage a couple weeks ago against joe biden we all saw how that ended in they assume as we go similarly i don't think the senator has any fears of going up against the vice president if of course she is even the vice president when the debate rolls around so we will have to see it's not something we are worried about in any shape or form. >> that's what the campaign is saying let's just wait till the candidate is thank you both. in the meantime jd vance took the stage with plenty of star power addressing the audience with first son to amendment many thought was the thirst runner up in the trump vice president
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stakes years more on that. >> the rnc had a lot of speakers featured tonight many being people close to the former president people who would likely help them in a second trump term 1 of the people we heard from tonight was doug bergan who just hours ago was considered for the vice presidential nomination but tonight with the whole country watching he made sure to sell the trump agenda. >> tony roosevelt encouraged america to speak softly and carry a big stick. energy dominance will be the big stick president trump will carry >> all week long it's been hard not to notice his family is been playing a key role in the convention as tonight donald trump junior who heavily lobbied for jd vance to be the vice presidential nominee declared he believes he could carry on the movement for years to come. >> look at me and my friend did
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jd vance i kid from appalachia and the kid from trump tower in manhattan. we grew up worlds apart now were both fighting side-by-side to save the country we love. >> all lies to monitor will be on the former president for the keynote speech we spoke to officials and delegates and lawmakers said they realize after the speech tomorrow night that's when the real work begins will see balloons come down but then trendy get the vote out doorknocking all those things have to get started in the battleground states we heard about a lot tonight. >> with spring and the author of what's killing america jason rants as well as a new york post columnist maranda divine thank you for coming on. were talking about the medium what they were covering at the
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rnc a found it fascinating during the gold star families fox news channel and cnn covered the entire day of it is of the families of the 13 who died in afghanistan during the miserable withdrawal. msnbc didn't touch it never mentioned it i thought it was shameful what did you think. >> shameful and despicable or perfect words for its incredible yet the 13 servicemembers all that was happening at the rnc was 1 of the fathers was reading out names of the 13 the crowd chanted them back at him it was electric heart rending in every american should feel that it's not a partisan issue and they can't bear to give any credit or humanity to republicans. >> they don't care about this
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country are a bit and it. >> biting getting covid as it's the same as the assassination attempt on donald trump watch. >> 's survival of that bouncing right back to his convention is conveyed in the media world is a sign of strength. the current president of the united states is 81 years old having covid-19. >> have a paper cut i can call myself a hero now. it's so transparent where they see their candidate that if they say this and somehow people are going to say we misjudge the guy
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maybe he is a hero because he can get over covid-19 which everybody has had now multiple times and fine with. nobody is going to fall for this it's transparent and political and frankly it's pathetic. >> going to ask a doctor in a minute you got a cold 3 weeks ago you blamed the debate on and now you get covid-19 i'm worried about the immune system. they called trump's here bandage a spectacle watch. >> it was also showmanship by a politician known for his mastery of what they call unscripted reality tv blacker for delegates and image for political mobilization a spectacle for a candidate who we know by his own admission is obsessed with assorted spectacles we make the pictures from the rally after the shooting propaganda and the
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bandage clearly a spectacle. >> where is the charity in these people's hearts it's just arranged they can't accept reality. saying this didn't really happen donald trump didn't really get injured ease putting on a show on a fake bandage and we all sat there and watched it live. we watched the blood on his head we drop to the is watched him drop to the ground we saw the secret service there. a man died another man injured. i don't understand why anybody watches. seems a base similarly to arranged and brainwashed. >> at least joy behar wasn't attacking jd vance wasn't
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attacking donald trump and said she attacked nikki haley watch. >> she is a big disappointment because now she's going to give permission to her people to vote for it might have stayed home or voted joe biden who knows. >> they forget it was a campaign to go back to the 2020 campaign call a let harris called joe biden a racist. >> the column too old and said they should drop out of the campaign and that's likely not going to happen may be a changes they could change their tune the releasees or guy and i sold the fact the view which is about female empowerment are getting that with unity as a country with partisan politics as thank
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you both. the meantime president biden south isolating in delaware as a comes amid growing calls and democrats to get out of the presidential race with kevin corke live in dc. good evening mild symptoms however the admission coming after saying he would consider dropping out of his reelection bid if doctors diagnosed with a serious medical condition keep an eye on that at 81-year-old democrat gave reporters a funds up and said i felt good he cancel his camping trip to las vegas covid-19 with no mask the course after that he flew to his beach home in delaware to go to isolation mr biden did think well-wishers on next heading i would be isolating as i recover
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and during this time i would continue to work to get the job done for the american people the infection comes at a critical moment of the biting campaign after a terrible debate performance against former president trump sparked concerns about his health calls from democrats for him to step aside not good timing this is also happening is 2 thirds a democrats say mr biden she get out of there and withdraw from the presidential race and led his party nominated different candidate altogether in the meantime democrats are also renewing their fight against his candidacy with docs having a letter circulating among congressional democrats expressing concerns about the dnc is sped up process for the convention in august i could give mr biden all the delegates he needs making it harder to replace him. so people like adam shiver telling them to step aside rate
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riding today i believe it's time for him to pass the torch. >> look sick as battle back on thank you for joining us bring in the author of the new book beyond a stethoscope miracles in medicine. the california gop chairwoman i don't know i was walking around the makeup room and wondering where is jessica she's in milwaukee okay we forgot that. dr to you i am curious you know more about this than i do they claim the whole debate bought was blamed on the fact that he had a cold and now he has covid-19. is that unusual to be back to back illnesses like that? >> i'm not surprised i've seen a lot of fluent covid-19 over the past few weeks but would biden you see a lot of interviews taking place to place his doctor
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probably should have told him relax and take it easy don't be going out and about so you can fully recover but i'm not surprised to see is just diagnosed with covid-19 for the third time in his doctors are saying he's suffering from a cough and malaise with fatigue and weakness. i don't think he is a candidate for the antiviral medicine paxlovid because it interferes with the other medicines he's on but i'm concerned because remember the high-risk vulnerable groups he's 81 years old his age alone but some in that group and the fact he has hard disease and atrial fibrillation yes sleep apnea in history a brain aneurysm so he is high-risk you for most people symptoms are usually mild especially for him he does have his boosters and his vaccines says doctors will probably just keep a close eye on them.
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now to politics he's fighting covid-19 he's fighting his own party including the group rate the following talking about hakeem jeffries telling biden directly they have great concerns about the real election. he visited the president is home and during the one-on-one meeting he shared his grim view of the circumstances that nancy pelosi might be joining and nancy pelosi might be joining the teams in. >> democrats are in disarray or republicans without a phenomena week at the convention not just bringing republicans but all of america we seen a deep contrast president biden just can't keep catch a break. >> the stress on biden has to be enormous because you just talked about this the different things he has the stress of being in
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the white house we always see it they go in and then 4 years later you see aging and realtime it's a factor lot of this is that fair. >> without a doubt being president commander-in-chief it's 1 of the most stressful demanding and curling jobs that ever exist even more so than being a doctor or trauma surgeon but it takes a toll on the body and the more stress you have more you're exposed to stress hormones where damage to your body interferes with healing decision-making everything he does impacts the nations of presidential health is critical as a party takes a closer look at itself and say, hey, time to take a break relax and recover and heal because god for bid we don't want any secondary things like another brain aneurysm or
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heart issue or a stroke that could very well happen. >> and know your mess covering the whole rnc thing it's been a success so far quite successful i want to get your take on this which should withdraw and allow the party to select which comes to your view who should withdraw and allow the party to select a different candidate talking about joe biden the overall number is 70%, the democrat number is 65%. 65% is a big number and i know you're on the other side of the aisle but you have to look at that and think that is a lot of democrats that want joe biden to step down. >> absolutely and they continue to be in disarray firing for most spots and they are very, very confused about the pathway forward and like you said republicans had a fantastic convention there moving forward
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talking about everyday americans not typical speakers at the republican convention everybody is really excited about putting the country together moving forward and finishing off at this last 4 years without a president biden and vice president harris. >> anybody giving tips or sneak peeks for trump. >> speaker-03: tomorrow night. >> olive heard is it's completely been rewritten. >> thank you both. we are learning more about the security failures that allowed a would-be assassin to fire and former president trump we now know the shooter was identified as suspicious by local law enforcement an hour before he opened fire also spotted with a rangefinder in a backpack how is it that nobody followed up on that. nicole parker, aaron cohen break it down for us live.
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be trump assassin thomas matthew crooks knew about their son's activities on saturday and when they knew it. matt flynn is live in butler, pennsylvania with more on this. >> matt good evening, heidi. i've been here the past couple of nights and for the first time tonight, we could see onto the actual crime scene all step off here and you can see the white tents in the distance. the remnants of the trump rally. and yesterday, i did a loop around the perimeter and some of the patriotic banners and some of the risers remain in place. pennsylvania state police tell me this is still an active and secure crime scene. so just kind of eerie and devastated to know what you're looking at. and the historic attempted assassination that happened on this property. also tonight, lots of new eyewitness video coming in during the moments before and after the shooting. first, new video that appears to show the alleged shooter wandering near the building that he apparently used a ladder to climb onto and then fire into the crowd. other new video that shows
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the chaotic moments after the shooting. you could see president trump being ushered away by secret service and the two gunshot victims being escorted off a bleacher. just horrifying chaos. and at this hour, as you have been reporting and discussing, there is intensifying scrutiny over the failed security plan here at the rally. also tonight, fox is jockey heinrich reports that the alleged shooter, thomas crooks, wrote on a gaming platform that, quote, july 13th will be his premiere. watch as it unfolds. and our understanding is the fbi is in possession of two of the alleged shooter's cell phones that they have apparently access to, one which is notable trace, because as you know, in previous shootings, including san bernardino and sutherland springs in texas ,apple refused to initially crack open those cell phones. the fbi now says they have access at least one of the cell phones of the alleged shooter. so we'll see what kind of data and information comes out of that thing. >> trace, we've come a long way.
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matt flynn live for us in butler. matt, thank you. let's bring in israeli special operations veteran aaron cohen and former fbi special agent fox news contributor nicole parker. thank you both for coming on. the local police say they notified secret service, nicole, that they did not have the resources to station someone on the building where the shots were fired. >> what do you make of that? well, this is coming down to pointing the finger, right? secret service is saying, look, we assign this to local law enforcement, local law enforcement saying, look, we told you that we didn't have the resources. and this is problematic because when you have a building structure within 150 yards with a line of sight that the president, the former president, united states and the top earning candidate and no one's got their eye on it, that is unacceptable. i think what they really need to be asking for at this point, i want to see the operations plan. let's just get to the point here. the lead advanced agent who's in charge of this and compose an operations plan likely. i want to know what every single person's assignment was ,where they were supposed to be, what was being manned, what was not.
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and if it wasn't being looked over, why not? you know, our understanding is that, you know, the trump team had asked for additional protection. i want to know, what were the communications, if that is true? what were the communications to the secret service from the trump team? what was their response? i want to see all of that communications and i want to know. i get it. you know, brian, is the current president, the vice president, they get precedence over, you know, a former president and a candidate. but i would like to know what was the threat assessment on jill biden, who also had an event that day in pittsburgh. her versus the threat assessment on donald trump, who had an event in pittsburgh that day and what resources were used where. >> yeah, that's a great question. >> senator john barrasso was in the secret service briefing today talking about the shooter being on the radar. >> he said this watch, he was identified as a suspect, as a character of suspicion because of saw a rangefinder as well as a backpack. and this was over an hour before the shooting actually occurred. so you would think over the course of that hour, you shouldn't lose sight of the
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individuals. yeah, but they did lose sight of them, aaron. that was the whole point. they lost sight of this guy until maybe five, six, 7 minutes before. and then they picked him back up again and still nothing happened. >> well, so what are they doing with this intelligence? they have information about a kid who's got a rangefinder. it's a very specific tool that's used for a very specific thing. you show up at one of those events with with that particular device, you should be red flagging like crazy. he should have been pulled aside that good security trace lives in all of that preventive layering. and so the moment that kid showed up, he should have immediately been isolated and should have been interrogated and should have been questioned and should have been removed from the event, had that investigation in that preplanning gone down the way the secret service to what nicole just said, the way it was supposed to based on those plans. the question again is i'd love to see what the plans are like, nicole said. according to the special agent in charge. what were the plans? what was the perimeter? why was the why were those building shut off and why was that kid allowed to move free?
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>> there's just too many failed layers that led to this that could have been prevented. >> and i wonder, nicole, if you knew there was a threat. i don't care how long you knew it, but if you knew there was a threat in the area and you couldn't identify that threat and you didn't have an answer to the threat, why would you let the former president walk out on to the stage? that should have never happened. that should not have happened. trace over and over. it's like one failure after another, after another after another. and i hate to say this, but i feel like maybe the secret service had just been lucky in the past and today was not their lucky day. but you know what? it was president trump's got god watched over him. i have no doubt in my mind about this. but these cracks that were exposed on this awful, tragic day where we lost a civilian who was just there to support an official, i mean, it's awful, but how often has this happened? and it just they were lucky that nothing went bad. and that's scary. we cannot have our law enforcement agencies operating on luck. that's not okay. they need to be doing their job. they need to do it properly. they need to hire the proper
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employees. they need to have the proper training. they need to have the proper funding and anything that is not related to the mission, such as diversity, equity and inclusion. >> it has to go. i'm sorry, it's not appropriate. that's fair. meantime, foxnews.com writes the following thomas matthew crooks, parents contacted law enforcement saturday hours before he opened fire on former president trump at a pennsylvania campaign rally. the aspiring assassins mother and father told local police that crooks was missing and that they were concern about his welfare. i mean, aaron, i have a 20 year old. she's gone for hours on time lots of times. i don't call the cops. why are the parents calling the cops? did they know something? was there a gun missing? were they concerned about something? because it seems unusual to me. well, now you've got to red flags pertaining to the same individual who opened, fired, successful early on trump from a portion of the butler rally, which was not within the sterile bubble. so anybody calling the police
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about a 20-year-old the day that trump is supposed to be speaking. that immediately should get assembled and collated and communicated to that protective detail just to make sure. but look trace good security lives in everything you do before the round can be fired. the moment you fail to prevent and hack all of the potential flags is the moment you're now living in the reactive state right now, which is what happened with those counter snipers and with that team that jumped on trump . and everyone sort of did a good job with that piece. but at the end of the day, it's what you do to prevent the attack. >> and the problem is this elite agency, you're only remembered for your sole failure. >> and this stain will carry for decades on this agency. everybody said it's all about the advance. >> it's all about the advance. >> aaron, nicole, thank you. coming up, leaving california. elon musk apparently fed up with gavin newsom, says he's out of here taking his space x and x headquarters
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. orders to texas after the governor signed a bill that bars school districts from notifying parents if their child wants to use different pronouns or change their gender. p chicken and dr. sheila nazarian join us live on set with this and more next. >> was there ever a time where you were like, oh my god. car insurance shopping is fine. yeah, me either. but experian has a whole new way to do it. it's called the experian insurance marketplace. they have this new ongoing rate monitoring feature. it keeps me informed whenever there's a better rate. all i had to do with enter my information was and they stopped it to over 40 top insurance providers saved me so much time is one and done. he believe experian does all that for free. and i just saved over 800 bucks go to experian .com slash car and you'll never need to shop for car insurance again all eyes on milwaukee. fox nation is at the convention. three years ago we were a great nation and we will soon be a great nation again.
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as the gop rallies behind donald trump, pete hegseth has you covered every night. seconds after the last speaker, i'll be here to make sense of it all. unconventional with pete hegseth. plus, if you missed a minute of the excitement stream, all of the biggest speeches all of the biggest speeches from every night of the rnc, the next day on fox nation, the next day on fox nation, democracroof! america is streaming all these america is streaming all these games on directvs, satellite on the roof. think about this. blue jayut-brains, cardinals, o. what's missing? t're notr. no walnut brain pigeons. they'd rather name a team after soccer. >> to be fair, we're not very athletic. >> lenses on me today. awesome. why? >> i have some extra cash right now. i started using upside the free app that gives you cash back for every gallon of gas you buy. wait, are you saying you get real money back when you get gas with the upside up? >> yes, i get real cash back every time i get gas. does that actually add up to anything?
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>> don't miss the story tomorrow. >> well, after previously moving tesla's headquarters and himself to texas billionaire entrepreneur elon musk is now quitting california almost altogether and quitting gavin newsom altogether. musk is now saying spacex, x and x are both going lonestar. christina coleman is live with that story. christina, good evening. >> that's right. heading to the lone star state. tesla ceo elon musk has had enough with the golden state. he announced he's relocating the headquarters of two of his companies to texas after california governor gavin newsom signed a controversial bill into law this week. it bans teachers from notifying parents about changes to their child's sexual identity. supporters of the law say it strengthens protections for lgbtq youth. but critics say it violates parents rights by preventing them from knowing what's going on with their kids. >> yesterday, musk wrote on ex quote, i did make it clear to governor gavin newsom about a year ago that laws of this nature would force families
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and companies to leave california to protect their children. he also wrote this is the final straw. because of this law and many others that preceded it, attacking both families and companies, spacex x will now move its headquarters from hawthorne, california, to starbase, texas. california congressman darrell issa weighed in on musk decision moving his corporate headquarters allows them to concentrate on the vast majority of the world, not on a california that doesn't want him or anybody else really who's making real things. that's just isn't what california is about right now. >> it has about 1500 employees. its headquarters will be relocated from san francisco to austin. mayor says relocating x from san francisco will be a good thing for several reasons, he wrote, have had enough of dodging gangs of violent drug addicts to get in and out of the building. >> must also made headlines this week after announcing he's formally throwing
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his support behind donald trump after trump survived that assassination attempt. >> trace christina, thank you. let's bring in the author of domestic extremism, one of america's great writers, poochie keenan and the star of netflix's skin decision. before and after pro-israeli activist dr. sheila nazarian. thank you both for coming on here. i don't know, did you see the meme where that where the bear is walking off the california flag? >> and he's like, f this place is like out. i thought was very funny, but it kind of goes along with elon musk in this whole thing. so the l.a. times says the following here. elon musk says he's moving spacex and x headquarters from california to texas, pointing to a new state law that prohibits mandating that teachers notify families about student gender identity changes. musk tweeted that he is moving the headquarters of space x from hawthorne to the company's launch site in texas. the move would be a blow to southern california. it really would be a blow. but elon musk said a year ago, listen. newsom this is a bad idea. >> this is not the way you want to go, right? i mean, i think the only solution for california now is if elon just
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buys the state, right. >> i mean, i want to elon to take me with them. can you give me one of his trucks that i'll just drive with him here? >> just he'll just fire you down there in a rocket. that'll be the easiest thing. i mean, it's going to hurt southern california. it really is, because the industry is big and but, you know, at the same time, you know, people have warned most of california does not want this law. and newsom is shoving it down their throats. >> she has five kids. yup, i have three kids. the school calls me when my kid gets like a scratch on their hand. they're not going to call me and let me know that my child wants to do something as drastic as this. >> it makes absolutely no sense. it makes no sense at all. speaking of no sense. let's put this up, because this is the peachy substack. it's called headline homeland insecurity in the wake of cory's death, meaning the firefighter who was killed in the attempted assassination of president trump and the miraculous intervention that allowed donald trump to survive a head shot by an ar-15 wielding assassin.
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changes need to be made today that cannot wait until january if incompetence and negligence are to blame, then the leaders in charge of homeland security are authoring a slow motion of american civilians and even a former president. i mean, the whole thing is we need to know and you reiterated this, we need to know the security plan here right, p.j.? >> that's right. i mean, this goes all the way to alejandro mayorkas. i called him. you know, he's like the master of mayhem in this country, just all the deaths from illegal immigration. we've talked about this. and now the secret service. i always thought the secret service was like the one agency you could trust. their job is very difficult, but it's simple. you have a perimeter. they have all their where to put the snipers. i assumed they knew what they were doing and this is just the most shocking reveal that yet another institution in america is like this incompetent. >> but we talked about this, sheila, back when these anti-israel protests were happening on campus. we said, what's the plan here to break these things up? what is the plan to get them
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out of these certain buildings? and there was no plan that this year, like where was the plan? >> and there was no plan. and we see this again and again. yeah. >> i mean, they have failed on so many levels. and also, it's almost like normal now, you know, is anybody shocked like you said, you were shocked. i'm not shocked. yeah, i was kind of shocked. i mean, i really i still and we're going to talk about this later. still haven't had a press conference from doj, from dhs, from secret service. why not? i'm waiting. dr. nazarian, you asked on x, how will trump destroy america? going on to say, quoting here, who has allowed political violence in the wake of george floyd and pro-hamas people chanting intifada in the streets? who has created an environment where they have demonized their political opponent for eight years, calling him a fascist, wrote a white supremacist and literally hitler? couple that with the normalization of political violence and what do you get? >> what do you get? you get an assassination attempt. i mean, and you get people going on twitter and on
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instagram and at concerts, which we'll discuss saying, why did he miss? i hope he didn't miss. i mean, the moral bankruptcy right now that we're witnessing of people saying, i wish a human being would have been shot and killed. i mean, what has to lead up to that other than the demonization and dehumanization of that person that people now want to see dead on live television? >> yeah, we by the way, you talk about ms.. we're talking tenacious d's, kyle gass. he said, don't miss trump. next time i want to play this soundbite, we'll get peaches. >> final thoughts on this? mean i made to donald trump next time? >> yeah, very funny. he got dropped by his agent and he's he's suffering some consequences there.
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yeah. and that just shows us that there's one party that's the party of extremism in this country, and it's not the republican party. i mean, i think that probably 90% of the democrats in america probably kind of agree that they were kind of disappointed that this did not actually go the way they wanted on saturday. and the fact that his agent, who i assume is also like a liberal democrat, dropped him, is really incredible. i mean, trump is getting his enemies sort of cancel themselves. yeah, he's is growing. he's growing powerful. >> yeah. really as peachy keen shannon is aaron, thank you both. coming up, we are getting new information by the hour on the security failures that almost got donald trump assassinated. we know the shooter's parents called authorities hours before trump was hit and law enforcement knew at least an hour before the shooting about a suspicious person with a range finder and a backpack. we will break it all down again for you because it's fascinating and we need to know next, when they want
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thank you both for coming on. melanie, to you first. i mean that we talked about this, the secret service being very tight-lipped and maybe it's just protocol, but it seems to me like for the american people is just really that we are eager for information, we are getting nothing. >> mhm. well my initial reaction to that is probably because they're under investigation. so i just wonder what their typical response is when they're under investigation by the fbi because of the incident on saturday. so i'm not 100% positive that it would be in their best interest to go on camera and talk about what happened and where they're failures were or where their successes were actually. >> i just want to point this out. and i mean and ted, to you, i want to have you both talk about this. it's kind of interesting to me. i mean, we know an hour ahead of time that there was word i'm not sure maybe there was a communication breakdown, but we knew there was word that this shooter was in the area. and minutes before we know the secret service had eyes on this person. what is the breakdown here,
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ted, what in your opinion happened? was it the advance? was it the was it the actual ongoing going part of this or what do you think? trace, what we witnessed this past sunday or saturday, should i say, was just about the assassination of a man of a president or a former president as a result of what i defined, a colossal failure. this is what we know around. 551 thomas matthew crook was seen and in the area, police notified the secret service. 553 the sniper team was notified that thomas matthew crooks was in the area fake. so too donald trump takes the stage. 609 crook is seen on the roof in an individual saw him
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and started shouting out to police right and it was a few minutes later that the shooting occurred. a collapse of fear. now, i want you to think about this. all you saw where all of the fbi or all of the secret service jumped on the stage and they surrounded donald trump. well, there came a time where donald trump popped up from the secret service. that was another failure. donald trump should not have been able to pop up because think about it, trace. we knew about one shooter, but there could have been other shooters out there. and when he popped up, it may be good for politics, but it was not a good move for the secret service to allow that to happen. >> melanie, what do you think about that? i mean, it's interesting there because it is it's interesting that he did. but -- but you knew about the shooter. you know that at one time that the the secret service sniper had eyes on this person
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before he opened fire on the former president. and then the whole. >> what happened on the stage. what's your thought on that? yeah, well, the agents responded appropriately as far as swarming the president, covering him as human shields with their own bodies. and it wasn't until after they got the word that the shooter had been neutralized did the president come up and stand up? we did. at ted is right. we did not know if there were other shooters. however, we had snipers up there, counter snipers up there. so i think it was okay at that point to get him up and get him out of there. that's what they were trying to do, is render him safe and away from that scene. >> do you think do you think it was a break down? and very quickly it hit you both on this? was there breakdown in the advance in the prescreening of this? >> are you coming to me? yes. yes, i do believe that if the building was identified, this ag building was identified as a vulnerability, then it would have been swept and it should have been maintained clean. >> and that obviously didn't happen in this instance. i got 10 seconds for you, ted.
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>> same thing with the advanced . absolutely. trace. she's absolutely right. there was a breakdown in communication. and so and that should never have happened. >> i hope that they learn from. thank you both. thank you both. fox news at night, extended coverage continues. >> why do some things have to be so complicated? sier. be so complicated? sier. we don't know either. to comes to dental care, aspen, dental g makes getting new dentures and implants easier with the technology easier with the technology right fit and $0 down plus 0% interest if paid in full in 18 months. making things as simple as they should be. it's one more way. >> aspen dental is in your corner. >> look, we know it's going to be a big change, but it's the right thing to do for all of us. it's just your mother and i want different things, which
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>> welcome back to fox news. in that extended coverage on night three of the rnc, u.s. marine veteran, yale law school graduate, author, united states senator, and now donald trump's running mate, j.d. vance made his big debut on the national stage. and with that, let's get reaction from princeton university political scientist lawrence wright and rnc spokesperson elizabeth pepco. elizabeth, pepco, to you first. i know you listen to every word of j.d. vance's speech. what did you think of the speech? and was this what you were expecting? it was basically what i was expecting. i loved the speech. but most importantly for me, it wasn't about what i thought of the speech. it was looking around at the other people in the arena, right. looking at their faces. i saw their faces the other day when he was announced as the vice presidential pick, and to see the excitement in people's eyes. that's what made me excited, right?
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this is so people told me they relate to. it's someone that they're excited about because of his age, knowing he'll be around much longer than just four years serving as donald trump's vice president, of course. it's someone that they are inspired by because of his rags to riches story, and it's someone they're really excited to have in this white house representing them. so i think that's what meant the most to me, is seeing the excitement on the american people's faces, knowing his name. hearing that speech and knowing that this was the man for the job. >> yeah. and i know you do a lot of analysis on politics, lauren. right. and i'm wondering, it's been a couple of days now, and you know that j.d. vance gave the speech tonight. there was a lot of criticism of him when he was announced on monday. what do you think about this choice, do you think, for the republican party as a whole that j.d. vance is a good choice? bring some youth to what primarily is an older ticket on both sides. >> well, one of the things i study is presidential surrogates. and so i you know, just as well as anyone know how important a vice president can be, either beneficial or a detriment
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at all, which is what i think kamala harris has at times been for the biden ticket. but really, because trump himself is so ascendant right now and because the biden campaign has lied and obfuscated and made things so untenable for themselves politically, but just from the standpoint of basic service to the country self above party, these things they accused republicans of. it doesn't matter who trump chose this time. and so i think he chose someone he wanted. but really, regardless of the slate of choices that he had to choose from, i think republicans would still be in a very beneficial standpoint. and i'll just say, you know, not to take away from all the great work elizabeth and her colleagues are doing, but really part of the reason that trump is so far ahead right now in the swing state averages is because democrats have pushed people away. it's not just that trump has now people in in a way that we
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haven't seen in a while. it's that people were already really upset with biden and his policies. i wonder going forward, elizabeth pepco to tomorrow night, because we have kind of watched and it seemed like on monday there was this kind of kumbaya moment where the democrats like, yeah, we're going to back off the rhetoric. and they didn't i mean, it lasted like 24 hours and they were back on it. i wonder when we are told that tomorrow night, the president is going to talk about unity, uniting the country. do you believe that's exactly where this goes or does he take a couple of swings back because the democrats haven't really stuck to their united pledge? so i do believe this will be very strongly about unity and unifying the country. i have for years saw donald trump as someone who simply wanted to unify the country through success and through strength. i know a lot of people may not have seen him in the same light. i think tomorrow that will change. look, this is someone who basically escapes death just the other day. it's someone who experienced something that most of us will hopefully never experience
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in our lifetimes. and i think that would change absolutely anyone. i think it's time based on like what's just pointed out the failure of the democrat party and their policies, the successes that donald trump has shown he's able to bring to the american people, and just how much the american people on both sides of the aisle are desperate for someone to unify them and bring this country back. i think everyone will be listening. they will be excited for this. and it's truly going to be a moment that both sides of the aisle have desperately wanted for a long, long time. >> and to you, lauren right. because it's interesting, you know, with that that iconic picture now where he's raising his fist pumping is facing fight, fight, fight moments after the assassination attempt. now to this unifying message. do you believe the unifying message is what the country needs right now, or is are there people in the republican party who still want to fight, fight, fight? >> well, i think they can be one and the same, because nobody, no matter what political stripe you come from, watched the events on saturday and isn't cheering for donald trump on some level.
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and i really feel that the political instincts he had in that moment were extraordinarily impressive. i've been critical of him and biden in the past. i will say it was a historic landscape shifting moment, and i think democrats recognize that, too. and so a lot has been made this week of former trump critics coming back into the fold. what's nikki haley going to say? what's to sanders going to say? j.d. vance even has been critical of him in the past. you know, but really, it's -- it's trump, his message, his place in american history. and he doesn't need any of those people. i really think that's how important saturday was. and also some of the events leading up to it. >> well, the tune in for tomorrow night's speech for the former president is the first time that we have heard from him. we've seen him every night. but the first time we will have heard from him since the assassination attempt. and it will be a big time audience.
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elizabeth pepco, lauren wright, thank you both. meantime, the more we are learning about the security measures or lack thereof, leading up to the attempted assassination of donald trump, the more questions we have. let's bring in israeli special operations veteran aaron cohen, former deputy assistant attorney general john yoo and a former member of the fbi's joint terrorism task force, retired naval intelligence officer steve rogers. thank you all for coming on. steve rogers, to you, since you brand new with the panel here, i'm wondering what you think because you have the local police saying, hey, the bottom line is and we told the secret service that we could not protect the building ,the building where the shots were fired from. what do you make of that statement? because there were also reports that there were counter snipers in, if not that building, the building directly behind that building. >> look, the bottom line this there are three elements of the secret services failures, a failure in planning, a failure in execution and a
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failure in training. it was not the the local police who were charged with protecting the president was the secret service. they're the federal lead agency on this. >> they failed, not the local police. yeah. and i wonder, aaron cohen, to you, because we just haven't heard much. i mean, doing this we do this a lot. we go over what about this scenario? it was this many yards from this, but we haven't heard from the doj and we haven't heard from the dhs and we have not heard from the secret service. and i'm wondering why. why not even hey, listen, here's what we're going to get to you. just hold tight. we've got an investigation to do. send somebody out when there's a plane crash. the the faa and the ntsb are out there 2 hours later saying, here's what we know. >> and we only had a former president almost killed. it's not like it's a big deal. road trips. >> here's why i don't think you're hearing anything. the secret service has been historically known as the most elite protective law enforcement agency in the
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world. they set the standard for close protection operations throughout the planet. and the fact that they had a former president who was shot said again he was shot. reason why he's not dead is because, like i say, in hebrew alone, the morale of god was watching. >> however, i believe the reason why there hasn't been any communication here and which i think is a massive failure now in the climate that we're in with law enforcement, where recruitment numbers are down 20, 25% across the across the planet. the fact is, is that kimberly cheadle, the head of the dhs, the head of the doj by not opening up those lines of communication and being transparent, they are only making themselves look more culpable with their incapable of being able to do this job. the secret service, like that gentleman just said, had one job to do. it's a federal mandate for these people to protect the president. they failed on multiple levels. and the fact that they're not talking is only making them
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look, it's creating a stain that's going to take years for them to fix. >> and john yoo, to you and i'm not asking you to put your your crime investigative hat on, but you process information all the time. you're an attorney. you're one of the top attorneys in the country. you know, this stuff. and my my concern is, is that we're hearing the rhetoric, the concern excuses. we hear excuses about, oh, no, no, they couldn't be on the roof because the roof was sloped. and then there is an fbi agent on the roof today hosing down the rest of the of the roof and walking around like it's not a big deal at all. oh, no, no. we didn't have the resources. oh, no, no, no. the secret service doesn't fire first. i mean, a million excuses as and when you have that many excuses and many different stories, as you know, john, you something smells. >> i was in the justice department the last time we had a massive failure like this, which was in the days after the 911 attacks. and i think you're right, jason, a lot of questions to be asked. we don't know a lot right now. and the government is not
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cooperating by releasing information. so what did we do back then? one is we had to consider radical change in organizations. i'd be all for getting rid of the secret service and folding it into some larger body, because i think they're having trouble maintaining the level of professionalism that they used to be known for. back after 911, we folding everything into a new department of homeland security. maybe secret service needs to be made part of the fbi. maybe it needs to be a part of the military. it's not succeeding in its job right now, which its primary job is to protect the president and other high level leadership . i don't think we did is we put together a 911 commission. and i think this is something that president biden could show executive leadership for if he wasn't of such questionable vigor. he should fire the head of the secret service and create a new presidential commission to get to the bottom of this. >> i want to go quickly, if i can, around the horn to you first, steve rogers. why is kim cheating in milwaukee? they're talking about this investigation going on. why the the head of the secret service in milwaukee cruising
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around. >> she should be fired or she should have resigned already. she's probably in milwaukee to in her probably mind to make sure that's a repeat of what we saw last week doesn't happen again. she's incapable. she doesn't have the ability to lead. >> she needs to resign. aaron cohen, why is she there? >> and why not just come and start talking? it's a pr move. >> she's trying to save face right now. she's trying to show strength. the fact is, is that the diversity and inclusivity that are infested and and infiltrated the the secret service has has has literally rotted that agency to the core. she's trying to show face and save right now. she's going to say it was because i'm trying to protect the crowds out there. >> but the fact is, is she needs to go. john young, same thing. 15 seconds. do you think somebody i mean, look, you worked in government, somebody from the government, doj on down needs to come out and tell us what in the world is going on. >> yes, i think it's important to keep the public informed. and if the head of the secret service herself can't do it, then she should resign in the
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public interest and let someone else step forward and can do it. >> gentlemen, thank you all. coming up, california, cleveland, elon musk apparently fed up with gavin newsom, says he's out of here taking his space and ex headquarters to texas after the governor signed a bill that bars school districts from notifying parents if their child wants to use different pronouns or changed their gender. and later in the nightcap, they said that they were worried. >> and i think it's really important that we know what they were worried about. were they worried that he had a gun, where they worried that he would use it on someone else? >> and what you point to, what he use it on himself. what if you knew your kid took 100 rounds of ammunition and all the other things that the authorities have told us he had with him, he probably wasn't going to just kill himself. >> yeah. we learned tonight that thomas matthew crooks parents called law enforcement the day of the rally, indicating that he was missing and that they were worried. why do you think his parents would call the police in the
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middle of the day to say their 20 year old, not their 12 year old, their 20 year old son is missing, been gone for a few hours? is something nefarious going on here? what do you. that we are not being told? let us know. and instagram. at trace gallagher will read your responses next in the nightcap. dad is alleging that his legendary moves might be passed down to you. dancing is just one of the many inherited traits you can discover with ancestry they st . see which unique traits you inherited. the places where they started and the people you share them with. get move in and try ancestry. dna. >> you might learn what makes you legendary to an alternative to pills. >> voltaren is a clinically >> voltaren is a clinically proven arthritis pain
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select smart beds. when you add an adjustable base sleep number, smart bed starting at 999 shop. >> now it's american. >> we've got a big crew now. elon musk is mad as heck in california's latest bit of liberal legislative lunacy and he's not going to take it any more now, saying he will move spacex and x headquarters out of the golden state, down to the lone star state that spring in chino valley, california, school board president sonia shah, republican nominee for congress in california's 30th district intensive care physician alex balakian, the author of domestic extremist, one of america's great writers, peachy keen and the star of netflix's skin decision. before and after pro-israel activist dr. sheela nazarian. thank you all for coming on. i mean, the whole x in musk thing, moving spacex out, move an x out can really be pointed at this woman, sonia shah, because she started all this. she and her school district went after this. the gender, right? and parents not being notified. and the truth is, sonia, i mean, you've been fighting
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this battle and you're continuing to fight this battle. this law was signed. and the truth is, he was told and parents said, we don't want this statewide. i mean, 60, 70% of parents said we do not want this. and gavin newsom, like tough. this is what you get. and elon musk is like, we're out. absolutely. and, you know, it's really sad and it hurts that we're losing families are going to lose their jobs because of it. right. but at the same token, it's going to take actions like this for people to realize that enough is enough and that we need to get to the voting polls and do the right thing and get the right in. newsom has made california a land of lawlessness. it's absolutely disturbing. when they came after our kids, that's when the law, the line was drawn and that's when we said enough. i mean, we're still an active lawsuit, trace, right? >> this is absurd and we're going to cover it and all the way through dr. malecki, i mean, this is part of the reason that you're involved in this. and running for congress and running for the state legislature has become our congress because you're interested in this. and, you know, this is not right. >> i mean, the first thing that i want to tell
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people across the country is my opponent, laura friedman, who is in state legislature, legislature right now, voted for this. right. and if she has her way in six months, she's going to be introducing this kind of legislation in washington for us all. but they're completely off the mark because if you look at the studies from europe, the long term studies, only a minority of children will not outgrow their gender dysphoria by adulthood. so a very small proportion, about four or 5% will remain with that into adulthood. and so. elon musk is, you know, believes like i that you shouldn't be railroading these confused children. they're anxious parents into this gender affirming carry that is going to be irreversible and lifelong. >> peter, you've written about this. i mean, it's one of those things where, listen, this is those things where you cannot have parents not knowing what's happening to their children at school. they're the parents, right? i mean, gavin newsom is a supervillain in california. i've written about this. and i mean, he this is government grooming on a massive scale. and they didn't like children and parents being separate
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at the border. this is separating children from their parents at every school in the state. >> yeah. and you've an humanitarian saying and we've said this on on the show, you cannot give your child an aspirin. you can't have the nurse give your child an aspirin unless you call mom and say, hey, can we give the kid an aspirin? but you can change genders. that's fine. i'll just be on that. you know, the last hundred years of gender dysphoria research showed that it was usually happening between the ages of three and five. why is it that only in the last ten years it's now happening within the ages of 13 and 15? it's clearly social media. it's a little bit of a social contagion. and just like social media trends, parents need to be aware of them. they can be dangerous at times. kids have died trying spicy things and this is not dissimilar to that. parents need to be involved and they need to be informed to do what's best for their family. they really do. i want to put this up on the screen, if i can. can we find this? katie? this is the hat maga hat wearing, man. this is colin redeemer.
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redeemer. colin rademacher. he's wearing the maga hat and he says, i spent yesterday wearing this as i drove all over northern california. my reason i do not want to live in a world where only one political opinion is acceptable. and it's interesting because we're in the rnc here, dr. balakian, but this is what's happening. and you have people, including people that we know, who will not wear or post anything trump ish in their their yards because they fear reprisal. >> i've definitely noticed a difference. i've definitely noticed people are coming out of the woodwork. so the same way that steve garvey outraised adam schiff this past quarter, i outraised my opponent this past year. so people definitely coming out. they've had enough of having to bite their tongue and saying that, you know, this is my opinion, for better or for worse, i'm going to be able to express. >> but luckin's by and after their shows are on your show it to you, it really is. people feel more comfortable because they think that, you know what? there is this movement that now all of a sudden maybe donald trump isn't a monster after all. maybe he's on the right path.
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absolutely. and i think it's more beautiful when you see parents do it. i mean, i have a group of moms that are ordering donald trump blowing bubblegum maga hats. and i think it's sending the message it's not about just donald trump, it's about the people. and that's what he's trying to do, is bring the people together and bring common sense back into the white house. and that's what we need right now, because there is no common sense. it's a bizarre land that we're living in. so, i mean, i'm proud to walk around with my maga donald trump stuff. >> and i don't care what they say, but you're still reticent. you're still a little bit reticent about maybe putting up the trump flag, maybe doing some of this stuff. >> and people are warning you, maybe not the best place to do. that's right. i bought our first trump flag after saturday and my father-in-law was a little nervous about it. it hasn't arrived yet, so i don't know what's going to happen, but i love that colin did this. he's a friend of ours. he's a mild mannered college professor. he's not an extremist and this is a really amazing to see that, you know, the maga movement is, is a movement of not division, not of hatred like the left says.
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>> it's about love. it's about restoring this country to what it was. dr. nazarian for me, i have an american flag. this isn't about trump, not about biden. the american flag is the most inclusive flag. we are. we escaped our countries because we didn't have freedom of speech. we didn't have freedom of thought. so for us to come to america and be a free to speak what we think is in the faces of our parents who risked everything to get us here. >> yeah, it's amazing when i hear people say that the american flag is racist, i think, wow that is something else. >> time for the nightcap with our same crew here. we've got john yoo back with us to join the thing. tonight's topic, parental advisory. we learned tonight that trump's would be assassin thomas matthew crooks parents called law enforcement the day of the rally. why? you think his parents called the police? is it unusual that they called law enforcement in the middle of the day to report their 20 year old, not 12, 20-year-old son missing? >> john, you your thoughts on this having grown up
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in pennsylvania, it's not weird for a kid to take an air minutes in the backyard and shoot at anything that moves. so if these people are worried, it's because their kid probably had some kind of mental illness, illness or emotional disturbance and they knew about it. >> yeah. i mean, you work with kids all the time, so enjoy this. they were there was some fear, at least in my perception there was some on the part of the parents. >> absolutely. a parent of a 20-year-old just doesn't make a random phone call. and i would like to know the history is this a history that they make phone calls to the police because of their, you know, their younger child or adults behavior, or is it just a one time thing? because if it's a one time thing that even sound the alarm even more like, what did they know that we did not know? and there's something going on. a great point, dr. black. >> for a boy this age, right around 18 to 20 is the perfect timing for a psychotic break. if he's having schizophrenia right. so it's going to be a culmination of the delusions, the hallucinations, thinking that somebody voices are telling you to do things.
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so that is what i think is there was an escalation of these symptoms that finally crack that day. >> is it odd for parents to call on the kid? >> yeah. i mean, i heard that both of his parents were behavioral psychologists. so it's very likely, highly likely that they knew something was off with the kid and maybe he was on some kind of medication. like many of these shooters are. dr. nazarian for me, it's a combination of that hearing that, well, as he used his father's gun, so maybe that wasn't normal in their family. the father noticed the big the big gun. the air was missing. i'm not trying to cast aspersions, but the parents, it looks like they know more than they're saying. is it odd for the parents on the ex? yes. 4%, no. 16. professor gibb, maybe the father noticed his rifle was missing and wanted police to look for the son without admitting he had a rifle. gary yes, unless they know he took the rifle. a newer thought he might be disturbed. jerry parents know when one of their kids is troubled? thomas maybe not. odd. if he was missing for hours and not answering his phone while out with an air 15. katie sounds like another crumbling prosecution in coming
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in. beth they knew he was going to do something. he took dad's gun and i'm sure he was acting weird before he did. thank for watching america's late news fox news tonight, i'm trace gallagher in losr on e angeles. we'll see you right back here ou. happy memories just come easier on the water. our founder, johnny morris, firsthand. >> they created a boat was more affordable trackeand sold the world's number one best selling, fishing and pontoon 5 dollar proudly built in missouri and sold factory direct at bass and sold factory direct at bass pro shop as little as $5 a day. as little as $5 a day. you can own a branamerica'd trar and make lifelong memories co pro shops voted america's best outdoor retailer save even more and support conservation when you join the club. >> i'm out here telling people about the experi and insurance marketplace. what if there was a way to shop for car insurance that was not overwhelming? i would say show me the way. okay. so it's called the experian insurance marketplace. so you put your information into experian. one time, experian shops over
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