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tv   FOX and Friends Sunday  FOX News  July 28, 2024 6:00am-7:00am PDT

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it's the 9:00 a.m. hour of "fox & friends weekend." starting with this new fox news alert. israel striking back after hezbollah rockets killed 12 kids yesterday. carley: the countdown is on, we are 100 days away from the presidential election. while trump rallies he voters, harris casts herself as the underdog despite raising millions in her first fundraiser since topping the ticket. we have a fight ahead of us. we've got a fight here. and we're the underdogs in this race. okay? we're the underdogs in this race. >> also this, a debate of biblical proportion, some oklahoma public schools are defying a superintendent's
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mandate to include the bible in lesson plans. interesting. that superintendent will join us live coming up. the final hour of "fox & friends weekend" starts right now. ♪ carley: good sunday morning. a beautiful view of the jersey shore right there. i think the said it was market,w jersey. i want to go. >> a littl crosby, stills and . >> a little too early for cocktails but if you want one -- >> it's too early? carl carley: it's good to see both off, charlie and guy, welcome to the couch. >> i know it's fun to be here. the usual you crew is all out today. we're doing our best to keep
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this on track. carley: a well deserved break. i believe they were all at the rnc. i believe some well deserved time off. >> there's enough news to go around for everybody. carley: it's the olympics going on and it's national ice cream month. we'll be highlighting that this month. >> the whole month. carley: can ice cream deserves a month, whole month. >> that's appropriate. for some reason i thought it was national ice cream day. >> there was that, which was within the month which might soften the blow for joe biden getting thrown out of the race, he's such an ice cream race. i love how you're talking about the olympics are underway. we're watching the you a watch s compete at the highest level and we're eating ice cream. >> that could be an l olympic sport. carley: joey chestnut does that. trump and a kamala harris made key campaign stops this week as today marks 100 days until the 22024 presidential election.
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>> madeleine rivera joins us from washington with the latest. >> reporter: after trying to appeal to bitcoin fans in nashville, former president trump went to minnesota for a rally with his running mate jd vance. he's trying to flip the north star state even as a fox news poll shows vice president kamala harris leading by 6 percentage points. trump is sharpening his attacks against the vice president, casting her as too liberal. he blasted harris for a tweet she posted in 2020 in the aftermath of george floyd's death encouraging people to donate to a fund that would post bail for folks. harris has not don donate. >> i sent in the national guard while kamala harris sided with arsonists and rioters and raised money to bail out the criminals out of jail. >> reporter: vance is calling
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out how quickly he secured the candidates. >> our media call it a coordination. i think there's another word. i call it a coup. if there's one thing we learned about kamala harris, she had has a hard time winning votes. she's too extreme even for the democrat party. >> reporter: harris was at a fundraiser in pitsfield, massachusetts on saturday where she alluded to the democrats' tough battle to keep the white house despite the campaign touting the $200 million haul since last sunday. >> we have a fight ahead of us. we've got a fight here. and we are the underdogs in this race. okay? level set. we're the underdogs in this race. >> reporter: and veep stakes is heating up. josh shapiro who is rumored to be on harris' short list is exacted to campaign in his state tomorrow along side michigan governor gretchen whitmer. char lirks carley and guy. carley: thank you so much.
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>> it's so funny that the harris campaign is objecting to this idea that they raised money for -- to get people out of -- to bail people out from the rioting in -- back in whatever, couple years ago. what's funny about that. you used your social media platform to raise money to get them out and the idea that you're going to -- the thin hair that you're going to complain about is that you didn't actually donate actual money. well, you did donate actual money because you actually used your platform, used your influence to raise money to bail people out of jail. >> the tweet is still up. carley: the suite honoring honoringjessie smollet after the attack he claimed to have been a victim of is also still up. i remember when she posted the tweet in 2020 to the minnesota freedom fund asking for follow
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followers to donate. even then it was controversial we see what defund the police did and the fact she was trying to raise money from a group that would bail out rioters, some of whom attacked police and now she's running as a prosecutor the presidential candidate, she is trying to rewrite her own personal history. >> she is. she's not the border czar even though she was. i think technically she's still the border czar. i think she has that in her portfolio. she's a supporter of defund the police. she was asked about it when that was the hotness on her side. los angeles slashed the police budget in the city by a lot of money and she applauded los angeles for doing so. she said we have to get past this an at the quited notion that -- antiquated notion that more cops on the streets makes it safer. this is without getting to her own record in san francisco and the state of california. defund the police one of many items on the checklist that i
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think it's essential to highlight about this person. >> jason chaffets was on earlier this morning with us and here's what he had to say. >> i think anybody she picks out of the group would actually be accretive and helpful to her. the problem is, kamala harris is kamala harris. that's the problem. at the end of the day, people are going to look at that and say she doesn't have the resume, she doesn't have the chops to do it, she is not up to the job and she didn't do anything. what did she do over the last three and-a-half years? you can't name a single thing she championed to make happen. she is the most pros dress i've- progressive, san francisco liberal, i don't think ultimately america will buy i i think she's in a honeymoon period be. when people are exposed to what she believes in, what she's done, i think they have a huge, massive problem on. carley: one of the things i've been thinking about is that people said joe biden did a disservice to the democrat party
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by dropping out of the race so late because they don't have a lot of time run the next candidate. will that help kamala harris? it gives her less time to screw up. the media attention on her right now from the mainstream media and other news outlets like people magazine, new york times, cooking, the publications where people who aren't so political go to and receipt are so in favor of her, will the tide turn in time for people to really see who she actually is? >> it's a huge propaganda effort on her behalf underway, trying to erase the record, her problem is going to be that her record is not just in existence, it's been spoken from her had own mouth, very left wing proposals. we'll be following that for the next three months. a fox news alert overseas, the israelis striking back at hezbollah overnight, coming after the iran backed terrorist organization launched the
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deadliest attack on the you jewish state since the october 7th massacre. that happened yesterday. carley: trey yingst joins us from the israeli town hit by the attack. hey, trey. >> reporter: good morning. we're in a town that is grieving. yesterday a hezbollah rocket slammed into the soccer field next to me, killing 12 children and teenagers. this morning, we were at the funerals for some of those killed in the attack by hezbollah. they used an iranian rocket against a civilian area and this was a moment that will change the course of the current conflict between israel and hezbollah. as we speak, and as this town is still picking up the pieces, trying to come together and hold each other up, the israeli military is preparing for a possible massive response against hezbollah inside lebanon. i want to show you a little more of this destruction and how close these kids were to a bomb shelter, they had just a few
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seconds to try to get out of the way and they weren't able to make it. and i do want to just warn our viewers here what i'm going to describe is gruesome and graphic but it's part of the horrific story. people have been around here all day on their hands and knees picking up pieces of these children because they were directly hit by this hezbollah he's --hezbollah rocket that wad on them as they played soccer. i spoke to one of the fathers who tried to call his daughter. he rushed over and found her lifeless. we spoke to a first responder who was in shock, he could barely speak e talked about what it was like are trying to save the life of a 10-year-old boy who passed away as he was working on him with shrapnel wounds. this is what the community was dealing with yesterday. again, this morning they held funerals as they wait to see what the israeli military will do in response.
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we've talked with security officials on the ground if the in telaviv, who talk about whate about to see whether tonight or the dayings ahead will be a significant response against hezbollah in southern lebanon, not just to send a message of deterrence but to stop future attacks like the one yesterday. carley: trey, so this is the deadliest attack since october 7th which they continue to call their own personal 9/11 and how are people in israel responding to this? are you getting that same sense of national mourning? >> reporter: absolutely. this was the deadliest single attack since black saturday, october 7th, that massacre that took place that hamas launched from insize gaza into southern israel. on the radio people were talking about the comparisons and israeli m media is buzzing with
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those comparisons. the country is truly mourning. there were screens across tel aviv that changed to a drews flag. they have a culture and people of their own but they're now in many cases aligned with israel and israeli people, they're speaking hebrew as well as arabic and english. many are serving in the israeli military. this is a peaceful, loving community of people and they represent what can be the best of the middle east. working together, living, co-existing and they were attacked yesterday by hezbollah and iran backed rocket that was fired at a soccer field where children were playing in the early evening, killing 1 # of 1f them and injuring dozens of others. hospitals in the area, they're currently treating a number of critical patients be including children that are on vent ray ly ventilators following the attack. it's a horrific day and day of
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mourning. >> more barbarism suffered by the people. trey, we're still trying to see how gaza ultimately gets he resolved. is there a possibility that we see a full-fledged war in the north now? what's the range of possibilities as the israelis figure out what to do next? >> reporter: the short answer is yes, israel and the entire region is currently bracing for the possibility of a full-scale war between israel and hezbollah. and this is important to talk about and it's good that we are taking the time to break this down because a war between hezbollah and israel will be far deadlier for the israeli people, for the communities in the north close to the lebanon border, for the entire region because hezbollah is an organization that is firing iranian weapons into northern israel, into the golan heights, throughout the area and they've not yet targeted major cities like tel
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aviv and jerusalem. the focus for the mast 300 days has been on gaza following the october 7th massacre. there was hope after prime minister benjamin netanyahu's visit to the united states, meeting with lawmakers on capitol hill had, meeting with the president, vice president, former president trump, that a cease fire in the days ahead could actually go into place, that would deescalate the situation in the south and give hezbollah an off ramp. what happened yesterday has changed the equation. we're looking at a traditional escalation ladder. hezbollah slaugh slaughtered 12 children and we understand there will be a massive response againstagainst hezbollah. the question is whether that lead toes a broader war. >> we know benjamin netanyahu cut short the trip to the united states to go back because of this. is he back in country? what is the timeline of what might happen next, when that might start?
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>> reporter: yes. so in a few hours the israeli security cabinet will meet and remember this is an expanded cabinet and so it allows decisions to be made on the spot about a response. but i can tell you according to defense officials that i talked to earlier today, those conversations were ongoing even as the prime minister was in the air on the way to israel. you have the chief of staff, the defense minister and other top security officials determining what the response will be. and so they're going to sign off on it during the cabinet meeting later today and once that takes place, it's really anyone's guess as to when the israelis launch the counter attack. it's not a question of if the israelis will respond but rather when and where. carley: trey, really quickly, do you think that what happened with this rocket attack will impact the hostage and cease fire negotiations that are going on or are they viewed as two separate events? >> reporter: yes, they will absolutely impact the negotiations that are continuing today in rome with cia director
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william burns, qatari and he egyptian negotiators. the critical part is the tight rope that israelis are walking. they want to respond to the attack yesterday but they don't want the region to go into a larger war and ultimately the question of whether or not they get a deal together will be one of a negotiating team. i want to show you one of our team members here just brought this over. this is a piece of the iranian rocket that was fired at the soccer field yesterday. you can see this is heavy and this is just one piece of shrapnel that exploded in the area while children were playing soccer many this is what communities in the north of israel are dealing with and you'll see similar attacks like this if hezbollah responds to the israeli retaliation following the killing of these 12 drewish children and a teenager, guys. >> unspeakable. thank you for all your
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reporting, trey. carley: thank you, trey. >> turning now to your headlines. president biden has commented on the severity of california's park fire as it's grown larger than the city of phoenix. the blaze scorching more than 350,000 acres since starting just four days ago. the park fire is the largest active blaze in the u.s. and is expected to burn for several more weeks as it's currently only 10% contained. right now, voters in venezuela are heading to the polls for the first presidential election in over a decade. president ma d maduro was seen casting his vote earlier this morning as he tries to clinch his third term in office. president maduro is going up against opposition leader he'd edmundo gonzales who had a lead over the incumbent heading into
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today. >> simone biles making her paris debut earlier this morning, despite dealing with an injured leg. biles is now on top of lead toker board for the individual competition after competing floor and vault machines with no issues. the u.s. men's basketball team is also kicking things off later this morning against serbia but they could be potentially without an nba star like joel emvid and anthony edwards due to illness. the medal count for the paris games currently has australia in first place, followed by south korea and the united states to round out the top three. carley: all have five medals. the united states is going to add a couple more to the count, i have a feeling, before all is said and done. >> we're supposed to win these things. carley: straight ahead, talking frac, the harris campaigns slamming claims that the vice
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president flip-flopped on fracking. we break down the record. >> there's no question i'm in favor of banning fracking. joe biden said i am, quote, not banning fracking. are you comfortable with joe biden's position. >> yes jo joe is saying, one, listen, those are good paying jobs. from pep in their step to shine in their coats, when people switch their dog's food to the farmer's dog, the effects can seem like magic. but there's no magic involved. (dog bark) it's just smarter, healthier pet food. it's amazing what real food can do. (vo) you were diagnosed with thyroid eye disease a long time ago. and year after year, you weathered the storm and just lived with the damage that was left behind.
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kamala harris and her campaign are in damage control mode after flip-flops on fracking, a critical industry in the crucial battleground of pennsylvania. >> there's no question i'm in favor of banning fracking. i have a history of working on this issue. to your point, we have to just acknowledge that the residual impact of fracking is enormous in terms of the impact on the health and safety of communities. >> joe biden has said, quote, i am not banning fracking. are you comfortable with joe biden's decision. >> yes, joe is saying those are good paying jobs. >> what is the vice president's record? as a presidential candidate she said she would ban fracking outright, also offshore drilling, banned, as a u.s. senator she co-sponsoredded the ludicrous green new deal.
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as california's attorney general she sued the obama administration over fracking on the pacific coast. as da in san francisco, she opposed drilling on public lands. with us is the founder of the american energy institute, jason isaac. so jason, let's talk about kamala harris and the things she said on the campaign trail last time she was seeking the presidency a few years ago. we had the clip where she said easy, breezy, absolutely want to ban fracking. she went on jimmy fallon's show, slow jamming the news thing where she doubled down saying once or for all she was going to get rid of fracking and then offshore drilling, you go down the list but fracking in particular could be a problem for her in pennsylvania. we did reach out to the harris campaign for comment. we haven't heard back. we know there's been a statement they put out there saying oh, well, she is no longer against fracking. she's not going to ban it. problem is, she said the words emphatically over and over again in her last campaign. >> yes, sh she's had a full on
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assaulted against american energy producer, wanting to go as far as prosecuting companies that produce energy in the country, i call this the pennsylvania pandering. she is now looking to chase votes and saying -- her campaign is saying one thing while she completely contradicts what her campaign said. she is trying to attack energy and has done it for decades. prosecuting, making them pay, i you would be surprised if she even knows what fracking is but it's the production of energy in the country, something we produce more responsible ethan anyone else in the plan t. she will continue to attack it and drive up costs. i don't think voters will forget they're paying thousands of dollars more because of policies she supported. >> she wants to pursue policies that will make everything pay more, by a lot. we played the clip from the cnn forum when she was a failed
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candidate in 2019, didn't make it to the 2020 campaign, the 2020 year of the 2020 campaign. and she was just like checking the boxes, ban fracking, yep, ban offshore drilling, yep, ban plastic straws, yep. even reducing red meat, she was open to that. she said using government power and recommendations to reduce red meat consumption for the planet supposedly. that's all i think one appearance she made, playing a lot of the hits that i think voters will be seeing quite a bit. >> it's incredible. president obama was right when he said electricity prices would necessarily skyrocket, if we implement plans he supports and now kamala harris supports and has supported for decades. that's what happens. people are paying more at the prespump. the trump administration the average american family has been saving on energy costs and that's beeny raised by $5,200
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increase in energy incross. energy is the center of economy, everything depends on the cost of energy. doesn't need to just worry about pennsylvania, needs to worry about owe he yow, michigan, wisconsin, where policies increased the cost of automobiles that are crashing manufacturing jobs in those states as well. >> thank you so much for your time. >> thanks for having me. >> a debate of biblical proportions playing out in the state of oklahoma, a handful of public schools defying a superintendent's mandate to include the bible in lesson plans. we'll talk to that superintendent, straight ahead. what can i do to make a better cotton crop? we believe that the best products are made in america and come fresh from the family farm. and produced under the most sustainable farming techniques.
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the main difference with golo is the way i felt. i wasn't jittery, my cravings went away. i felt satisfied and healthy and had tons of energy. give golo a shot you won't be sorry. choice hotels is a family of brands with a hotel for any traveler you want to be. like #1 chef dad, cookin' up a free, hot breakfast for the entire family at a comfort hotel. mom made this. umm... i...added... the garnish. stay twice and get a $50 gift card when you book direct. >> so it's less than a month before oklahoma students head back to school. at least eight districts are pushing back against the new directive that the bible and 10
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commandments be taught in every classroom. oklahoma state superintendent ryan walters joins us now. great to see you, superintendent. >> thank you for having me. >> tell the viewers, why does the bible and 10 commandments need to be taught in schools. >> it's part of our history. it's crystal clear, you go back to american history, look at the pilgrims, the mayflower compact, thomas jefferson talking about rights coming from the creator, martin luther king, junior references multiple biblical examples. the left and radical woke administrators want to indoctrinate and lie to your kids and act like there's in no role that faith played in history. that's a lie and that is frankly pushing a left wing agenda on kids to try to get kids to hate the country by saying look, there was no morality, no belief in god. the primary sources are crystal
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clear. in oklahoma you will receive the bible in historical context, you will see when individuals throughout history reference the bible, cite the bible. it's part of our history. the left wing activists can be offended, they won't like it, but we won't allow them to rewrite history. >> you were elected superintendent of schools for state of oklahoma. you're expressing the view of voters here. >> oh, i've heard it from parents all over the state when i ran three years ago, they were crystal clear. why in the world are we not teaching kids that our rights came from god, why are we not references unbelievable moments in history where the bible was cited. it is part of our history. what you hear me advocating for is what the people of oklahoma demanded. they want our kids to know about american se exceptionalism. we know as president trump said to make america great again, our
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kids have to understand the history of the country and what made it great in the first place. we won't allow the aclu and teacher unions to attack our schools and say no reference to god, no reference to the bible when it was one of the most cited books in american history. >> what do you have to do in the next couple weeks to get this done? >> well, first of all, i'm going to tell woke administrators if the they're going to break the law and not teach it they can go to california. in oklahoma schools we're going to make sure history is taught. we're making sure teachers have resources in order to teach these concepts take that the left pushed out of our schools, we're making sure that guidelines were given out last week to make sure every individual teacher understands exactly what we're talking about here at the historical references, where these are located in our standards because we need our kids to understand our history, we want our kids in oklahoma to understand american history better than any in the country and frankly we're laying out a road map for every state to follow. president trump laid out a vision for the country and for our schools to make america
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great again. we are instituting that here in oklahoma so every state should do what we're doing right here. >> thank you, ryan walters. >> thank you. >> still ahead, vp harris economic record under scrutiny as americans still grapple with the high cost of goods. maria bartiromo on what a harris presidency would mean for america's economic future, that's straight ahead. with so many choices on booking.com there are so many tina feys i could be. so i hired body doubles to help me out. splurgy tina loves a hotel near rodeo drive. oh tina! wild tina booked a farm stay to ride this horse. glenn close?! with millions of possibilities you can book whoever you want to be. that's my line! booking.com booking.yeah
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>> we're back with a fox news alert. israeli defense forces announcing retaliation generals hezbollah, in response to the terror group killing at least 12 children in a rocket attack on an israeli playground and soccer field saturday, the deadliest such attack since october 7th of last year. there's this, dozens of drivers being left stranded for hours when a stretch of major highway connecting la and vegas was shut down after a truck carrying industrial lithium-ion batteries caught fire. firefighters say water would not put out that blaze so they have to wait for it to burn itself out. it is not clear when the highway will be fully reopened. and we've got wild video here showing a black bear and its cub hijacking someone's car, this was in connecticut. conservation officials saying
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they believe the bears got in the car by opening the door, which i guess would make sense. that's how you get in. it's not clear how the door then closed behind them. those officials eventually were able to get the car back open and the bears could run off but not before they did this to the car's interior. they were not happy. i think you're going to need a new one there. i hope insurance covers that. officials say it's another sign of the state's booming black bear population. and those are your headlines at this hour. let's check in with rick. wow, on the weather. that was a very unhappy group of bears stuck in the car. >> i'm sure. they're trying to get out. that's amazing that they did all that. >> yep. left a lot of damage. what do we have on tap for the forecast. >> lock your cars. tell you what, take the a look at the weather map, show you what's going on. we've got a couple problems to watch. one is the atlantic basin, starting to come alive again. i think over the next two to three weeks we'll see this what we're expecting to be an active
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hurricane season get going, in the short-term we've got a disturbance that i think will have some sort of development, this is the way it's looking as of right now. the point is, getting closer to the u.s. over the next week or so, plenty of time to watch it but if you're along the eastern seaboard or across parts of the gulf, be aware. we're getting towards the beginning to be towards the active part of the year. all right. storms this morning across kansas and nebraska, later on today, it's going to become a big her severe weather threat, could be looking at a tornado or two, anywhere you see the red especially sure you watch for that. >> back to you inside. carley: thank you so much. the economy taking center stage in this year's election, kamala harris holding the record for most tie breaking votes, including the covid stimulus package in 2021 which critics say grew today's inflation crisis. what does this mean for her economic agenda? sunday morning futures anchor maria bartiromo joins you now. good morning, it's great to see you. now that kamala harris is the
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presumptive nominee, everybody is wondering how she would handle the economy because it's the number one issue on the minds of voters. what do you think? maria: good morning to you you. i think you have to assume -- you have to assume she is going to continue whats she's been doing in her career before getting to this place. look, she was and is the most progressive senator. she was in the senate. we all know that. you're talking about her being the tie breaking vote in the biden administration 33 times. most importantly as you mentioned, she kicked off what became massive inflation, costing everybody so much money on everything at the grocery store. some of the spending that biden has done in his term which she was by his side was of course the inflation reduction act where she was the deciding vote, the fiscal responsibility act, the forgiveness of student debt, the chips act, green energy tax credits. you've got all of these policies from the biden harris administration so it's going to be hard for her to walk away from these policies but that's
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what we're seeing happen right now. there's this complete rewrite of history underway. she wasn't the border czar? really? she doesn't want to the ban fracking? she was adamant about banning fracking. how can you have such conviction on something and then turn around when running for president 100 days away from election and say you're not going to ban fracking. the border is a massive black eye. we'll see how she will get out of all these things she put in blaze as the most progressive senator. it's interesting, they keep -- the democrats like to talk about what the republicans are doing when in fact they're actually doing it and now i understand they're using the same language as well. the wall street journal last week wrote can trump beat harris with common sense? of course, common sense not to kill off america's energy independence. they're using that term as well on the democrat side to donors. we just want common sense. we'll see how this next 100 days places out. we're talking about it this morning. carley: she sports single payer
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-- supports single payer health care. she supports some form of universal basic income. she co-sponsored legislation with bernie sanders that would pay tuition for four year public colleges for students with families making up to $125,000. her answer to everything when it comes to the economy is more government spending, spending our taxpayer dollars. maria: throughout this period, under biden, government has been getting bigger many that's where the jobs are coming from, largely. the government sector in particular healthcare. a lot of wall street journal street analysts last week were coming out with he's notes telling clients this is what will be impacted should kamala harris get to the white house and they centered on healthcare because of the decision from her, medicare for all. medicare for all is also going to come back and haunt her and the impact on this economy as well and as you say, all of that spending led to 40 o -- 40-yearh inflation. i spoke with one analyst who said when you see inflation get
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excessive like we have seen it above 7%, it actually got up to 9.1% on biden's watch, you typically have a second wave of inflation unless you have serious policies to stop it so i would expect a second wave of massive inflation should kamala harris reach the white house. and that's what we're talking about this morning. we will get reaction to this complete rewrite in history, scrubbing her record clean from the governor of florida, ron desantis is joining me coming up and we'll talk with ken paxton, the ag of texas, about the border and a why they're running from the border. by the way, why run from the border and a say you're not the border czar? obviously doing that in itself tells the us they understand how important a wide open border is to the american people and america is upset about the wide open border. now they're trying to run from it so they've exposed themselves there. obama has been pulling a lot of strings and he peter schweizer has a thing or two to say about that on the way out of the white
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house, president obama had an interview and he said i would love it if i could be in my sweats in the basement and tell whoever is in charge what to do and i'm wondering if he's going to continue holding the strings and pulling the strings. we'll talk with byron don algds donaldsand senator joni ernst we latest out of israel. carley: you're cover every angle about the political landscape. watch sunday morning futures coming up at 10:00 a.m. eastern time. have a great day. it's a bird, it's a plane, no, it's a drone, how a.i. is taking over the sky in the next generation of air force. kurt the cyber guy on the drone domination, coming up next. hey, kurt. ♪ jim caviezel here. you know, saint john paul this second profoundly impacted my life. and i just finished recording some incredible new meditations on his life, on the hallow app.
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but it's under siege from big out-of-state media companies and hedge funds. now, california legislators are considering a bill that could make things even worse by subsidizing national and global media corporations while reducing the web traffic local papers rely on. so tell lawmakers, support local journalism, not well connected media companies. oppose ab 886. paid for by ccia. >> is a.i. a taking over the sky? the air force is unveiling a new drone system that has the capability to fly on its own using artificial intelligence, doing everything from intelligence work to combat roles. so is this the future of warfare. carley: here to react is kurt knutsson, the cyber guy. this sounds cool but when technology starts to think for itself you get worried. >> you get a little bit of both
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here. good morning to you. we having coming in, qx67a. you don't need to remember the number. you need to remember that the technology is a.i. meets a drone and an aircraft together. the goal is that this will now create a fleet of these type of vehicles, airborne vehicles in the air force, that will be able to protect human pilots. so we're used to having drones operating from the ground by pilots. these will actually think, act, and learn all on their own. carley: what they get it wrong? >> that's what we'll have to find out. so far, the problem is we have to do it. because our enemies around the world are also getting involved in a.i. with their warfare. if we're not ready to use this, we're in trouble. it's a good move forward. you're right, we have to keep our eye on it. >> where is the u.s. in the a.i. arms race with these type of things. >> there's part of the
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information that's made public that we're able to get our hands on. there's a lot of stuff that's not public. i would suspect we're in a pretty good place globally at this stage. we're not wasting time. we're getting out there with a.i. a.i. is moving technology and our military and business like nobody's ever seen. >> so i want to move to this topic. it's important for consumers to keep their eye out. if you get a text message from amazon, it's not a text message from amazon, right. >> there's a wildfire of text message scams going on from amazon. they first glance, looks real. second glance, still looks real and people are being tricked. if you get a text from the amazon and it also comes in the form of e-mail and phone calls, it probably is not them. so number one, just watch out, because i mean, i almost got trapped last night for a banking scam but i report on this constantly. number one, don't click a link you didn't ask for. if you didn't say send me this,
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don't click the link and the better thing is strong anti-virus software on all defies, whether mac, android, pc or iphone, that will often make those links null. so that even if you do get tricked into clicking them which we all do, it won't do anything. and then even better is to remove yourself from the -- we were talking about phishing earlier. when you remove the data from the internet or you can do it yourself forever and every, you -- if they can't find you they're not able to attack you. that's a really good route. carley: i answered a spam call. now i'm inundated so i'm a victim of this as well. will amazon ever text you? >> sure. you're going to get updates from amazon but i would say don't click on a link that comes from amazon. instead, go back to the app or -- carley: always be a little suspicious of those text
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messages. >> always a, always a, always. if you want around the clock 24/7 security alerts, i know you subscribe to my -- carley: i love it. it enriched my life and safety. where can you get the newsletter. >> cyberguy.com. carley: not too many e-mails but e-mail that matter when they come from you. >> thank you. carley: thank you. good to see you. >>.-- i scream, you scream, we l scream for ice cream. it's national ice cream month. carley: bring in the goods. we love it. ♪ new centrum menopause supplements help unpause life when symptoms pause it. with a multivitamin plus hot flash support.
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sent us a bunch of ice cream and all these toppings as well. and we're living it up. charlie: what's that word you just said? carley: frinkle. charlie: if you want to celebrate friendly's 89th birthday, visit friendly's restaurants come and get yourself some ice cream. carley: i also know anyone who joins friendly's fan club in july receives an iconic frivle -- a free one. charlie: were you a cake cone gal -- bioguy oh, yeah. carley: cheers, my friends. [laughter] if have a great sunday, everybody! bye! enjoy some -- ♪ ♪ maria: good sunday morning

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