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tv   FOX and Friends Sunday  FOX News  July 6, 2014 3:00am-7:01am PDT

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hey, everybody. it is sunday, the 6th of july, 2014. i'm anna kooiman. terror at the beach. a great white shark on the attack. >> he got bit. >> hey, get out of the water! shark! >> get out of the water! >> shark! >> oh, my goodness. the chaos and the escape caught on camera. and the shocking new report this morning says almost 240,000 illegal aliens have entered the u.s. since april and get this, the president is not deporting almost any of them. instead, he's sending them to their relatives in the united states. we'll tell you the latest from the white house. and did you celebrate
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america like this on the fourth of july? ♪ >> it turns out fireworks are just war propagif your kids wat fireworks, they are likely going to want war. that comes from a liberal professor and you are not going to believe it. "fox and friends" begins right now. no fireworks. >> hey, everybody. come on in. later in the show we'll talk about how to divorce-proof your marriage, too, right? >> all right. >> i thought you guys were going to carry something and give an example of how -- honey, no, that dress doesn't make your booty look big. or the dinner isn't burnt, it's delicious. >> top of the morning to you.
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also, some of the things america has perfected. i love this list. things america has taken to the next level, like tires and hamburgers. there's no hamburger like america's in this world. >> we'll ask you what you think is missing from the list. i think fried chicken is missing from the list. >> we have fried chicken here? >> we do, on the plaza. what don't we have? four hours to go. stay tuned. also, a job-like experience. we'll get to your headlines this morning. terror at the beach as a great white shark attacks a swimmer and the terrifying moment is caught on camera. >> are you going to laugh again at this? >> he got bit. >> hey! get out of the water! >> shark! >> get out of the water! >> shark! >> well, the shark was fighting to break free from a fishing
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line when it got mad and took a bite out of the swimmer. >> you think? >> we actually were yelling at these guys saying there's a shark on the line, shark on the line, stop, move away. i think the swimmer got too close to the swimming line. >> well, you can see surfers carrying the man ashore at a manhattan beach in california. there were several bite marks to his side and arm and he's currently recovering in the hospital. in a midair scare when two planes full of passengers nearly collide. it happened two miles from houston's bush intercontinental airline. the singapore jet came within a half mile of a delta plane before air traffic controllers alerted the pilots. planes should always be three miles apart. the faa is investigating. terror suspects were not the only ones targeted by the nsa. a new report shows the agency was spying on ordinary americans between 2009 and 2012 collecting information from their online
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accounts including names, e-mail addresses, instant message conversations and 5,000 private photos. despite being marred by useless analysts, the information was stored. and "transformers: age of extinction" crushing the competition this fourth of july. >> a new era has begun. the age of the transformers is over. >> don't you get it? >> winning the holiday box office battle there, and then "tammy" came in second. and "how to train your dragon" came in third. >> transformers is not that great. i did see "how to train your
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dragon 2" with the kids, and that was excellent. and they are not telling you the truth. in one specific case, we can now confirm that. the white house has said all available means will be taken to deport those tens of thousands of illegal aliens from central america streaming over the southern border. now "the new york times" reports that's not true. of the 50,000 unaccompanied children who come to the united states in recent months, almost all of them have been delivered to relatives in the united states. they have been, quote, reunited with in their families here meaning they are not going anywhere. >> the numbers are more distr s distressing because we thought it was 50,000 kids. according to "the new york times" reports, we know it is upwards of 290,000 individuals. 240,000 adults in this group. and at one flight landing in
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myriad, california, a flight is landing there and they will continue. >> it is plane tickets and bus tickets. people who come here illegally don't get the taxpayers to foot their bill, right? so what is the incentive to come here and abide by the laws? break the laws and you get your ride paid for and your food too, in some cases. >> the illegal loophole allows them to come here and get transported by government officials by having this work permit, visa, work permit to be here illegally and then it's like a relay ride. certain government officials will hand you off to other government officials. but throughout the united states they will find your relatives and deliver you to their front door. >> family reunification we have been saying for weeks on this show. there's no chance that most of these people are going home. and by the way, the "times" does not point out all this happening against the record of unemployment against young americans in this country. they are out of work and now they have a quarter million new
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people to compete with. >> and they are going to be burdening the system locally, at the state level and national level. that's why you saw the texas attorney general greg abbott saying he's considering filing suit because of this because they are not skilled workers or educated worn workers. they are going to be costing us more money than to help us. >> let's break down the number. we have been saying 51,000 or 52,000 kids and parents coming into the united states, but since april we know the number is upwards of 290,000. upwards of 300,000 individuals have come into this country since april. >> unbelievable. well, here's a story that defines hypocrisy. tom steyer is the single largest donor to the democratic party. he may be more responsible than any other person for killing the keystone pipeline through his donations to the democratic party. it turns out this warrior on
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behalf of climate change, this faux of carpet has made his billions through, you guessed it, investigating in carbon. in fact, a massive new coal mine that just opened in australia was financed by tom steyer. >> his firm has made millions of dollars off of coal. fighting coal plants in the united states, this could be a number of hypocrisy. a large number of his environmental buddies are quoted in the front page of "the new york times" piece saying how disappointed they are in him. that how could a man that is going after environmental policies in the united states, the keystone pipeline, other things that he says are causing the burning of fossil fuels in this country, that we are creating climate change in this country, funding large coal processing plants in other countries, specifically china with one of the worst levels of abuse of carbon monoxide and carbon poisoning in the world. we have seen pictures of
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beijing, people can't go out of their houses in the morning because they have to wear a mask or stay in their apartment for three days' time. >> oh, it's the same planet? >> same planet. >> the climate change people like steyer, it is not just bad for the environment but it's a sin, it's a moral crime. this as they fly across the country in their private planes and fund coal plants. it is unbelievable. >> it is hypocrisy. we have an alert to break down some of steyer's energy investments. he funded farallon capital in 1996. invested hundreds of millions in coal plants in australia. he invested $250 million in canadian oil sands producers and $125 million in a company planning an oil pipeline. >> that's unbelievable. >> the "times" says you should
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feel guilty for driving a suburban, just so you know. >> they go on to say the members of his firm, the way he's making money he's still quietly or passively making money. he's not sort of actively involved in the fund to give him money. >> he's giving the reigns back a bit. >> right. >> i'm an animal activist but i own a slaughterhouse because that makes sense. did you watch fireworks this weekend? >> of course. >> it's an american tradition. it dates back to china. they celebrate not only the religious freedoms and experiences. we have seen that. the vatican fireworks. political rallies throughout world history show fireworks a symbol of celebration. according to one professor in
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oregon, he's calling fireworks, bill bigelow, he's calling fireworks propaganda. that when kids watch fireworks, let's not pretend they are fun. we'll tell the kids what it is, it's a representation of war. the pretend war of celebrity fireworks becomes a propaganda campaign that ensures us and the children among us to current and future wars half a world away. >> we just talked last week about the low patriotic member that is the united states is suffering from and it is worse among liberals, so does it surprise you that a left-win teacher is saying something as surprising as this? the war on easter was not enough and now we have a war on the fourth of july. this is the one holiday where people are patriotic. we forget it as it gets lost in thebarbecues. this is the one time kids sing
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"the star spangled banner" and "god bless america" all at the same time with the red, white and blue. ridiculous. >> it doesn't surprise me a college professor is staying stupid things. that's par. one, the federal government is paying for this. the federal government subsidizes the colleges and universities. b, it's amazing that people still consider most american colleges impressive. people from around the world second their kids here to go to our colleges. at some point they are going to wake up and say, this is a joke. mediocrities like this are teaching classes? does this work? $6,000 a year, $60,000 a year? i don't think so. >> we are reminding our young children -- i'm teaching my son how america became free and having the discussion. the tyranny of the british empire at the time. it started out of war. i flayed with fireworks as a
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kid. i can't stand war. i didn't grow up and say, i'm going to be a war amomongor. because i play ed with firework. come on. i need a coffee. >> it is still my favorite sound. bang! >> let us know what you think, friends@foxnews.com. new reports that the president plans to back someone else in 2016. and we told you yesterday about this, the bank teller fired for telling customers to have a blessed day. she brings her fight to "fox and friends" next. that's coming up next. don't go anywhere.
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we have a serious hairball issue. we clean it up, turn around, and there it is again. it's scary. little bit in my eye. [ michelle ] underneath the kitchen table, underneath my work desk, we've got enough to knit a sweater. [ doorbell rings ] zach, what is that? the swiffer sweeper. the swiffer dusters. it's some sort of magic cloth that sucks in all the dog hair. it's quick and easy. pretty amazing that it picked it all up. i would totally take on another dog. [ kevin ] really? ♪ have the p.c. police gone too far? a former bank teller said she was fired for telling customers to have a blessed day and now she's fighting back in the lawsuit against the bank. paula is joining us now with her
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attorney. thank you for joining us. >> good morning, thank you for having us. >> i'll start with you, paula. you say it is normal for you to say, have a blessed day. people say it on their voice mails all the time. call me back, have a blessed day. but you got fired for it. set us up and tell us what happened. >> well, it was in 2009 someone said to me to have a blessed day. and i thought, what a wonderful thing to say to somebody. i mean, in my opinion, i don't think that there is any better day to have than a blessed day. >> okay, so -- >> so i started telling all the customers -- i'm sorry. >> that was five years ago. bring us to what happened more recently. >> well, more recently i was told that i was not allowed to tell customers to have a blessed day anymore. that there had been several complaints. and i told them i didn't agree with that. i have been saying it for over two years that the point without
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a complaint from anybody, management, anything. and ultimately i was let go because of it. >> okay, this is a statement from u.s. bank. at u.s. bank we hold our employees to high ethical standards when interacting with customers and coworkers and stake violations of these standards seriously. we believe this lawsuit is without merit and believe the facts presented and future legal proceedings will justify our actions. so randy, i'm going to give this to you. or jeff, rather, how do you respond to that? what do you think about what the bank has to say? >> well, i'm not surprised at what they have to say. i would kind of expect them to deny. i have never represented someone in the case where the defendant admitted we are right. here's where the proof is, the proof in the record has shown that polly was discharged because she insisted on the right to say, "have a blessed day." after she was written up for doing so, she filed a complaint
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with the equal opportunity commission. several months later, she quit telling people to have a blessed day but complained about it and said, i might as well go back and tell everyone to have a very blessed day. the very next day she was terminated. >> it does seem wild. there are reports, polly, that you mentioned to a client coming through to the bank something about their -- what they believed and their salvation and asked if they used the lord's name in vain and possib were pushing your religion on them. the bank had a problem with that, and you say? >> well, there was a situation that arose with a customer who did take the lord's name in vain. and i asked him not to do that. that that was the worst thing my ears could hear. that it went straight to my heart, but the customer was not offended by that. as a matter of fact, he told me to have a blessed weekend before he left. >> i think it is important, i think it is important that you know that that statement, that
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incident has nothing to do with her termination. her termination occurred months later when she insisted upon being allowed to say have a blessed day and the next day she was terminated. that incident is a red hair and has nothing to do with it. >> there are worse things a bank teller can say to someone that "have a blessed day." thank you for your time. let us know how everything turns out. >> thank you so much. i hope you have a blessed sunday. >> thank you. you as well. >> thank you. 20 minutes after the hour on this sunday morning. coming up on, terrorists making bombs virtually invisible to airport security. and the next guest says there's one mastermind to blame and he's extremely dangerous. plus, it's happened yet again. a child's blow-up toy f flies away. how does this keep happening? co: sometimes you don't know you need a hotel room
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some quick headlines for you. a surge of violence in chicago this holiday weekend. 22 people were shot on friday alone. the weekend total? 37. three have died. a woman has been found alive after missing for more than 12 hours off the west coast of florida. the 49-year-old was diving for scallops when separated from her husband and their boat. she survived the stormy night by treading water and drinking rain she collected in her mass. she still has the scallops that she found. >> that's a hearty woman. well, a new terror threat this morning. invisible bombs. al qaeda working overtime to develop explosives that can go undetected by metal detectors. that prompting beefed up security at overseas airports
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with flights to the united states. the man thought to be behind the operation is this guy, ibrahim haitian siri. he's the creator of the famous underwear bomb that never went off, so should we be worried or getting anxious for no reason? joining us is lisa, how do these work exactly? >> this is the new generation of bombs. and what they are doing is working around the current security apparatus in place in the west, the u.s., the u.k. and europe. they are non-metal bomb that is can be put into phones or computers. they don't know exactly what the exact technology is of it yet, but they know this is what the bombmakers are after. really pinpointing the vulnerability of the security apparatus in place and working around it. >> so when we take our laptops outs of the bags at the airport, they go through a scanner
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separately. we are allowed to keep ipad in our bags because they are smaller, thinger. maybe there's a way to have terrorists pry those open and replace batteries with plastic explosives, right? >> we heard about the underwear bomber and the shoe bomber. and then in 2010 there was bombs being put into printer cartridges caught by the u.k. i mean, we don't know what the next phase is, but the main point here is to understand that there are always going to be those one step ahead and we have to react to that. for example n this country we had 9/11. afterwards we thought, we need to beef up airport security and then we had the boston marathon bombing. so this year we decided to beef up security for the marathon, but we have to understand they are always one step ahead coming up with innovative ways to penetrate and to get in. and what is even scarier here is that they have u.s. recruits. this is isis we are looking at, al qaeda we are looking at.
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we know there are american, canadian and people from the u.k. traveling to syria and iraq. these are people with the u.s. passports. >> who is the guy behind all this? this ibrahim, he's a saudi chemist. tell us why to be worried about this guy? >> he's a well-seasoned terrorist. this is old school meets new school in terms of terrorism. he's a chemist that is very well educated and grew up in sue dee arabia. he knows how to make the bombs and recruit people and use social media. so the scary part is that he even speaks about his death. we got him in a drone attack and obviously he's alive. and he would help out isis and we have reason to believe that he is with isis. the danger being this guy has great knowledge about how to penetrate our security. >> all right. i also find that jason johnson,
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jay johnson, last week when they talked about the flights that came into the united states, and when pressed on whether to tighten security at our own border, he's in charge of that, we hear reports of 300,000 people streaming into the united states. >> right. the message is they are being innovative so why aren't we protecting ourselves on all fronts? >> lisa daftari, great to see you this morning. >> thank you. a beach burglar caught red-handed. >> this is our stuff. >> ah. and how this ended is priceless. she's already in jail. she's in jail there. and forget made in china. we have some amazing toys being made right here in the united states. we'll test out some of the best ones straight ahead. huh, fifteen minutes could save
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that's my favorite competition of the year. it's your shot of the morning. take a look at the screen. it's the 19th word wife carrying championships in finland. men racing through an obstacle course while carrying a female teammate. the pairs don't actually have to be married, but after holding a woman like that you're probably going to get married. organizers say male contestants can borrow a neighbor's wife if they don't have a female come pa companion. there's a similar competition in bethel, maine. >> i would love to know how the phone call goes. hey, bob, can i borrow your wife this weekend to carry her through icy water? >> on my back. >> i have a pretty light wife. i think i can win it. i could. not to brag. >> i want to get a camera up there in bethel, maine.
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for that. you know what? america has perfected a lot of things but we have not perfected the wife carrying competition. we'll leave that to the finnish, but we have a list of items we have perfected. >> the real football, not the world cup football. >> football where you can use your hands, too. in the way that we have made burgers, i don't know any country can make a cheeseburger as well as america can. >> of course not. >> now, coffee, what they said was interesting, we don't have the best coffee, but we have the most convenient coffee. so like the little k-cups that taste terrible. >> and the most variety. the thing with burgers, anybody can grind meat and put it between buns. but to put it between glazed donuts and add thousand island dressing and add jalapenos is
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amazing. >> for $19.95 you can stuff it with whatever you want, too. >> on coffee you are messmerize what they add to coffee. now they have added chocolate cookie dough to coffee. >> you are in europe and going, what is this little thing? how do you drink this? >> that's fantastic. can i have a tall? >> they don't make cups larger than that in europe. >> slow down, clayton, you're out of control. >> i had too many glazed donuts. >> tires were first perfected in ohio, usa. they make travel possible, not just cars but airplanes need tires. but we make the best tires and the biggest tires. you think they make massive house tires in belgium in think again, they don't. >> what about bird watching?
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yi i didn't think it was possible to be on the list, but no one does it better when it comes to birding. >> my mom and dad are super into birding. we make fun of my mother about this all the time. with her binoculars -- >> is that a brown thrush? >> what do you think at home? what has america perfected that people around the world are not as good at? i also say chicken, fried chicken. janice and i are going to be making chicken and waffles. >> have you been in new york to have their pizza? really good new york style pizza or cheesesteak? >> the rest of the world sends up their fragments of their brain droppings and we perfect them into excellence. send us your idea. >> we have some other stories
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making headlines this sunday to tell you about. the world getting its first look at the leader of the terror group isis. he's emerging from hiding and making a rare public appearance reportedly seen delivering a sermon at a mosque in mosul. the militant group claims they have taken over the group but the iraqi leaders deny that. well, another horrific inflatable mishap. this time kids were lining up to ride a giant blow-up slide in nevada when this happened. well, a 70-mile-an-hour wind -- they pulled the stakes out of the ground and blew this into the air. two people were hurt after being hit by flying debris. this is the third incident involving bouncy playsets since may. last month two children were hurt when it broke away. 2016 could be an interesting election year according to the new york post.
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president obama reportedly promised massachusetts senator elizabeth warren his full support if she runs for president. talk about a slap in the face to former second stair of state hillary clinton. president obama is apparently worried clinton would undo many of his policies. and there's a grudge between him and bill clinton dating back to 2008. "the post" says his chief political officer has been meeting with warren in secret to convince her to run in 2016. so what happens when two women are caught stealing another beach goer's stuff? this may surprise you. >> need some help? >> yeah, this is our stuff. >> this is yours? >> yeah, it's okay. we'll let it slide. i'm glad i made it in time. >> no, step away from my stuff, how about that? >> you know what, i will. and now i'm going to get that camera and put it in the ground, would you like that? step back.
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>> that's my stuff! >> how dare you, you are stealing my stuff! >> things escalate from awkward to unbelievable for the man. the two would-be thieves get angry at him for recording the thing. then they left before police could arrive. >> can we find out their names? >> that's so shameful. >> that's unbelievable. >> it's one thing to steal somebody's seat. >> when you are on the beach, janice, even if you walk two miles to take a nice stroll with your honey, you come back, your boombox will still be there. >> that was a very large thing to steal, right? >> that was. >> did she say where she was going to put that phone on our air without a beep? i just caught a little bit of that. >> i think she just said in the ground. >> oh n the ground. look who i bumped into today. what are your names? >> karen. >> and john. >> it's your birthday.
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you buried the lead. happy birthday are. you having fun in new york? >> absolutely. >> and look at this sign. everybody is on here. look at that. janice, big heart. we have rick and anna and clayton and tucker. very nicely done. that's the way to stop everybody in the streets. we'll take look at the weather headlines. beautiful day across the northeast. you'll enjoy new york city. 67 right now. 60 in cleveland. 65 in chicago. 75 in dallas. 71 in albuquerque. taking a look at where to see the threat for severe weather today across the upper midwest, we have a watch in place until around 6:00 a.m. local time. and within that watch we could see large hail, damaging winds. isolated tornadoes. not a severe weather outbreak today but be on alert if you live in any of the yellow shaded neighborhoods. there's your monday severe threat moving southward across the ohio river valley. and it will be warm. warm across much of the country today. warming up to 86 in new york. 105 in phoenix. 95 in dallas. have a great day in nyc.
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that's the way to do it, right, big signs. i'm sure to talk to you. clayt clayton, anna, tucker, back to you. did you know 80% of the toys sold in the united states are made in china? >> our next guest is a father of three and is making it his mission to make quality made in america toys. david, good morning. >> father of four now. >> congratulations. >> since the last time you were on a month ago? man, keep it going with the toys. we have all the recalls on lead and paint. so you brought great toys here made in the usa. we'll start with something kids love to do, paint, and not paint the walls. but paint this instead of the walls. >> mom hates that, i don't know why. but this is cool. it is an easel filled with acrylic. this way kids can paint on both sides. a good friend of mine designed
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this last night on a women. and we have a proud american hashtag going on there. paint on the front and the back. a lot of fun for all the kids. >> this will run how much? >> this is a little over $200 but with free shipping. real solid birch wood and puts together in three minutes. i'm not the handiest guy in the world, either. >> and you are bringing back the silly putty. >> we have a girls and boys bundle. we have a lot of other acrylics as well. we commend the major corporation, because not many this age still make sure to keep it here in the country. some products are made overseas, but whatever is made in the united states we have on our site. >> and they are in pennsylvania, right? i drive past them on the highway going to see my home state. let's talk about some racetracks now. every boy and girl loves racing. >> this is an 18-footer starter set. we have a limited space here, but you can put this up on the
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wall. good job. i'm a lefty so my right-hand coordination is not perfect. there you go. >> okay. what do you have up next? >> when it is longer it is easier to do the loops and turns. next we have the crocodile rocker. a lot of kids are in front of the computer and on the phone playing the game, get them going and active again. and this takes two or three kids. my kids have a great time on this. >> $46.95. and over here? >> my son has one of these. love this. tell us about this. >> make it, take it. >> this is easier in real life, right? >> another major corporation that we always take our hat off to for keeping it made here in the usa. big corporations here have many, many toys. and a lot of the american-made products. i'm bringing back this money to
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the economy. >> thank you so much. and your website one more time? >> keepamerica.com. >> keepamerica.com. a man is recovering from several burns but his reaction on twitter shows he has a sense of humor about it all. and how bad are liberal biases on the college campuses? we'll tell you how bad it really is. go clayton, let's see it! once there was a girl who never settled for ordinary. even in her laundry room.
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a guild-stricken thief who stole an american flag from a 9/11 firefighter's family home on long island has returned it with a note that reads, i am so sorry. i had no idea. the homeowner was given the flag in memory of her 29-year-old brother who passed away at ground zero. and duck dynasty star willie robertson recovering from burns he got trying to make tea. he put boiling water in a glass pitcher that exploded. he tweeted this picture of his legs all bandaged up. his mother making sure it never happens again, she bought him a real tea maker.
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good idea there. tucker, over to you. >> thank you, anna. well, colleges and universities in america have been accused repeatedly and correctly of pushing a liberal agenda on their students and now there's further proof. young america's foundation did a study on the top 50 schools and the required reading programs for freshman. they found or better yet did not find conservative books. there was not a single conservative book assigned to freshman in the last three years. joining me with more this morning is ashley pratt. >> good morning, tuck ir. >> not a single book for freshmen in three years? >> not a single book with conservative themes were on the list. and basically how we conducted the study is we took the forbes top 100 list and looked at the top 50 because there was so much information. and we were looking at the books from the freshman required programs and realized the
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colleges are speaking to indoctrinate the students before they get there. the courses definitely to end be more liberal and the graduation speakers are more liberal, but not the freshman required reading programs are definitely liberal themes. not one promoted free market principles or capitalism, which is things that students should be learning or american history. >> keep in mind for our viewers this morning, even if you are not paying tuition at one of the schools, you are paying for them receiving heavy subsidies. so we'll start with the books you did find. first up, "americana," what is that? >> that book actually was required at pamona college and duke university throughout the years. we found both of these promoting this in 2013 and 2014. and it delves into race in ways
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i have not seen before. and it was more of a -- it blames the protagonist at one point, but then it shifts more to the cultural perspective of race. and in a way blames americans for their per senceptions of immigrants who come to the country. as we know, what makes america great is our exceptionalism and that anybody can come here to make an american. for the themes to be produced in a way that reinvents history seems to be bizarre and something we shouldn't teach our college students. >> immigrants come here and complain about it to america. what is this book like? >> yeah, this book delves into a lot of concepts regarding vegetarianism, this is not a bad thing, it's a trend in the country, but it talks about the consumer's responsibility to know what they are eating and to care about it.
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if you like bacon, you should care about the pig that is dying and how they are treated and delving into concepts that peta represents. and you go through the themes and it is incredible. they actually want you to do research everything you are eating and then to once you realize that don't eat those anymore or eat organic. which obviously, yes, is trending in our country right now, but you really look at the themes represented and what they want you to look into. >> we could go on and on and people could go to your website. tony morrison has a book on there. anyone who takes tony morrison seriously is not qualified to teach kids. thank you for joining us this morning, appreciate it. >> thank you so much, tucker. coming up, unions have a lock on the education system making it nearly impossible to fire bad teachers. now one group of parents is planning to take back tenure, straight ahead. and the nypd has foiled 16
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terror plots. we'll tell you about the latest weapon they have in the war on terror. fourth of july is coming, and that means this, this, and definitely this. so if you're looking to buy a car, don't wait because the savings have already begun. just make sure before you buy to go to truecar.com or use the truecar app for guaranteed savings. happy fourth of july.
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well, it's the only full-time dive country in the team, but the elite scuba team not only performs recovery tasks but they play a crucial role in the fight on terror. >> the newest counter terrorism boat is what i boarded to see what it is all about. the nypd scuba team holds the line here at home specializing in the water and in the sky. >> it is a 30-men unit with air
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seas and rescue takes place. >> reporter: the newest arsenal is a $4 million fully customized counter terror boat. ah! this boat is 62 feet long, but it's maneuvering like a small sea boat. >> it is highly maneuverable with the jets. >> how fast does the boat go? >> we have do 45 knots. it is very fast. >> how fast can you stop? >> within one and a half boat lengths. >> the newest boat is equipped with nine separate cameras. also on board, infrared technology to see through the dark. side scan sonar and underwater iod. >> we can look at bridges and see if there are attachments on them.le any active threat. from a car bomb to a plan to decable the brooklyn bridge, 16
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new york terror plots have been foiled since 9/11. >> at post 9/11, our role swelled looking for bombs, ieds, maybe something hidden under water. that's something the terrorist could do under water. >> the nypd's top of the line equipment also serves a larger purpose. >> this is a spearhead for the rest of the country in terms of testing the equipment, having the equipment and being able to have the equipment to cover the large area that we're in. >> so along with the military, the nypd very often has top of the line technology and the simple training they do becomes a model for what the rest of the country does with local law enforcement agencies. >> and you get a nice tour of the new york skyline there. >> that was nice. coming up in the 8:00 hour, we'll go out with aviation teams that come up with a unit to do
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air sea rescues. we are going to watch them do all of it. they are the only ones in the country to deploy out of a helicopter with full gear. coming up on the show, the immigration crisis on our border not putting our nation at risk according to the white house. but our inside sources say differently. todd starns is joining us with new details you will see only here. and beer, we found one that is anything but cheap. we'll taste it, coming up. a yummy reward is important after a good workout so i give butch delicious milo's kitchen chicken grillers recipe dog treats.
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that's called inward facing dog. he could do it all day. milo's kitchen. made in the usa with chicken or beef as the number one ingredient. the best treats come from the kitchen.
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hey, everybody. good morning. chaos and the latest caught on camera. and a stunning report. get this, the president is not deporting them. their relatives are sending them to the united states. we'll tell you the latest on this breaking story. and to work or not to work? this morning the pope is
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sounding off on working on sundays. so what do you think? a day of hard rest or hard work? when you wake up at 4:00 a.m. and do a four-hour morning show? sorry. "fox and friends" hour two starts right now. >> we just have a different day of rest. monday. >> that's a question and argument that we'll dive more into. it's fascinating that this argument, families and children are suffering because we are not spending one day to connect with our families anymore. >> it is not about relationships. it's about material things very often and trying to grab it and get more. on another important note, tucker, today is national fried chicken day. >> wahoo! >> i just had a bucket this morning of drumsticks and wings. >> a whole bucket? we'll tell you how to make
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fantastic fried chicken. >> chicken and waffles. it's fair game for breakfast. >> does it get any better? i love this show. we have other stories making headlines this sunday. a great white shark attacks a swimmer and the horrifying moment is caught on camera. >> oh there, he is. look! >> he got bit. >> hey, get out of the water! shark! >> get out of the water! >> shark! >> can you imagine the shark fighting to break free from a fishing line when it got mad and took a bite out of a swimmer? >> we were actually yelling at these guys saying there's a shark on the line, shark on the line, stop, move away. i think the swimmer got too close to the fishing line. >> well, you can see surfers carrying the man to shore at the manhattan beach in california. he suffered bite marks to his side and arm and is currently recovering in the hospital. four people are dead after a horrific boat crash in miami
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that left a dozen more injured. officers responding to the chaotic fourth of july scene. they say they just kept finding victim in the water. eight victims were found in the hospital. the marina where the collision happened was packed with boats for the fourth of july celebration. and terror suspects are not the only ones targeted by the nsa. many americans were spied on between 2009 and 2012 collecting information from their online account including e-mails, names, instant message conversations and 5,000 private photographs. despite being marked as useless by the nsa's analyst, the information was stored anyway. top-level kayakers are paddling to the potomac river this weekend and taking on terrifying rapids. the great falls race features heart-stopping 18-foot drops that you can see there.
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oh, boy, but it is not just the waterfalls kayakers worry about. >> a little technical turn around the rocks, the high falls, you can get in trouble real quick here. >> people are stations at every point with ropes in case of emergency. you say it happens a lot, huh? >> people drown all the time in the potomac. it's unbelievable. this is also unbelievable. a shocking new york times report about the numbers. 51,000 of the unaccompanied children are being delivered to the u.s. border. now we are learning according to "the new york times" report that the kids are being delivered to the border and right to the relatives' homes here in the united states. perhaps distant relatives, it's not clear, but they are setting up rely rides in a way where one department in the u.s. government hands them off to another department in the u.s. government to drive them to the front door of the relatives. >> it's called family reunification and a cornerstone of the immigration policy.
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the idea is people have a right to live with their families even if they don't have a right to live in the country to give claims from the white house that most people will be deported. they are not. they have been at government expense brought to their relatives in this country and are now permanently here. they will become voters and will take jobs. this is a big deal. a quarter million people have entered this country. and the next time we hear obama say we are sending them back he's not telling the truth. >> they are not being deported and neither are family members. they are being reunified with their members and are not bothering to find out whether they are living here legally or illegally. think about the costs associated for this and who is paying for it? all of you at home, that's your hard-earned money going on their bus ticket or plane ticket. how much does that cost for somebody who wants to come here illegally? and what does that say to people who abide by our laws? just do it the illegal way to
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get a free ride. >> and despite a loss somewhere in the middle of america, if i got a flat tire, would multiple levels of government bring me back home so i wouldn't have to call a taxi to get back home? >> no, you would be on your own. this administration that claims to care about income equality in the plight of middle class and the struggles of people to make ends meet. if you cared about wages in this country, you would not pursue a policy of unlimited immigration because it depresses wages. any economist who is honest will admit that and this administration says we care about the middle class and jobs. come on in because we need the vote. it's an outrage. >> this has been exploited since 2008. this law that basically lets them get transported by government officials. and also this number, you mentioned it there a moment ago, a quarter of a million. that is also in "the new york times" report this morning. we have been hearing 51,000 unaccompanied children showing up at the border to take train
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rides and walking through the desserts for three days to get to the united states. getting here malnourished and whatever else they deal with. that number according to "the new york times" since april is 290,000 individuals have come across the border since april. 290,000. someone saying 250,000, no, correct them, upwards of 300,000. >> despite coming illegally, the unaccompanied alien children used to be called uacs by ice, there's an e-mail that fox news uncovered is they are just calling them children now and not alien children. we are changing our perspective on how to handle them. >> because we are all americans. they just have to be central americans. tom steyer is the biggest democratic donor in the united states. he's a billionaire that lives out in san francisco and pledged $100 million to attack any republican candidate who doesn't take a vigorous position against
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climate change. that is his reason for being. fighting carbon. yet it turns out in a paper of record that tom steyer made his billions from carbon, coal, in particular. financing coal mines and coal plants. >> i don't know if he figured he would wake up this morning to see this on the front page of "the new york times" this morning showing just how hypocrite call his past has been. here are some of the energy investments broken down by "the new york times." his firm farallon capital invested hundreds of millions of dollars in coal plants in australia, indonesia. $250 million in canadian oil sands. $125 million in a company planning the oil pipeline. a lot of the coal plants he's backed are overseas yet he's fought coal production in the united states. so all because it's over there in committee china.
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it's okay, i'll make money off that while also telling you not to go forward with it with the keystone pipeline in the country. he's almost solely responsible for the keyline pipeline being installed. >> this is the piece of the world view. if the hip ok ro hypocrisy is b you have to feel guilty about driving the suv or minivan, but we'll drive private mines in australia. it's part of what modern liberalism is. >> and control the money that we're making. >> define hypocrisy, there are other high-profile environmentalist who is are shocked by this. >> everybody knew. i have been hearing this for months. i talk to guys who work in the coal company. our company is financed by tom
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steyer. this is common knowledge. the environmental defense fund didn't know this? of course they did. pope francis has been sick and has been a bit ill. he's a lot better and was just recently in southern italy speaking to an agricultural community where the unemployment is sky high. he said the poor need to have jobs to make them feel better about themselves, but the most important thing in life is your relationships and your friends and your family. and obviously praising the lord. and he says, working on sunday is true freedom and says all the hard work people are doing on the weekends and sunday is having a negative impact on their lives. >> it's so easy to let work seen in. if you are home on the weekend with a job monday to friday, you are going down to your work to get this done, you don't realize what it is taking away from the day of rest and family.
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that hour or two hours starts to snowball and he has a great point. >> of course he does. judaism take this is seriously. orthodox jews don't mess around with the sabbath. again and again you see this in the old and new testament. keep the sabbath holy, don't work. it's like people have the temptation to let work crowd out all the other things that matter. family and faith. they have to be told not to work. people work too much. >> it is cool when you see businesses like chick-fil-a not open on sundays and a lot of people give them business the other six days of the week because they believe in that policy as well. when driving around on a road trip on sunday and the lights are dark, yeah, they are closed on sundays. >> still? >> yes, one of the few companies. >> on the holidays, all the companies are opening on thanksgiving day to make extra money when everything used to be like a ghost town.
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quiet and closed down. companies opening on christmas day. crazy. let us know your thoughts on this. go to twitter and let us know. janice, where do you come down on this? should we be working on sundays? >> we are here on sundays but i do believe in a day of rest, believe me. after the week i've had with a hurricane -- we'll talk to this beautiful family. happy birthday. what is your name? >> emy. >> and your birthday? >> yes. >> what is your name? >> alyssa. >> what are you doing today so special other than seeing us at "fox and friends"? >> we are going to go see buddy, the cake boss. >> buddy, the cake boss, is he going to be there? >> hopefully. >> he better be there after this, right? we'll make sure buddy the cake boss is there for your birthday. we are going to look at the radar to show you the potential of showers across portions of the southeast. we'll watch for possible tropical development. and in the southwest, a
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monsoonal moisture season happening over the southwest. a shift in the change of winds bringing some much-needed moisture across the southeast. and there's your forecast for the northeast. buddy the cake boss, you better be there. back inside. clayton, tucker, anna? coming up, immigration crisis at the border putting our nation at risk. we are going to be shocked with exclusive details with someone on the ground there. and she never saw it coming. >> ah! >> this prank is scaring the grandma right off her feet. >> that would terrify me. [ male announcer ] super destinationsu know
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16 minutes after the hour. there's a major crisis at the border. hundreds of thousands of illegals are streaming across and now they are being held at refugee-like camps and military camps across the country. >> sources are telling us it's a tsunami of people. i don't know what to do to make it stop. it's more serious than people realize. that's a quote from todd
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starnes. >> thank you for coming on this morning. tell us what your source said. >> well, i have multiple sources inside the refugee camps as well as inside the agency hired by the federal government, the department of health and human services, to run this camp. and i think what is really disturbing is coming from the people, the actual workers, the nurses and doctors who tell me they have been told to keep their mouths shut. they have been said that if they speak out about the condition of what's happening with the health of the children, that they will find themselves immediately fired and they have also been threatened with arrest for speaking out. so there really is a shroud of secrecy that's been placed over these camps. but the other component of this is, in fact, the organization that's running and contracted to run the camps. this organization called bcfs priestly known as the baptist childhood family services. i have a source inside this organization who says that they are getting these orders for
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secrecy from the federal government and they say if it was up to them they would be happy to let anybody inside to see what's happening, but unfortunately the federal government is putting really a shroud of secrecy over these refugee camps. >> so there's still a lot of misinformation or a lack of information coming out as to exactly how threatened the children are in their countries of el salvador, et cetera. what are you hearing from sources inside there? are they being told as we have been hearing several reports of what to say when they get to the united states? the children are being told what to say to the united states or are they under a major threat of violence in their country. >> that's certainly suspect. some of the nurses tell me these kids want to go back home and don't know why they were sent to this country and want to go back to their moms and dads. i heard what you said earlier about the reunification process. this is not reunification.
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this is a government sanctioned invasion of our country. and i really question who these kids are being sent home to here in the united states when in fact we are hearing from our sources that mom and dad are still back across the border in central america. >> well, you think once the school year gets ramped up back in august and september the numbers will be bigger than what we have with the 52,000 unaccompanied children? because school will be in session and they have to get educated somehow. >> anna, you're absolutely right and the question is, where are some of these kids going to be educated? just last week the "washington post" had a report of the schools overwhelmed with illegals. 40% of this year's kindergarten class can't speak english. not only are you faced with an influx of students but now you're faced with the prospect of hiring teachers who are fluent in english and spanish as well. so this is going to be a tax burden for the american people.
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and i want to -- just everyone needs to understand how significant this is for the american taxpayer. many of these workers in the camps, and i'll give you an example, 350 workers there, many of the individuals are making nearly $5,000 a week. $5,000 a week. and we are paying for that as taxpayers. >> that's just unbelievable. >> todd starnes with the inside sources on our border crisis. thank you, todd. >> thank you, guys. coming up, unions have a lock on the education system making it nearly impossible to fire students no matter what they do, but one group of students are fighting back. their plan to eliminate tenure, coming up. and jessica simpson is officially off the market. we'll tell you details in her ranch ceremony. my daughter is studying to be a dentist,
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25 minutes after the hour. a woman was diving for scallops when she was separated from her boat and husband. next, 11.3 is the percentage of american wage and salary workers unionized. that number is down 24% from the all-time high in the 1950s. finally, $120 is how much a bottle of a new truffle-up fused beer will cost you. created by chicago-based moody tongue. the shaved black truffle pilsner debuted in new york city last month. it's not clear where it will be sold next. moody tongue.
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tucker? >> huh? >> thank you, clayton. well, fed up with the poor education system and no way to get rid of terrible teachers. students and parents in new york are taking action against the unions and their tenure rules. they have now filed a lawsuit to overthrow tenure. some tenure laws, anyway, coming just weeks after the anti-tenure ruling in california. the vice president of the new york city parents union is joining us now. sam, thank you for coming on. >> thank you for having me. >> a judge in california basically said union tenure made it very difficult, maybe impossible, for poor kids to get an education on the grounds you are hoping to be scaled back. and something similar is happening here. >> let me just say from the offset, this is not about attacking teachers or unions. this is about providing the minimum education required by the new york state constitution to educate our children. >> and the law basically offers
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protections of tenure for competent and innovative teachers. we are not opposed to that but we are saying if you are not a competent or innovative teacher, you don't have the right to protection by tenure and we want you to be replaced. >> this guarantees you a lifetime job bound to mediocrity. getting fired always makes me a better employee. any job you can be fired from is probably a mediocre job, no? >> the difficulty is we cannot replace teachers fast enough because of all the rules. it takes three years and 300,000 dollars to remove one teacher. there's a study done from 1997 to 2007 that any given year with 75,000 teachers on the job up to 12 in any given year were replaced. >> total? >> total. >> of 12 per year. >> possibly. >> that's unbelievable. nobody is going to deneand in public. this is about money.
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they give massive amounts of money to democratic politicians. that's what this is about, is it not? >> if you want me to come back with the money trail, i'm sure we can find it to politicians in new york state. and that's the problem. let me thank john tribiano, our attorney from staten island, thank you for putting us on the map as far as this issue is concerned, but we have no place to go but to the courts. parents do not have a seat at the table in new york city as far as setting education policy. and we are the stake holders. our children, for the last generation after generation after generation, who are not being educated properly. there's a huge disparity between minority school locations and non-minority school locations. and this report that i'm bringing you this morning from the edinburgh institute lays out specifically that 80% of our students cannotperform at grade level. so when do we take action? 80% is enough?
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90%? so thank you to jonathan, but we are looking to have this conversation. and we are extremely focused. anyone who thinks that this is about hedge funders and wall street, they don't know me. they don't know the new york city parent union and don't know who we are. >> the politician to protect the union and tenure all send their kids to schools anyway. private schools. bribery in parenting, will it work? and it is national fried chicken day. you don't have to wait for lunch because we have the greatest thing to happen since cereal. chick en and waffles on the plaza. stay tuned. [ male announcer ] this is the age of knowing what you're made of.
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why let erectile dysfunction get in your way? talk to your doctor about viagra. ask if your heart is healthy enough for sex. do not take viagra if you take nitrates for chest pain; it may cause an unsafe drop in blood pressure. side effects include headache, flushing, upset stomach, and abnormal vision. to avoid long-term injury, seek immediate medical help for an erection lasting more than four hours. stop taking viagra and call your doctor right away if you experience a sudden decrease or loss in vision or hearing. this is the age of taking action. viagra. talk to your doctor.
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it's your shot of the morning. would you be scared of this? a grandmother getting pranked by
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interactive television with a shark at the international spy museum in washington, d.c. she thinks that the shark is going to smash through the glass. the touch tank has a fake spark swimming towards her breaking the glass. she falls down on her butt. >> there's not terrifying elderly residents, is there? >> no, it is terribly cruel. that is always my reaction when i get scared. i remember when i was watching "the sixth sense" i was down in the bottom of my chair. >> we'll rent the movie and then my wife watches behind the pillow the whole time. i'm like, you didn't even sea the scene! how is this, parents? how would you like to bargain with your kids using the internet as the key bargaining chip? there's a new device being funded online on kid starter to
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give kids internet time for doing chores or homework. they accrue the time as they do the work. >> i think bribery is the smartest thing. i mean, for children. that's the only way you get anything done, am i right about this? you have to bribe your kids. that's the only way you get them to do things. >> some people say, this is bad parenting but to me it is the sign of the times. when i was a kid, my parents did the same thing, if you do this, you get this. and you should do it anyway, but we need rewards and incentive. that's why we work hard to get ahead as americans. >> it will let users set goals for their children then tied to their access to the web. so parents can select approved websites and then set the amount of time. netflix, youtube and other sites can be set. and if they help around the house and help dad out with the lawn and those kinds of things, take out the garbage, they get points and get free time. >> i get it. i agree with your point.
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market-based parenting works. >> on the other hand, the upside of this is the parental seal of approval on the internet as the greatest thing to get. this is your reward, the internet. and the internet is already a harmful drug to which every child in america is painfully addicted. and i think you can say to the internet, the internet is for losers. make fun of the internet. >> come on. >> you can't make a kept statement about the intern internet. netflix lives on the internet. many things are on the internet. movies exist on the internet, so they may be sitting on youtube watching a mickey mouse cartoon. >> but you have to be a reactionary cool parent. you want to be a 1972 parent. >> at least parents are monitoring what kids are doing online instead of propping them
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in front of it to say, this keeps you occupied for a time. >> let us know what you think about it, twitter and facebook, by the way. other headlines to tell you about. 30 members of the new york fraternity are expected to be charged with homicide in the hazing death of one of their pledges. 19-year-old michael deng died following a paternity prank last year. the baroque college freshman was blindfolded and beaten while carrying a heavy backpack. the members were also accused of waiting around for 90 minutes before taking him to the hospital. awful. and an accused killer escaped from a jail in missouri after being allowed out to watch the fireworks. 32-year-old jason mclure was denied only inmates.
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he's awaiting trial. authorities believe he may be armed. 2016 could be an interesting election year according to the new york post. president obama has full support if she runs for president. the path is going show president obama's political adviser has been meeting with miss warren to tell her to run for president. and jessica simpson is married again to eric johnson. she declares to "people" magazine it was the happiest moment of their lives.
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>> didn't we have a story on the other day about what she charges for her hair? >> reporter: 12,000 or so. >> janice, you remember that story? >> i'm a huge jessica simpson fan. no more dissing jessica simpson. congratulations, girlfriend. i was not invited to the wedding, though. how are you girls today? what's your name? >> sidney. >> kathleen. >> robin. >> breanna. >> where are you from? >> charleston. >> i like the group therapy. can i join? >> yes. >> having fun in new york? >> you bet. >> we have a beautiful day in new york city. 67 right now. into the 80s today. gorgeous. 75 in dallas. 70 in albuquerque. we have a little bit of monsoonal moisture working into the southwest. great news for them as they need it after a severe to extreme drought. and the potential for severe
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weather across the upper midwest and portions of the great lakes. keep that in mind if you live in that neighborhood. it is national fried chicken day today. >> how good does this look? which part are we making right snow. >> how are you doing? we make chicken and waffles every day. so today we'll show you how to make the waffle. here's what you have to do -- how dhid tradition start? >> a lot of people saw this sta start. first we'll start with the dry ingredients, flour, baking powder, salt, mix that up. >> looks pretty easy. >> pretty easy. egg yolk.
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then add our milk. >> okay. >> so what would happen if you put the egg whites in there, too? >> i'll show you about the egg whites. i'm glad you asked me. melted butter. you add these all together. >> there's no such thing as a diet waffle, right? >> no such thing, trust me. you have to have this -- >> like a meringue deal. >> yes, these are egg whites whisked to a peak. once you guys -- it's okay if there's a little bit of lump. we'll fold in our -- >> start folding, baby. >> our egg whites. very nice. >> the trick is to fold them in nice and gently. very gentle. >> no whipping. whipping good.
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there you go, folding in the egg whites. it's okay to be lumpy. it will add character to the waffle. >> all right. what does the final product look like? >> a little something like this. that is fancy. >> and we do waffles the way -- >> we just opened up three weeks ago in manhattan. >> have you been there before? >> no. we'll see you after the show. >> what we do here with our waffles and ricotta, that's a secr secret. we add berries, so seasonal berries go with this.
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>> do this quick. >> tucker, clayton, aren't you jealous of us right now? >> butterball, baby. >> you are making me hungry. wow. >> can you whisper sweet nothings through a television screen? because you are. coming up next, ever wonder what your coworkers think of you? a new app is -- >> the american dream is going to show us how to attain it, next. huh, fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance. everybody knows that. well, did you know words really can hurt you?
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what...? jesse don't go! jesse...no! i'm sorry daisy, but i'm a loner. and a loner gotta be alone. heee yawww! geico. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more. jesse? when folks think about wthey think salmon and energy. but the energy bp produces up here creates something else as well: jobs all over america. engineering and innovation jobs. advanced safety systems & technology. shipping and manufacturing. across the united states, bp supports more than a quarter million jobs. when we set up operation in one part of the country, people in other parts go to work. that's not a coincidence. it's one more part of our commitment to america. but they have to use special care in keeping the denture clean. dentures are very different to real teeth.
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they're about 10 times softer and may have surface pores where bacteria can multiply. polident is designed to clean dentures daily. its unique micro-clean formula kills 99.99% of odor causing bacteria and helps dissolve stains, cleaning in a better way than brushing with toothpaste. that's why i recommend using polident. [ male announcer ] polident. cleaner, fresher, brighter every day.
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a quick look at the headlines. with a man speaking about the prisoners of war flag, 66-year-old jeffrey heisley asked his father to model for the picture back in 1970. his father was a pilot back in world war ii.
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and the former beatle was singing "hey jude" to a sold out crowd there after fighting a virus. and the rising cost of the american dream. >> add in costs like cable and so ontoaling $130,000. he is the author of a new book, "the american boomerang." the american dream is not like any other dream. why is it important to preserve? >> we have only heard of the american dream. we have not heard of the norwegian dream. president obama is quite an
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american exceptionalism, but the american dream is one dream that has united the entire world. everyone wants to be a part of the american dream. it is what inspires us. make is about kicking butt, not kissing it. so it's important that the american dream reminds this to the entire world. >> you have written this book, you are from australia and have an interesting perspective. why is it harder to attain the american dream? >> i'm the president of the world and somehow america keeps getting europeanized. >> the obama administration, under obamacare medicare costs go down, so mark that off the list. >> well, that's why it is so
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important that the american dream is attainable because we need the world to unite behind us. it is so indepenceabspensable. >> let's take a look at what it is to have an american dream lifestyle. don't we want bigger things? we don't just want five basic channels. we want 100 pairs of shoes. we want one car and not two cars, but this is making our family have two incomes. >> it has a very bad impact on the family. america is struggling economically. that's the truth of the matter. and there are simple ways that the american recovery can help with growth. cut taxes and ribbon tape.
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stop spending so much money and exploit the energy resources underneath your feet. we have almost 3 trillion held by american corporations overseas by waving that back to the american dream. >> if you are not from here, do you find that american dream is taken for granted? >> sometimes it is more of a game and that's the perspective i hope to offer to americans in that despite all of those far and away, we are a head above everywhere else. the american dream is all about
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this. >> an australian inspiring us this morning. >> you got me going, nick adams, thank you for coming on this morning. coming up, the president wants to fix the immigration crisis, but are his policies creating the problem? shannon bream is hosting "fox news sunday" and is joining us next hour. and a new app to talk about in the office. is this a good thing? at panera bread, we fill our freshly baked flatbread with bold, unflat flavors. like taste inspired by the freshness of the mediterranean. so you always get flavor that's anything but flat. new flatbread sandwiches, try one today.
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do you wonder what your coworkers think about you? around here they tell you what they think to your face, but now there's an app for that. chris ruby is on the right and the social media expert is frankie arial. what is this app about? >> basically you can crowd source what is going on anonymously and see what your coworkers really think of you. so before you had yelp for restaurants, now you have knozen. >> it is pretty user-friendly. it is more like a high school thing, most likely to take a nap at work or whatever. it is pretty light hearted. >> here's what the company
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actually says about it. we'll put this back up on the screen here. yeah, we use fun social games in a unique way to show people's personalities so that you can comment and share and let people know what you think makes them unique and different at the office place. it seems like it could be a lot of bullying jumping on place and picking on certain coworkers with a lot of gossip. could that ignite into the apps? >> gossip could ignite, but the mission statement of the apps and why they did it was for it to be a positive user experience and not for cyber bullying. >> do you buy that? because when do these turn into a positive experience. you remember the app secret with people just complaining all the time about their life and office. in fact, certain news was broken on secret about certain employees leaving google ahead of them leaving. those sorts of things. >> there's always room for error and always going to be a liability.
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it's an h.r. nightmare. they keep it pretty light-hearted. you click yes or no. who is the most likely to have fun with at the office and is great to work with. you won't a unique review from the employees but there are a lot of ways around it. >> do you think it may come back to bite you? would you lose your job? >> i do think there are possible issues that could emerge from it for sure. >> what about this new app called lulu to rate men across the country in a relationship, right? how does this work? >> so you can go on it -- >> it's the yelp of dating. and this week, what cities a are -- what is going on where? we do have a sketchy phone of all this. >> miami is always happy, always party boys and the bad is they
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have a sketchy call log. san francisco, good, nerdy but i like it. bad? questionable search history. would you actually go on here to bet a guy before you started dating him? >> a lot of women do go on to bet a man before they start dating him. would i personally do it? i would check luluu yes. >> are you on lul snuru? >> i checked it out and my friends gave me bad reviews. >> it is like yelp review. restaurants go under with terrible yelp reviews. could this lead to depression or insecurity issues? a man could be hurt by the reviews. >> what is interesting, the men could be hurt but the men i talk to are wondering what their lulu review is. i need to know. sometimes the answer shows them who they really are. >> i'm a bad boy.
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no lulu review. fantastic. frankie and kris, good to see you. coming up on the show, did you celebrate america with the firework this is fourth of july in it turns out they are just war propaganda. and a liberal professor who wrote this all down you won't believe. happy wife, happy life, right? things husbands aren't saying that wives really want to hear that could save your relationship.
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good morning, everyone. it is sunday, the 6th of july. i'm anna kooiman. a great white shark on attack. >> hey, get out of the water! >> shark! >> get out of the water! >> shark! >> the chaos and the escape caught on camera. and then hundreds of thousands of illegals have entered this country since april. and get this, the president isn't sending most of them back. instead he's using your tax dollars to deliver them to the relatives here in this country where they are going to remain. so is this really a fix to the border crisis? we'll report and you can decide. and did you celebrate
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america by watching these this weekend? well, shame on you. turns out fireworks are just war propaganda. and if your children watch them, they are likely to want to grow up to be more mowar mongors. "fox and friends" hour three starts now. well, good morning. 8:00 a.m. on the east coast. anna kooiman sits between clayton and me. >> you always call me anna b. kooiman. and it is clayton b. morris. >> it could be tucker b. carlton as well. >> we are making chicken and
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waffles later on. a very patriotic day. we are talking about fireworks and how one professor from the left thinks this is not a good idea. but we have more ideas for you. if you are heading to the beach, be careful of sharks. if someone yells, hey, there's a shark. pay attention to that person. >> swim in the opposite direction, not toward that warning. a 7-foot great white shark attacked a swimmer in the horrifying moment caught on video. >> oh, there he is. look. >> he got bit. he got bit. he got bit. >> hey, get out of the water! shark! >> get out of the water! >> shark! >> people are like, hey, you must be joking, right? >> this poor swimmer. the shark was fighting to break free from a fishing line when it got mad and took a bite out of the swimmer. >> we actually were yelling at these guys saying there's a shark on the line, shark on the line, stop, move away. the swimmer got too close to the
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fishing line. >> you can see surfers carrying the man to the shore at the manhattan beach in california. he suffered bite marks to his side and arm and is recovering in the hospital. another inflatable mishap. this time kids were lining up to ride a giant blow-up slide in nevada when 70-mile-an-hour winds blew it 300 feet into the air. two people were hurt after being hit by flying debris. this is the third accident involving bouncy play sets since may. last month two colorado children were caught inside a bouncy house when it broke away. terror suspects weren't the only ones being targeted by the nsa. a new report finds the agency spying on ordinary americans between 2009 and 2012 collecting information from their online accounts, including names, e-mail addresses and instant message conversations and 5,000 private photographs. despite being marked as useless by the analyst there is, the information was stored anyway. breakout the puppy shirt. a new york minor league baseball
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holding seinfeld night in honor of the 25th anniversary of the show. >> what is this. >> a puppy shirt. look at it. >> don't you remember the '90s? i had one of those. the brooklyn cyclones are paying homage to that scene where they had the puppy shirt. look at this. during the practice memorable guest stars were there, including the real cramer. do you remember those shoes? >> there's a bus tour for every flavor here in new york city. so let's say you have been watching at home as the white house responds to invasion being taken on the border. they have been saying a number of times, don't worry, we are going to send back the overwhelming majority of the folks to their or gin. it turns out that is totally false. the overwhelm majority of the tens of thousands who arrive in
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this country have been delivered at public expense to those here in the united states. it's the official policy of the obama administration and it means they are never going home. one plane is arriving every 72 hours in california right now. one plane every 72 hours is being brought into the town and being handed off to different agencies to the department of homeland security and to different departments and then finding out where in the country, it doesn't matter if you are in seattle or alaska or montana. they will deliver these folks to their extended family in the united states on their taxpayer dollars. >> that's your hard-earned cash. these children are not being called unaccompanied ialien children. they are just saying to them,
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hey, you can stay here. the ones who move to the united states who are trying to get here illegally, they are letting them get here with a free meal. >> this is the most cynical thing i have seen in a long time. the administration says they want new voters. every one of the people who remains can be a democratic voter, but what does this do to the middle class? if you are working for minimum wage at a big box store, there's no way this helps you. it hurts you and means wages will remain low because this is competition. >> also, in addition to that, the number is much higher. we have been hearing 51,000 to 52,000 of these illegal immigrants and their children coming across the border, but now according to "the new york times" report, since april there's been a total of 290,000
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people coming across are the border. up near 300,000 have been coming from el salvador, guatemala and on the back of trains, some walking through the desert for three days. that number is much, much higher. todd starnes was on "fox and friends" earlier this morning who has sources inside for all intensive purposes knows about the refugee camps with the tsunami of people coming across the border. let's listen. >> from the actual workers, the nurses and doctors have been told to keep their mouths shut. they have been said if they speak out about the conditions of what's happening with the health of the children, that they will find themselves immediately fired and they have also been threatened with arrest for speaking out. a source inside this organization says they are getting these orders from the federal government and the nurses and caregivers who work with the children tell me these kids want to go back home.
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they don't know why they were sent to this country and want to go back to their moms and dads. this is not reunification but this is a government sanctioned invasion of our country. and i really question who these kids are being sent home to here in the united states. when we are hearing from our sources that mom and dad are still back across the border in central america. >> and these refugee-like camps make you wonder why we have not gotten real video and why the pictures are scanned coming out. when we ask to go in there, what is it they are hiding? >> congressmen are being turned away. >> in their own states! >> congressmen are told you can't come in here because i represent this area. just send us an e-mail and we'll get back to you about it. the m things is where they are going. a lot of the illegals are coming into riverside, california. which has had a tough time in recent years with the subprime meltdown. by the way, they are not coming into washington, d.c. where the
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lawmakers live but they are coming into riverside. we have jeff stone from the chairman board of supervisors from riverside to talk about this next hour. well, a lefty teacher out in oregon, his name is bill bigelow, he's a teacher, but he says that we shouldn't be indoctrinating our children by having them watch fireworks because he says fireworks are propaganda. it's a propaganda campaign to get our kids thinking about going to war on a regular basis. and if your kids watch fireworks, they are going to grow up to be war mongors. >> he says, "the pretend war of celeb a terror fireworks thus becomes part of a propaganda campaign that injuries us es especially the children among us to current and future wars half
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a world away." do you see this anywhere else? what about memorial day? people say this is the kickoff to summer and barbecues. everybody really bases their holiday, their festivities around kids getting excited about it, they sing the national anthem. >> i played with fireworks as a kid. i'm sure we all played with fireworks as a kid. i can't stand the idea of war. because i played with m-80s and snakes and smoke in bombs as a kid, i was a boy! the best thing about fireworks? they go bang! >> it's exciting. and only a neutered dude like bill bigelow finding a little home in tenure university land, what a loser. how could he possibly be against this? bang! bang! sorry bill bigelow. >> we are using fireworks to celebrate our independence and have been since the beginning.
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>> our story last week was how low patriot numbers are and it is the lowest among liberals. let's go to janice dean outside to take a look at the forecast this morning. >> did you see the fireworks? what did you think? >> spectacular. it was great. >> where are you from? >> ohio. >> happy anniversary in order? >> yes, 34. >> so you were married when you were 8. >> that's right. >> welcome to new york city. we'll look at the maps here with a beautiful day across the northeast. we have a hurricane that cleared. we are watching an area of the coast. that's one of the regions to watch for tropical developments. southwest, we have monsoonal moisture working in. they need the rain, so that's a good news story. the severe threat today with large hail and damaging winds. isolated tornadoes are possible over the upper midwest to spread southward and eastward across the ohio river valley. then your highs today will be warm across much of the country. feels like summertime.
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i want to point out we are watching this typhoon in the western pacific forecast to become an equivalent of a category 5 and move very close if not top of okinawa. this is a typhoon that we have to definitely watch for. back inside, clayton, anna and tucker? thank you, janice dean. coming up next, the president wants to fix the immigration crisis, but are his policies creating a problem in the first place? shannon bream is hosting "fox news sunday" and will weigh in on that coming up. and americans have perfected the cheeseburger but we want you to weigh in, so keep the e-mails coming. we thought karate was just another phase.
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but now we're karate parents. one day i noticed her gi looked dingier than the other kids. so i used tide plus bleach alternative and now she's all...pow! she looks as sharp as a serpent strike. [ female announcer ] tide plus bleach alternative. that's my tide plus. i'm saving a ton of time by posting them to my wall. oh, i like that one. it's so quick! it's just like my car insurance. i saved 15% in just 15 minutes. i saved more than that in half the time. i unfriend you. that's not how it works. that's not how any of this works. [ male announcer ] 15 minutes for auote isn't how it works anymore. with esurance, 7 1/2 minutes could save you on car insurance. welcome to the modern world. esurance. backed by allstate. click or call. a body at rest tends to stay at rest...
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while a body in motion tends to stay in motion. staying active can actually ease arthritis symptoms. but if you have arthritis, staying active can be difficult. prescription celebrex can help relieve arthritis pain so your body can stay in motion. because just one 200mg celebrex a day can provide 24 hour relief for many with arthritis pain and inflammation. plus, in clinical studies, celebrex is proven to improve daily physical function so moving is easier. celebrex can be taken with or without food. and it's not a narcotic. you and your doctor should balance the benefits with the risks. all prescription nsaids, like celebrex, ibuprofen, naproxen and meloxicam have the same cardiovascular warning. they all may increase the chance of heart attack or stroke, which can lead to death. this chance increases if you have heart disease or risk factors such as high blood pressure or when nsaids are taken for long periods. nsaids, like celebrex, increase the chance of serious skin or allergic reactions, or stomach and intestine problems, such as bleeding and ulcers,
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which can occur without warning and may cause death. patients also taking aspirin and the elderly are at increased risk for stomach bleeding and ulcers. don't take celebrex if you have bleeding in the stomach or intestine, or had an asthma attack, hives, other allergies to aspirin, nsaids or sulfonamides. get help right away if you have swelling of the face or throat, or trouble breathing. tell your doctor your medical history. and find an arthritis treatment for you. visit celebrex.com and ask your doctor about celebrex. for a body in motion. we want to keep attracting the best and brightest from beyond our shores but then we have to fix our immigration system which is broken and pass common sense immigration reform. we shouldn't be making it harder for the best and brightest to come here and grow jobs and grow the economy here. we should be making it easier.
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>> president obama spent the day pushing for many who come across our borders to stay here. >> the obama administration fail ed to intention what he means by this. good morning, shannon. how are you? >> great. >> the president is said to be in town for a fund-raiser. governor rick perry said to come down to see the crisis firsthand. from everything we have heard he's not going, what are you hearing? >> the same thing. so far the white house is confirming of him to texas but no mention of the border. we thought it was interesting when the new spokesman said what governor perry had to say and he's a persuasive guy, if he would push them to get something
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done on the immigration here in washington, the white house is making sure they vote for the immigration reform package. no plans for the president himself. >> there's no sense there is going to been a an immigration bill this year as far as i can tell. and is there a feeling in the white house this is a crisis to respond to? >> they do a humanitarian crisis. i thought it was interesting that the department of homeland security jay johnson when pressed on this a couple weeks ago, i was covering a press conference when we were getting the full impact of what's happening with these kids, he said he knew months ago during his confirmation back in december that this was happening. they could see this company was dealing with. >> there have been some rumblings in washington that the
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president will once again use the power of the pen, the executive power, to skirt congress and say, republicans aren't pushing forward with the comprehensive immigration reform so i take out my pen to declare this a refugee crisis. so stay here and they won't have to be shifted back anyway. crazy me, the 9 -0 decision a few days ago tells you that you don't see order as stay fit, but there may be an executive power. if you in the house have been developing all sorts of bills but that ary reid won't bring them up for a vote. we'll talk to darrell issa down there at the border and talk about his reaction to the
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president's remarks and talk to him about the latest developments in the irf targeting scandal. >> who else is coming up, shannon? >> there are a lot of developments as you know this morning going on in israel. apparently some arrests in the death of the palestinian teenager. we'll have the ambassador of the united states on and we'll talk to john barasso and senator casey out of pennsylvania to show the impact felt. we'll bring down the hobby lobby decision. and i have an exclusive interview with justin andce sca wife. >> she's great. unions have a lock on the education system making it impossible to fire bad teachers, but one group of parents are
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taking down ten yours, next, white is this. >> yeah. >> when is that coming up? >> right here. >> i'll be here. quiet! mom has a headache! had a headache! but now, i& don't. excedrin is fast. in fact for some, relief starts in just 15 minutes. excedrin. headache. gone.
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new coppertone clearlysheer ugh sunscreens.. barely noticeable and face-friendly for beach,pool and sunny days. perfect, no matter what you're wearing. it's so on. coppertone clearlysheer. it's on. if your denture moves, it can irritate your gums. try fixodent plus gum care. it helps stop denture movement and prevents gum irritation. fixodent. and forget it.
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good morning. 23 minutes after the hour. while you were sleeping, a raging wildfire burned right up to 40 homes in monticello, california. firefighters were able to hold
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back the fast-moving blaze that has grown to more than 5,000 acres and just 30% contained. and a guilt-stricken thief who stole a u.s. flag returned it with a note that read, i am so sorry. i had no idea. the homeowner was given the flag in memory of the 29-year-old brother she had who died on 9/11. well, wedding season is in full bloom, so how do you make sure your marriage stays together for the duration? the next guest has the top things everyone wants to hear from their husband. >> joining us is the host of the nationally syndicated family show mark merrill. >> good morning. i have to tell you that your wives called me to tell you they wanted me to talk on this topic so when you get home you will really impress them. >> tomorrow we do the segment of
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what husbands want to hear from their wives, but todaywhat the wives want to hear from their husbands. let me do that for you. what does that mean? >> the husband says, let me do that for you and jumps in and does it. instead of sitting around saying, how can i help and ignoring his wife? he jumps in and does things he normally may not do for his wife that may be getting home and she's tired from a long day and he is, too, but just grabbing the kids and taking care of the kids and cooking dinner. even cleaning up after dinner. doing the things he may not normally do. >> i'm curious why my wife had your phone number. we'll get to that in a different segment, but number two, how can i be a better husband to you is something we should say. >> this one, clayton and tucker, if you say that and your wife passes out, that will mean she's not used to hearing that from you but that's a very important thing for a wife to understand that you really want to learn how to be a better husband.
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you are really being vulnerable in saying, how can i do this thing better? and when she does, then respond, make sure you mention well. >> it is probably worth it. sometimes we say, let me watch the kids. sometimes we act as fathers and are there to fill in, but we should always be willing to watch our our kids. so say, hey, honey, you have had a tough day. let me watch the kids. that really relieves her and lets her recharge her battery. >> because it is not baby sitting when the dad watches the kids, it's called parenting. >> exactly. >> here are divorce-proof ways to save your marriage. surround yourselves with strong relationships, how so? >> it's so important. peer pressure never ends and we need to make sure we get positive pressure on the
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marriages. if you support clayton and tucker with people who don't have strong marriages and are always going to talk about it. we'll catch it. >> really quickly, don't lie, be an open book, which makes sense. and date on a regular basis. what does that mean? >> well, it's so important to make sure that we are an open book. secrets in relationships are not a good thing. always have an open, honest relationship. really all relationships are built on the -- i like the point you make there. mark merrill, great to see you this morning. the president of the family first and host of the radio program "the family minute."
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thank you, mark. >> thank you, guys. day of rest or day of hard work? this morning the pope says working on sundays may hurt families and friendships. that's something we used to know but do we still? tell us what you think. and what is better than sugar and cupcakes with beer? we'll put the two together, next chlgs.
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♪ well, it's your shot of the morning. this man taking a shot of his self and then the other family members make fun of him. >> he is recreating the same picture. >> and his older brother down in the corner there, jimmy kimmel, and his mother and sister wanted to get in on this as well.
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>> they have all these weird selfies of themselves. >> he's wearing a winter hat because obviously it is really cold. but then he's wearing an avengers tank top. >> that's awesome. what a great family. i hope we have them on at some point. >> effectively jimmy kimmel, that is definitely him. >> they were doing the brady bunch thing looking in different directions. >> i love the mustache, is that fake? well, celebrating independent day and the fourth of july, we have a look at things america has perfected. here are some things we do better in america than any place else. you have a lot to be proud of, but the small list starts with football. the kind you can use your hands in, real football. >> not like the world cup. >> remember the world league. they tried to do football and it was horrible. canada may have football. but that's pretty terrible.
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>> everything from the monster burgers that we have to the you can do anything as you have seen on tv. >> and then coffee. you can get all the crazy flavored vacuum sealed into a k-cup and put into a machine to access. >> old fashioned donut. >> chocolate chip cook key dough -- >> the whole point is innovation. we don't think it up but take ideas and expand them into something amazing. take tires. we didn't invent the wheel near the country, we didn't, actually, but we took it and brought it to some new brand new levels. not just monsters nir -- we have
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the best items in this country. what have we perfected? mike wrote us from iowa. he says, the u.s. has perfected freedom. thank you, mike. >> and another fox and friends viewer e-mailed us to say, frozen food, kitchen appliances and canned soda. >> frozen food. barbara writes, stepping up when there's a crisis and getting the job done. no whining. amen. there's a refrigerator magnet if there was one. >> how about this? we'll be making fried chicken dinner later. >> we have actual -- >> in portugal they have a rest stop and they don't have a coffee shop. we have a starbucks and a lounge to take a nap.
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go to france to see what they use for rest stops. >> you pay per square there. we'll go to the headlines to tell you about now. the world is getting its first look at the leader of the terror group isis. he is emerging from hiding and making a rare public appearance reportedly seen delivering a sermon at a mosque in the country there. and a midair square with two planes full of passengers almost colliding. the faa says a singapore airline jet came within a half mile of a delta plane before air traffic controllers alerted the pilot. officials say planes should always be three miles apatient. the faa is investigating.
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parents took aim at the state's tenure laws. they have filed a lawsuit saying teachers tenure is denying their students from getting a basic education. earlier we talked about getting the -- this is not about attacking teachers or unions but providing the minimum education by the new york state constitution to education the children. >> this lawsuit comes weeks after the landmark anti-tenure ruling in pro union california. pope francis is saying people are abandoning the christian practice of not working on sunday. he says it has a negative impact on them but the day should be
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family day. >> verona says, sunday should be a family day, bring back the sunday dinners. stores should be closed, too. we agree. let's go over to januaice dn to do the weather. >> i love cupcakes. we'll talk about cupcakes and beer, two of my all-time favorites. the temperatures in new york city? perfect for cupcakes and beer. 69 right now. 68 in cleveland. 57 in kansas city. a perfect day for cupcakes and beer wherever you are today. mix them together and we'll talk about that. the potential for severe weather acro
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across the country. the northeast is looking spectacular. we have showers over portions of florida and georgia. and then the potential for severe weather, perhaps, we'll keep an eye on the southwest. the southwest is seeing showers and thunderstorms. otherwise a pretty good looking day. cupcakes and beer, clayton? >> i just tweeted it, cupcakes and beer, does it get any better. >> it doesn't. >> we have an awesome guest this morning. i'm here to talk about how we can bake cupcakes to the next level with american conduct. how do you improve a cupcake? >> we make them like cocktails. we call them caketails. >> you won me over. >> in keeping with the patery
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patreatic theme, we are going with the strawberry daquiri. >> i'm a huge fan of sam adams, the american beer. can we make that cupcake? >> yes. we are part of brew iing compans here. first we'll add some butter. >> okay. >> because this is buttercreme. >> are two sticks enough? >> this is tv. we are trying to look good here. then add four kups of confectionary sugar. >> four cups, go nuts. >> this is really healthy. then a little lemon zes. if one of you would like to pop in a sam adams.
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>> pop the top, baby. is it a twist? >> yes. >> and we're going to add -- thank you. you're welcome in my kitchen any time. so we'll put that all in there and mix it up. and through the magic of television -- >> wow! >> look how quickly that matches through the magic of television. >> that goes right there. >> keep your day job. >> get after that. look at that. >> how is it? are you 18 and allowed to have beer is th
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beer? say yes. fortunately, we are not on live television. anna and tucker, back over to you. >> you are giving beer to children, clayton. coming up, if you don't do your chores, no wi-fi for you. the latest form of parents involving bribery. does it work? we'll report, you can decide. and her exotic hunting photos sparked a media firestorm and facebook outright deleted them. now you are getting death threats. the professional caller is here next to. >> do you need something to wash it down?
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welcome back. harvard university campus evacuated after someone called in a bomb threat. bomb-sniffing dogs found no one armed or any explosives. that's when police ruled it a hoax. the fbi is working to identify two other people who sent out tweets claiming responsibility for it. they are probably trying to get out of class. and a new way of parenting? a wires rerouter allows parents to bribe children with internet time. no wi-fi until the chores and homework are done. they can earn surf time and the
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hope is for kids to be less reliant on the internet with parameters. thank you, clayton. after a firestorm on the internet, death to kendall jones are causing her to fire back. craig is here with more on this story. you have hunted a lot in africa so tell us what the reality is of these hunts? >> well, whether it is elsewhere in the world or here in the united states, the reality is that hunters pay for the majority of the wildlife management conservation. and there is no alternative funding. in africa and elsewhere in the third world, hunting revenues from visiting sportsmap and
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women are really important in turning what may otherwise be dangerous nuisance animals into a valuable resource. it places value on the animals and also deters poaching by meat distribution and by reducing human animal conflict. so it really is absolutely critical to wildlife management. you know, a photo of the tourism industry is a wonderful industry, but photo safaris are conducted in a well manicured park. hunters know that's the only way to realize value out of these animals. so it really is important in the countries of origin. >> what would happen if there was no more big game hunting in
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africa? >> well, the cheetah is considered one not hunted in most areas, but the rhino is hunted and the revenues are really important in funding the anti-poaching efforts and maintaining the viability of the species. >> so what do you make of the response that she got her facebook was a death threat. were you surprised by this? >> tucker, it's totally amazing. in contact there's between 16,000 to 20,000 hunters here in the united states. and the national shooting sports foundation indicates that 79% of americans approve of legal hunting.
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and i can't imagine another legal and internationally rig right -- >> have you taken both of your girls hunting? >> i did. i took them to africa when 17 and they enjoyed the experience and did hunt. and i think they came away with a much better and enlightening experience. >> do you see this becoming so violent that you threaten to kill someone over it? >> i generally don't understand it but to some extent the media has caused this. tucker, you're a journalist and i'm a journalist in my own world
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and it's incumbent on us to get our facts right. and the animals kendall hunted are told to be endangered but that's not true. there were no animals that any competent individual focused on. the picture of the leopard there is identified as a cheetah. that needs to be corrected. she's been shown with a rhino, but that particular rhino was mauled by a lion and was darted. the veterinarian was on hand and they put in a microchip for tracking and administered the anecdote and that rhino is very much alive and well and going about the business of making more rhinos. >> craig, thank you for joining
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us live this morning. thank you for coming on, it was interesting. >> thanks a lot. i appreciate being here. a billionaire environmentalist trying to take down the republican party in the name of climate change. but this morning we're finding out out that he actually makes billions off of coal. you'll get tom steyer. it's an amazing story. stay tuned for the details. and and the seas to the skies, our own anna kooiman is in a helicopter getting a look at the nypd's elite unit. it's incredible. sfx: sounds of marching band and crowd cheering sfx: sounds of marching band and crowd cheering so, i'm walking down the street, sfx: sounds of marching band and crowd cheering just you know walking, sfx: sounds of marching band and crowd cheering and i found myself in the middle of this parade honoring america's troops. which is actually quite fitting because geico has been serving the military for over 75 years.
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aawh no, look, i know this is about the troops and not about me. right, but i don't look like that. who can i write a letter to about this? geico. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance.
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was a radical islamist group isis continues its moch across the rock, many people an end to the war on terror might not be in sight. >> the former leader came back for revenge saying, quote, i'll see you in new york. what's being done here at home? i spent the day with the ynpd's elite scuba and aviation team. >> at night, during the day, when it's snowing, raining, high winds, we're in the water diving. >> as one of the country's only units with two air sea rescue members at all times, the nypd scuba team is always on the clock. >> around the beach, anover turned boat, those guys will launch on that job and they can
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be anywhere within the city in about seven minutes. >> on top of rescue mission, the scuba team helps with counter terrorism surveillance. >> pre-9/11 was very reactive. post 9/11 it's become a very much more proactive response. if there's a bomb in new york city under water, well, who is going to do it? >> training for the aviation unit mirrors that of military pirates. it includes 25 hours in the flight simulator. >> i'm a newby. i've never flown anything. can it happen? >> hop right in. >> if you can manage. >> i think you've got it. >> whew! >> you're flying the helicopter. >> that explain why it's a little shaky. i see the statue of liberty. we're doing all right. >> enough of this. let's see how the pros do it.
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♪ >> the nypd tells me the elite scuba unit is the only one in the country to dive in full face masks, can -- and -- >> yeah, 24 hours a day, seven days a week, they're the only full time scuba team for law enforcement across the country. and so along with the military, nypd has cutting edge technology and training and it becomes protocol and a model for other law enforcement agencies across the country. >> and they're not out there like in sunny, beautiful afternoons most of the time. they're out there in rough conditions, stormy weather, choppy seas.
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the headlines is cruising in a helicopter over the new york harbor, another day in the life of anna kooiman. >> and getting to try out the simulator, because i got very sick doing that. i go sea sick, so every time i do these things does she. >> but you do it, anyway. coming up, if you thought 50,000 alien illegal children crossing the border was bad, another report says 240,000 illegals have come since april. then our firework's war propaganda. your e-mails are pouring in.
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hello, good morning. i'm sunday the 6th of july, 2014. terror at the beach, a great white on the attack. >> hey, get out of the water. >> shark! get out of the water. >> the chaos and the escape caught on camera. and tens of thousands of illegal children just entered the united states this year. we must be sending them back, right? no. despite white house claims, they're staying. we've got details of this story, coming up. and did you guys all watch fireworks? >> yes. >> well, then you're all warmongers, according to one liberal professor if you watched
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fireworks. turns out, they're just war propaganda. the comparison that has you fueling this morning. we're going to read your e-mails in just moments. "fox & friends" hour four starts right now. >> hey, everybody. good morning. happy fourth of july weekend. >> clayton b. morris. >> we figured it out that, yes, we all have bs in our middle name except tucker, so we wanted to employ our audience to -- >> it's like the ramones. everybody in the band has to have the same name. >> what would the b stand for? >> it's an initial signifying solidarity. >> not clayton b. morris? >> i think you're making that up. >> you don't even know my middle name. >> how long have we been dating and you don't know my middle name? >> my first born will be brook.
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>> b wsh it's a zen concept. we've got headlines for you this morning. >> let's get right to those. terror at the beach. can you believe this? a seven foot great white shark attack aes swimmer and the horrifying moment is caught on tape. >> oh, there he is. look, look. >> i think he got bit. >> he did. [ bleep ]. >> he got bit. hey! get out of the water! shark! >> get out of the water! >> shark! >> this is what you're watching, the shark fighting to break free from a fishing line for nearly an hour when it gets mad and takes a bite out of the swimmer. >> we actually were yelling at these guys saying there's a shark on the line, shark on the line, stop, move away. >> we really think that swimmer got a little too close to the fishing line. >> you can see swimmers carrying the victim to the beach. steven robel is currently recovering in the hobbit.
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seen here earlier in a facebook photograph says he escaped the shark by punching it in the nose. he credits quick thinking along with god's intervention for his survival. four people are dead after a horrific boat crash in miami that left a dozen others hurt. officers responding to the fourth of july chaotic scene say they just kept finding victims in the water. eight people taken to the hospital. a young man and a woman later died. then the next morning, another woman was pulled from the water as well as a fourth victim. the police say the marina where the collision happens was packed with boats for the further of july celebration. and a new report for the nsa agency says was spying on americans way more than terror suspects. despite being marked as useless by nsa analysts, the information was stored, anyway. a former teacher says that fireworks are too much like pretend war and terrify our
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children. that teacher, big biggilo says we should rethink the fourth of july because the pretend war of celebratory fireworks has become part of a propaganda campaign th that inures us especially the children among us to current and future wars half a world away. many of you are commenting on this. robert said, folks like fireworks. most people will see this fool's notion for what it is, foolish. and matt says he's obviously living in the wrong country. those are your headlines. >> or the right country. you have freedom and he can speak his mind. >> all right. so if you've been following this immigration story, our southern border overrun with migrants from central america. probably you've seen the white house response, which is to say yes, we understand this is a crisis and we're sending these people home. a new report says that is untrue.
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it's false. it's a lie. the majority, the overwhelming majority of those unaccompanied minors at our borders have been at public expense reunited with relatives in the united states. that means they're staying. >> so not@of kids are staying in these detention facilities and centers where they're being screened for very long. we thought they were there for a long time, the catholic charity was coming in to help. but yes, on the taxpayer dollar, they are being delivered through a number of different agencies to homes of relatives all across the country. it doesn't matter if they're in ceilings, pennsylvania or ohio. one airplane every 72 hours will arrive in california carrying another round of illegal immigrants. >> and the officials are saying this is the most humane way to do this to reunite them with their families. but when they find their families, they're not even trying to make sure that they are here legally in the first
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place. and what about all the people who do try to come here legally. you get a free meal, medical treatment if you need it, you get a bus ticket and a plane ticket and no questions asked, it seems. >> humanity has nothing to do with this policy. those considerations are secondary to political considerations which are simple. the more illegal immigrants who come to this country and stay here, the more democratic voters there are. by the way, you can't simultaneously argue you care about middle class and wages and unemployment and be in favor of unrestricted illegal immigration because it undercuts wages, it makes it harder for middle class people to ascend, it makes wages stagnant. you look at the wages, that's why they haven't moved in 40 years, illegal immigration. >> it's not just the tens of thousands, the 50,000 unaccompanied minors. this report says another 240,000 making 290,000 illegal immigrants. and as you mentioned, this is not good for our economy, it's hurting local governments, federal, state, all of that.
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that's why you're seeing even the attorney general in texas greg abbott saying we may try to sue the federal government for these policies because they're putting such a strain on our federal budget. >> jeff is coming up to join us in a few minutes, from one of the areas hit hardest by this immigration debate. do you want some more high pock city? are you familiar with the name tom steyer? you will after this segment. he plastered on the front page of the "new york times" this morning in a pretty explosive report. he is the guy probably single handedly responsible as an environmentalist for stopping the keystone xl pipeline from being built because of, as he has called it, an environmental catastrophe could unfold. it turns out a new report this morning in the "new york times" found his firm, fairlawn capital, founded back in 1986 has made millions of dollars off of coal powered plants. all across the world. hypocrisy? of course it is. and it's of a piece.
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this is exactly the modern liberal mind-set crystallized. we're taking your guns away, we have armed bodyguards. we want you to feel guilty about driving a minivan or an suv. we're flying private, we're investing in coal companies in australia. it's good for you, but not for us. obamacare for you, private insurance for us. this is a world view, by the way, and he's just the ladiest embodiment of it. >> not only that. the coal plants in this country that he's been outspoken against -- he's been outspoken against coal, fossil fuels in this country, yet he's making millions in plants off of other countries base the mroogz -- let china have the pollution. >> he's the single biggest donor for the republican party. it is wrong for you to have any contact with fossil fuels at all, and yet their biggest donor is funding a coal mine?
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how does that work? >> a hundred million dollars to block any gop candidate against the climate change. all right. let's talk about this. enough is enough, right? poor teachers, students are getting bad grades, the education system is falling apart in a lot of ways and some people are saying that it's bought of tenure. that these bad teachers are allowed to stay in place simply because they've been there a long time and it's block teachers champing at the bit to get into those positions. >> sam parisola was on "fox & friends" earlier this morning. take a listen to what he had to say about it. >> the law basically offered protection of tenure for competent and innovative teachers. we're not opposed to that. we're saying if you're not a competent or innovative teacher you don't have the right to protection by tenure and we want to have you replaced. we cannot replace teachers fast enough because of all these rules. it takes about three years and
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$300,000 to remove one teacher. about 80% of our students cannot perform at grade level. so when do we take action? >> nearly impossible to get a teacher fired. >> and i don't know that tenure is the main problem with schools. unmarried parents who don't care and aren't involved are the main problem. but tenure certainly doesn't help. how is it good that bad teachers are still on the job? do we take education seriously when we have tenure? >> right. when they can't be fired and they sit in these holding rooms where they don't report and we still pay for them? let us know your thoughts on i . "fox & friends".com. >> what a crowd we have today, right? what a great crowd. and not only do people watch us in the u.s., but people watch us all over the world. where are you ladies from? >> northern ireland. >> what's your name? >> rebecca. >> and your name? >> emily. >> what are you planning to do today. >> we're going to go on a bus
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tour. >> are you hoping to spot any celebrities? >> hopefully jerome jerr. >> jerome, if you see these ladies, we would like to meet you. we have about a half hour before we actually go off air, so they would love to meet you you. let's take a look at the weather. it's a beautiful day in new york city. isn't the weather great here today? yes. we did have this hurricane named arthur that has since exited the coastline. we are watching that area you see off the coast of the southeast and were seeing showers and thunderstorms over the southwest. severe threat today across the upper midwest, the great lakes stuff, going to spread southward over the ohio river valley. the potential for large hail, damaging winds, isolated tornadoes and there's your daytime high today. very warm and a spectacular day here in new york city. that's what mr. rogers said when he said it's a beautiful day in the neighborhood. >> what a great weather map, anna. thank you. we just told but the outrage
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and growing debate in california over the immigration crisis. we'll be joined live by one person involved. and she never saw it coming. ahh! it's a prank that scared this grandmother right off her feet. quiet! mom has a headache! had a headache! but now, i& don't. excedrin is fast. in fact for some, relief starts in just 15 minutes. excedrin. headache. gone.
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southern california's gaining national attention after protesters blocked buses carrying illegal immigrants being shipped from overwhelmed facilities in the state of texas. that happened last week. in 2,000 residents came to a town hall meeting and clashed. both sides arrived.
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the town is so torn that one of its supervisors wrote president obama alert saying this, quote, this surge that is not likely to diminish is seriously impacting the limited resources at the murrieta station and surrounding communities. this is unacceptable, inappropriate and more importantly potentially unlaw l unlawful. what changes the residents there want to see. joining us now is the murrieta county board of supervisors. thanks for joining us this morning. >> my pleasure. >>fy mister apologies. it seems like riverside county is bearing unfairly the brunt of this crisis. what would you like to see the fed do? >> as i mentioned in my letter to the president, he has complete control over this. what we've learned is that mexico has given 10,000 work visas in the month of june alone to gautt mall yan residents that are expressly given those permits to go to the border and get into the united states where they're going to find safe
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haven. they're advertising in guatemala for those citizens to come to new mexico. i think president obama needs to get more border patrol at the rio grand office and if he needs to augment it with the national guard and let's stop this -- you know, the opening of the borders for people, otherwise we're going to keep seeing thousands of migrants that are searching for a better life. and you can't argue with them. they're having troubles down in their own countries. but we're really ill prepared in our local area to take care of 30,000 residents or migrants coming into our country and many of them being flown to the southwestern united states and most notably murietta, a city where i representative. we have very little good communication with border pa trot and with i.c.e. as to where they're going, who is going to pay for their care. we offered to put a county
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hospital on wheels on property to provide humanitarian care for these exploited, you know, individuals and we were refused access to put our mobile hospital there.. we're very concerned about the communicable diseases, tuberculosis, that could be spret spread into our communities. we're just looking for cooperation. >> i bet you are concerned. i want to get back to the first point you made, that none of this would be happening without the complicity with the government in mexico. the mexican government would be in a lot of trouble without u.s. help. presumably, obama could shut this down tomorrow, as you pointed out. why do you think he isn't doing that? >> well, i don't govern border policy as an elected official as a county representative. but we all know the president has his disagreements with congress about immigration reform and we're just asking him to do what the law requires him to do and that's patrol the
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borders and keep them closed. and mexico is complicit in giving these work visas with the express intent of having these people, these migrants go to the u.s. border. there's no shortage of labor in mexico for these migrant toes work in mexico. they're going there and paying coyotes $2,000 to $4,000. there's reports many of these enfranchised people have been assaulted, sexually assaulted, physically assaulted. and by not putting some border enforcements, he's -- mr. obama is exploiting all of these people, these innocent human beings, mowers and young children to thinking they're going to get safe haven in the united states and without a change in policy there, that expectation is going to continue and we, the beneficiaries, counties and cities in southwestern riverside county and arizona and texas are inundated with these migrants
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with no idea how we're going to care for them. you know, we're still suffering from the great depression, great recession in southern california. our unemployment numbers are still very high, especially in my county, and this just adds insult to injury as to how we're going to take care of these people. i don't remember president obama saying we're going to accepted you you a check to help take care of the medical needs and the social needs of these people that really need a lot of help. and we really empathize and, you know, we want to make sure people understand that we're a very philanthropic county. the city of mureitta is very philanthropic. if these migrant res delivered into our custody, we're going to give them the social services they need, but it's going to come at a great price. and i'm hoping president obama will do the right thing and start protecting the boarders for all of us. >> i hope so, too. thank a lot for coming on. we pressure per expect pitch. craving some alone time? be careful what you wish for. new study reveals people would
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rather get an electric shock than be left alone with your thoughts. then if your wife is happy, your family is, right? divorce-proofing your wife, coming up. i'm m-a-r-y and i have copd. i'm j-e-f-f and i have copd. i'm l-i-s-a and i have copd, but i don't want my breathing problems to get in the way of hosting my book club. that's why i asked my doctor about b-r-e-o. once-daily breo ellipta helps increase airflow from the lungs for a full 24 hours. and breo helps reduce symptom flare-ups that last several days and require oral steroids, antibiotics, or hospital stay. breo is not for asthma. breo contains a type of medicine that increases risk of death in people with asthma. it is not known if this risk is increased in copd. breo won't replace rescue inhalers for sudden copd symptoms and should not be used more than once a day. breo may increase your risk of pneumonia, thrush, osteoporosis, and some eye problems.
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some quick headlines for you. israeli police hunting down suspects in the kidnapping and murder of the palestinian teen who was burned to death. six jewish extremists are now in custody. the murder of the 16-year-old boy was seen as a very veng attack after the murder of three israeli teens last week. and a guilt stricken thief who stole an american flag from a family's home on long island has returned it with a note that said i am so sorry.
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i had no idea. the homeowner was given the flag in memory of her 29-year-old brother who died at ground zero. a shocking new study reveal that's people are afraid to be alone with their own thoughts. so afraid, in fact, that they would rather be shocked, physically shocked. how can we get back on track? >> well, joining us now is political psychologist dr. jenny tate. good morning. thanks for being with us. so we would rather be doing something, even if that something is negative, rather than doing nothing. why is that? >> you know, a lot of times people find their thoughts can be scary if you have negative, destructive thoughts, people call it rumination in the field of psychology. if you have thoughts that go in a vicious cycle that can pr difficult anxiety, depression disorders, leading to bing eating and compulsive actions. >> how important is it to spend time alone? oscar wilde said i think it's
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very healthy to spend time alone. you need to not be defined by another person. >> that's a great observation. other forms of distraction might be a temporary escape and not leave us with a feeling of fulfillment and to have peace of mind. >> that is so true. that is completely true, the neurotic behavior, the phone grabbing. what are the tips for being alone? >> one of my favorites, and i would love for viewers to try this at home is called singing your thoughts. a lot of times people get into this vicious cycle where they have a thought, they trite to dispute it, they gather evidence for it. it doesn't do anything like that if you have a thoughts say i'm a losing other i'll be alone forever. you can try singing that like -- >> can you demonstrate that for us? >> my mind is hovering. ♪ i'm a loser and da, da, da >> i love this track your tech time. really important. >> we are so bad at estimating how much time we spend doing
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things. i think a lot of people would be shocked to know that, for instance, google estimates android users check their phone about 150 times a day. >> it was lower a few years ago. it's upwards 200 times a day and often for no reason at all, just because you want to keep checking it. there's no news coming through. >> there's some great apps for that. there's some apps called moment and rescue time that can help with that. >> next, you have practice mindfulness. just sit there in nature and thank you for the wind blowing across my face and the ground under my feet. but it really works. >> it's terrible that that sounds hokie. >> and you can do that anytime, a lot of people waiting in line, but the truth is, mindfulness is like a muscle. the structurally change your brain the next time you practice it. some researchers at the university of wisconsin madison studied the neural core his of joy and people who have the most
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extensive meditation practices are the happiest. >> i've been reading about that. >> you seem very common centered. whatever you're doing, i want some of that. >> thank you. coming up here on the show, this accused killer on the run. the prison guards are regretting letting him out to watch fireworks. >> wow. and who doesn't love fried chicken? find out how to make it perfect. after all, today is national fried chicken day, coming up. great job! okay! here you go. good catch! alright, now for the best part. ooh, let's get those in the bowl. these are way too good to waste, right? share what you love with who you love. kellogg's frosted flakes® they're g-r-r-reat!tm
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welcome back. it's your shout of the morning. tun believable sight caught on camera. watch this. grab the kids, get grandma out of bed and come to the tv right now. a man claims he caught two women red handed trying to steal his beach stuff. he films it and they yell at him for filming it. >> do you need some help? do you know how to do it? >> yes. this sour stuff. >> this is yours? >> yes. it's okay. we'll let it slide. i'm glad i made it in time. >> no, step away from my stuff. how about that? >> you know what? i will and then i'm going the take that camera and is put it into -- like that.
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>> step back. stop it. >> so let's get this straight. she's mad that he's filming her stealing his stuff. >> but he just got man handled bay grandmother who is also a thief. >> well, and there's really no excuse for this. i could see you're walking along the beach stranded and you can't remember exactly where your towel is. maybe you could potentially lay down on a red towel. come on, this is a huge tent. there is no way they thought that was theirs. >> it's a pavilion. they stole a pavilion. oh, is that our pavilion? i didn't bring that red towel and all of this stuff. oh, that wallet? that's not my wallet. >> the kids go and mess up the beautiful sand castle that other people have made. you're grown. don't act like that. act right. >> let us know your thoughts to that. what would you have done to those grandmothers if you caught
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them stealing your stuff? e-mails us. you've been weighing in on this study this morning. tucker has been leading the charge on this. how do you have a happy life by making your wife happy. these are the things that, according to this new study, women want to hear so your wife will continue to be happy. >> first up? here, let me do that for you. or how can i be a better husband to you? or let me watch the kids. these are all great things, right? >> that is clearly good advice. i've been married 23 years. i think those all make sense. how can i be a better husband? that's a great question. my question is, why would it be so uncomfortable for us to do a segment asking women, how can you be better wives? that would be considered appalling and sexist and horrible when actually it's very, very simple, but nobody wants to say it out loud. >> exactly. exactly. >> i can imagine where your mind is right now. >> would you guys support a segment, how would you be better wives? could you handle that? >> twice. >> twice in the morning they see it. >> our viewers agree with
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tucker, i agree with that. >> but you've never seen that on television. when was the last time you've seen a show take up the all important question, be a better wife. you'd get arrested for doing that. >> the pink elephant in the room, it's something that pastors talk about on sundays. they have sermons about it. >> about -- >> affection and marriage. there's nothing wrong with saying that because it's true and it makes marriages happier. i don't know why that's so embarrassing. >> why are we scared to talk about it in this country? i don't know. >> other ways to improve your marriage, i think it's a great thing to surround yourself with positive influences, right, and make sure you have strong couples around you to -- you are the company you keep, right? >> and we always talk about, though, the wives need to be happy. happy wife, happy life. >> you're right. >> we never talk about, well, how do you make the man happy? yes. >> next week. >> next week on "fox & friends," we're going to do that. >> we're getting the rap. >> whether our producer megan wants to or not.
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>> on your sunday morning just for megan. another horrific inflatable mishap. this time, kids were lining up to ride a giant blow up slide in nevada when 70-mile-per-hour winds blew it 300 feet into the air. two people were hurt after being hit by flying debris. this is the third accident involving bouncy play sets since may. last month, two colorado children were caught inside a bouncy house when it broke away. an accused killer has escaped from jail in missouri after being allowed out to watch fireworks? 32-year-old jason mcclure who was with nine other inmates outside the jail when he broke free. he's awaiting trial for his wife's death. at the moment, he's considered dangerous and authorities believe he may be armed. midair drama on a flight between new zealand and australia. a pilot locking his first officer out of the cockpit. an air knew zellland spokesperson saying the captain was angry at his spokes pilot
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for delaying the flight by 13 minutes by undergoing a random and required drug and alcohol test before flying. both pilots are suspended and have to undergo training and counseling before returning to work. and the prank one woman actually falls for, literally. >> oh, my god. >> it did look like it was coming through the glass. this grandmother getting pranked by an interactive shark. a fake shark swims towards her, breaking the glass. she gets so scared, she falls down. looks pretty real, though. >> it looks totally real. i've seen the tape four times and it still scares me. this won't scare you, tucker and anna. it is national fried chicken day. >> who doesn't love fried chicken? nobody. >> who do we have here? john seymour.
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>> we just opened up two weeks ago downtown in manhattan. >> comfort food. >> excited to cook some chicken. >> are you known for your tried chicken? >> we're known or our chicken waffles. >> what is the best way to prepare fried chicken? >> first step, you have to have a brian, right? >> it's like a hot tub of chicken. >> we're going to brian this at home, we have oregano, salt, water, garlic powder. no chicken stock. our secret is a sweet tea brian. >> sweet tea? >> yeah. that's kind of our little thing there. >> double dredge. >> first we have to season our flour. we have all-purpose flour. we're going to use paprika. you have to go with regular white flour or -- >> another thing we did, black powder, salt, and a lot a little bit of cornstarch. >> and that's going to give it a
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little extra -- >> this is the only reason i'm doing "fox & friends" weekend. >> the food. >> well, the weather is important, too. >> so we have our brian chicken. when you take it out of the fridge, pat dry it. >> pat dry. >> yeah, gently pat it dry. >> we're going to take two pieces for you. >> into the oil? >> no, right into the flower. mix it up there. we'll get two pieces. why not. >> let dip her into the oil. >> our producers are so hungry, they literally want you to is skip five steps. >> but the screen here is you have to double it. >> that's butter milk. >> so a double layer. you have to do a double layer, you got it. we want our chicken super crispy. you're going to have it with one of our fluffy waffles. >> can we have a at your restaurants, too? >> yeah, we have naps in the back.
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i'm back there all the time. >> sweet doctor. >> at home, let this fry, cover it up. >> fry for seven minutes on each side, cover, preferably. uncovered for five minutes turning for color. go clayton, go clayton, go clayton. you know what we have to talk about is this deliciousness over here. >> we do all our pastries in in-house. >> i have never seen a biscuit this tall. >> oh, yes. >> you know what this looks like? it looks like lincoln's hat. >> that's what we were going for. >> lemon meringue in a cup? >> in a mason jar. we have passion fruit puree on top of that, as well. >> and the waffles and the chicken, they go together? >> we on do a bacon cheddar waffle, a dry cherry waffle, plain belgium waffle. >> name of the restaurant again? >> sweet chick. >> thank you so much. >> do you mind if i eat this right next to you?
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>> please do. >> and as you do, coming up, college graduates struggling to find work and now let's get a whole lot worse. why raising minimum wage may hammer young americans. and this little boy getting an honor only 100 people have ever received and it's perfect for the fourth of july weekend. that brave kid going dutch, coming up. quiet! mom has a headache! had a headache! but now, i& don't. excedrin is fast. in fact for some, relief starts in just 15 minutes. excedrin. headache. gone. this, and definitely this. and that means this, so if you're looking to buy a car, don't wait because the savings have already begun. just make sure before you buy to go to truecar.com or use the truecar app for guaranteed savings.
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happy fourth of july.
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welcome back. sorry, michigan college students, but it looks like you're going to have to start eating a lot more ramen noodles. a recent signed minimum wage reform act is forcing colleges to make major cuts to student employment programs. it's going to raise michigan's current minimum wage to $9.25. the effect of all this, kayla bonham. caleb, thank you for joining us. >> thank you for having me. >> in michigan, they passed the minimum wage increase. it's going to increase wages from $7.40 to $8.15 in september and top out at $9.25 in 2018. what we're seeing at the leadership institute campus reform is that this is already directly affecting college
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students. at saginaw valley state university in michigan, they came out and said that this increase is going to cost the university $760,000 annually to pay for on campus student employment. and now the university has two choices. they came out and said we are either going to have to give students fewer hours to work or we're going to have to hire fewer students and get rid of the ones that we can't afford. >> there are 11 states up on the screen with a minimum wage of $9 an hour that will roll out by 2018. but you know the argument, caleb, right? most people affected by minimum wage hikes are those who have kids at home. they're in the mid to late 30s and it's not students looking for summer jobs. what do you say to those people? >> well, exactly. exactly. minimum wage, people that work in minimum wage positions in america, half of them returned the age of 25. and millennials are going out into a job market where they're
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seeing at the age of 18 to 29 are faced seeing a 15% unemployment rate. and i'll tell you this, only a politician or a liberal activist could make sense of the idea that to help the unemployed, to help those looking for jobs, you need to make them more expensive to hire. this is an absolute burden to the students and we're seeing it all across the cup. >> well, there's no question the minimum wage decreases the number of jobs. here is the conservative case in favor of the minimum wage. this is a welfare state. we're going to make up the difference in pay through welfare benefits, stamps, housing vouchers, flat out money transfers, disability. so why shouldn't the employer foot the bill for people's livelilyhood rather than taxpayers? >> well, exactly. here is the idea. if an employment wants to increase the wages of his employees, we should do so. that's what stimulates the economy. but this is some sort of mandate handed down by the government. politicians do not know how much an employer should be paid.
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and this is the problem that we're seeing. they come through and they demand an increase to help out those poor, starving, ramen noodle easting students. we're going to give them more money. but then what happens? the university has to backfill that from some. so they can either decrease the benefits that high paid administrators are receiving, which isn't going to happen, or they can increase tuition costs. and when they increase the tuition costs, it ends up hurting the very students who they were trying to help by increasing their minimum wage. it's a vicious circle and it all failed. >> we know universities don't raise tuition costs at all. >> it's like a hundred times the rate of inflation. >> caleb, thank you so much for joining us this morning. have a great weekend. >> thanks for having me, guys. >> coming up, a lion attacks camera crew. maybe a pet lion is not such a good idea. >> you think? and this little boy getting an honor only a hundred people have received, and it's the
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perfect fourth of july. it's perfect for this fourth of july. the brave kid is going to join us, coming up. i'm randy and i quit smoking with chantix. for 33 years i chose to keep smoking... ...because it was easier to smoke than it was to quit. along with support, chantix (varenicline) is proven to help people quit smoking. it's a non-nicotine pill. chantix reduced the urge for me to smoke. it actually caught me by surprise. some people had changes in behavior, thinking or mood, hostility, agitation, depressed mood and suicidal thoughts or actions while taking or after stopping chantix. if you notice any of these, stop chantix and call your doctor right away. tell your doctor about any history of mental health problems, which could get worse while taking chantix. don't take chantix if you've had a serious allergic or skin reaction to it. if you develop these, stop chantix and see your doctor right away as some could be life threatening.
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tell your doctor if you have a history of heart or blood vessel problems, or if you develop new or worse symptoms. get medical help right away if you have symptoms of a heart attack or stroke. use caution when driving or operating machinery. common side effects include nausea, trouble sleeping and unusual dreams. i did not know what it was like to be a non-smoker. but i do now. ask your doctor if chantix is right for you. that's why i always choose the fastest intern.r slow. the fastest printer. the fastest lunch. turkey club. the fastest pencil sharpener. the fastest elevator. the fastest speed dial. the fastest office plant. so why wouldn't i choose the fastest wifi? i would. switch to comcast business internet and get the fastest wifi included. comcast business. built for business.
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52 minutes now past the hour. some quick headlines for you. the animal edition. this video is why you shouldn't have a pet lion in your house. you're going to break my vase! the animal attacking that man in the czech republic. he was part of a tv crew filming a documentary on the owner.
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thankfully, he wasn't seriously hurt. he's just playing. and fun in the sun turns into a rescue operation, a group of people working together to save a baby dolphin at a beach near tampa. the dolphin was stranded and struggling to swim out to the ocean. it was taken to a nearby marine aquarium and will be nursed back to health. aww. anna? >> all right, clayton. thanks so much. a 7-year-old boy has been given an honor less than 100 people in the united states have ever received. andrew star, who suffers from a rare genetic disorder, has been made an honorary marine. three generations of the star family have been in the marine corps, and andrew's father wanted to make sure he was able to follow in the tradition. joining us now is andrew star and his father and marine corps veteran, andy star. good morning, both of you, thanks for being with us on "fox & friends." >> thanks for having us, we're honored. >> you too. >> thank you so much, andrew. and andrew does have this rare
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genetic disorder, nf1, where tumors form on the brain and spine so you knew it was a long shot for him to become a marine, even though he wanted to. so what did you tell your superiors when it was time to retire? >> yeah. again, our dream -- andrew wants to be a marine, always wanted to be a marine like his dad. and so i went to one of my commanding officers and asked that -- that the marine corps has an honorary marine program established in 1992. and we wanted to fulfill his dream so he would continue the fourth generation of service to our country and our corps. and that's how the process started. >> i can tell you're a very pattic family. even the last name, star. andrew, i see you playing with something. did you get a special coin in the ceremony? can you show that to us? what is it? >> it's a gold coin and it's made out of real gold.
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>> real gold. wow. what does it mean to you to get to be an honorary marine, just like your father and two other generations before him? >> good. and -- five generations. >> no, it's four generations. >> no, five. counting uncle chris. >> all right. okay. >> remember, he was a marine. >> all right. >> so five generations. >> okay. >> right? >> yeah. >> a long line of service in your family, for sure. andy, tell us about the service. the ceremony. >> the ceremony was -- we -- again, it's so hard to become an honorary marine, less than 100 have ever made it. so we didn't tell any family or friends. they actually came over for my birthday on the 30th of june, which was also the third-year anniversary of my retirement from the marine corps. and so everyone gathered for my
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birthday party, and then they were presently surprised when major general fred padilla knocked on the door to announce the good news and present andrew with an appointment from the general commandant, general amus, to become a marine. >> the smile says it all. what a great honor bestowed upon the starr family. enjoy it. >> thank you very much. >> thank you very much. >> andrew, real impressed. real gold. 56 minutes after the hour. there's a gap out there.
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make it a great weekend, everybody. >> see you, everyone. well, the stable, secure iraq president obama promised we left behind is now a tinder box. good morning, everyone. i'm maria bartiromo. welcome to "sunday morning futures." could iraq become the linchpin that sets the entire middle east on fire and puts the u.s. in the cross-hairs? u.n. ambassador john bolton will join us live. thousands of illegals streaming across our border and being bussed away from overwhelmed facilities to other spots in the country. what can be done to stem this growing crisis. and will the summer blockbuster movie season help turn around the economy? the ceo of i max is here as we look ahead to

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