tv FOX Friends FOX News June 6, 2017 3:00am-6:01am PDT
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months. one man arrested this morning. rob: extremely angry woman jumping the counter. jackie: "fox & friends" starts right now. have a great day. rob: see you later. >> contractor under arrest this morning accused of leaking classified report to the russian media. >> i don't care if you are republican or democrat i want to see people in handcuffed and behind bars. somebody who leaked needs to suffer the consequences. >> radar for a while. so how did he slip through yet again? >> you are not working on your tan when you are going to syria or iraq. you are there because you are involved with bad actors. >> you can have all the security in the world, but if that security shows up after the fact, the lives have already been lost. >> president trump will not stop fired fbi director james comey from testifying before congress this week. >> here, there's one
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question, did the president obstruct justice? that's what everybody is waiting for. >> our nation will move faster, fly higher, and soar proudly for the next great chapter of american aviation. ♪ ♪ ♪ all right now ♪ baby, it's all right now ♪ all right now ♪ baby's it's all right now. steve: welcome aboard studio 2. mezzanine level of studio f heart of mid-atlantic. brian: how long is the lease you say day 2. expire at the end of the week. steve: we own this place.
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brian: good. ainsley: i hope it's a long time. according to "saturday night live" i'm only going to be here for two years. i have a few months left in the studio. brian: a lot of stuff snl says turns out not to be true. steve: no kidding. the federal government made good on something donald trump said he would do. that is going to find these leakers and we are going to bring them to justice. yesterday we saw the images of a 25-year-old bernie sanders supporter by the name of reality winner, her actual name who had top secret clearance worked for pluribus international corporation down in georgia. she was arrested and will be charged under the espionage act. brian: have we learned one thing from the edward snowden fiasco where so many of our secrets left with this private contractor? now we find out this person detested, judging by their social media posts, detested donald trump and determined to bring donald trump down, i imagine leaked information about what the russians did or didn't do to certain
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voting machines or attempted to do on election day. ainsley: let's find out who she is. she is 25 years old. very young. spoke a lot of languages, middle eastern languages because she was a linguist for the u.s. air force. she was a bernie sanders supporters a you have mentioned. she put that all over her twitter. part of the movement to resist trump. one of her twitter posts says #resistance. steve: you know, it's interesting how they found her. the intercept published the information and she was arrested essentially within an hour that it went online. what they did was published the document and it looked like it was folded and they said that was probably printed by somebody and walked out. so the federal government looked at how many people had printed that document, the number was six. and then they went through her hard drive and found that she had an email to the intercept, went and talked to her she said yep, did i it. also, apparently, there are a number of stories about how printers can actually
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tell exactly what printer was used for something like this and who did it. ainsley: that's fascinating. brian: scary. steve: good. brine brian do you think she is the only one? ainsley: here's the thing though, she actually put it in the mail and sent it to this media outlet. she intentionally did. this it wasn't like she printed it out and read it and talked to friends at barbecue. she is 25 years old. brian: no just like edward snowden meant it. this was her agenda. thinking she is helping the country and clearly hurting the country. according to congressman jason chaffetz chairman of oversight for a few more days, she is going to jail. >> i don't care if you are republican or democrat, it doesn't matter what administration. when you have classified information, you cannot put that out there just because you think it would be a good idea. i want people in handcuffs and i want to see people behind bars. steve: if guilty, she will wind up behind bars. meanwhile, the other side of the idea is that tim kaine,
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brian: lost. steve: he says that people have a right to know these secrets. listen to this. >> somebody who leaks documents against the law has got to suffer the consequences but the american public is also entitled to know the degree to which russia invaded the election to take it away from american voters and whether anybody with the campaign or the transition or the trump administration was working with the russians to sell out the country. steve: absolutely have a right to know. but the fbi, we have some senate and house committees, they are looking into it. 25-year-old woman with a postage stamp from augusta, georgia not the way to do it. brian: and he knows better. doesn't he know better? steve: i don't know. brian: what exactly is he talking about? he is saying it's okay for 25-year-old operative or private contractor to if they see something interesting to send it to an outlet which they find they would like to read or our audience would like to read. as people are investigating maybe investigating
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something tim kaine likes maybe he won't be as amenable to somebody leaking out information along the investigation. ainsley: i wonder what his stance would be if he were the vice president. would he have even cared about these leaks at that point? i want to know more about the company she worked for, too. 22 locations all over the world. the one in georgia is at fort gordon i went on their website it says they specialize in government customers in defense security and intelligence community sectors that directly support the fulfillment of u.s. national security objectives. some of their clients, this is pretty scary the information she had her hands on. some of the current and past clients of this company defense intelligence agency, office of counter intelligence, u.s. army intelligence cuter command, missile defense agency and one more i will read u.s. central command centcom. this is intelligence information, classified information that she is sharing with the media. that is illegal. steve: she had top secret clearance. she has her fingers on all that stuff. brian: and so did private
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manning. he cut our knees out and hillary clinton state department out by releasing all those misses and then edward snowden. if you think this is it, you're dreaming. ainsley: do you think she will go to the jail for the first 10 years since she is the first leaker found? steve: if found guilty, definitely. meanwhile, cover "the new york post." we are talking about the london bridge attack and the headline is how could they miss this guy? this is the fella that was in that documentarifullying the black flag of isis. turns out he worked in the subway and had access to the tunnels under parliament. he was on the radar of mi-5 but they say now, now that they are trying to figure out what went wrong, there was no evidence of him attacking -- planning an attack which, as it turns out, was wrong because he did plan an attack and execute. ainsley: this is what got me, so they aired this documentary on a british tv network channel 4 and in the documentary he is in the
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park with some of his friends and they are praying to a black flag. imagined in that happened here in the u.s. imagine. we would be on him like white on rice. we would find out who he is, where he is, and he would be investigated at least. brain brian the thing is though he was free speech section. he was worshiping one of the imams there preaches nothing but hate. he was on the documentary proud to be there his neighbors called him in out of control. i have had a bunch of confrontations with him. for some reason mi-5 didn't feel empowered or assess him as dangerous. man were they wrong. he has links to ireland. married to a woman in scotland, bolivian dissent. his background seems to be pretty seen but i'm sure they will find something else. ainsley: this one woman was the neighbor and she confronted him, confronted one of these guys because he was trying to indoctrinate her kids. offering sweets to the kids. how to play football.
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steve: child came home i was listening to him and now i want to be a muslim that's what she said. at least one of these guys we know of was radicalized online. the guy was born in pakistan, raised in great britain. he was radicalized after watching a number of youtube videos. and they say that google is now refusing to remove a number of the vile rants. one politician over there said google is aiding and abetting terrorists by leaving this vile stuff onlibrary. and there are the two images of the two terrorists who we know of brain brian these two terrorists, one of the guys name is jabril palestinian american. and evidently he just talks about hate. talks how how moderate muslims should be killed. those without beards should be murdered in terms of google, facebook, and twitter. one of these guys their rants are still up. the question is should google, facebook, twitter all these media sites have monitors to pull this stuff
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down. that's what britain wants. steve: they need to have a report from someone complaining and they have a review board and figure out whether or not it's nontd. what happens those these sites have the most eyeballs. people go there and see what they're talking about and starting to follow them. google will kick them off and they will go to some other smaller site which is encrypted and they still get all the vile and hate but nobody knows. ainsley: have a way if you post some sort of language or wording online they get flagged and they see this guy could be dangerous? steve: they have people and algorithms. it is disappointing that that particular pair of hate preachers been viewed more than a million times. symptom some of the stuff still online. brian: they call the whole thing a daunting task and they're working on it that may be not good enough. we have to see. meanwhile, jillian is here with the latest news. jill jill that's right. good tuesday morning to you guys and to you at home. we begin with a fox news alert now.
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isis taking credit for australian terrorist standoff that left one man dead and three police officers hurt. [gunfire] jill jill police killing the 29-year-old smoll somali refugee in a shootout where he lured a woman in an apartment building and held her hostage. criminal on parole had been acquitted of plotting a terror attack at sydney army base in 2010. disgruntled worker who murdered colleague singled out his victim. john robert newman jr. shot five people dead in the head at awning company in orlando before taking his own life. police say the gunman had a negative relationship with at least one of those former co-workers. newman was fired from the company in april. he had a criminal record and among his victims, a widower raising two teenage
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daughters on his own. major changes coming to the v.a. secretary david shull kin announcing the department will adopt the same electronic healthcare system that the pentagon uses. the move aims to improve coverage for vets and better serve their medical needs after they leave the military. president trump praising the decision. >> this is one of the biggest wins for our veterans in decades. and i congratulate secretary shull kin for making this very, very important decision. jill jill secretary shull kin says the v.a. will spend up to six months planning the new system. and in just a few hours, vice president mike pence will give the keynote speech at the 13th annual national catholic prayer breakfast. more than 1,000 people are expected to be gathering at that event. that's going to happen today and pray for the direction and leadership of this country. those are a look at your headlines, guys. brian: he will have a busy morning. ainsley: he grew up catholic, too.
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steve: jillian, thank you. if your child chooses a different gender and you don't like that, is it child abuse? a new law actually going on the books ahead that you're going to want to hear about. brian: u.s. finally on the offensive against isis. what does that strategy look like retired admiral james rodriguez who was the supreme allied commander of nato is here to break it down. he also has a brand new book out. great to s see you, admiral. ♪ born to be wild ♪ born to be wild ♪ ♪
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itthe power of nexium 24hr protection from frequent heartburn. all day, and all night. now packed into a pill so small, we call it mini. new clearminis from nexium 24hr. see heartburn differently. ♪ ♪ >> we have to crush them in their heartland, so that is why you see secretary mattis deploying our isis plan to crush the heart of the islamic state in syria, in iraq. brian: president trump's advisor dr. sebastian gorka telling us yesterday that we're finally on the offensive when it comes to isis. so what should the strategy look like from here on in thousand that we have armed the kurds. here to answer that question is former allied commander forenato and author of brand new book new book.
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excellent. congratulations on the book. >> thanks, brian. brian: you know you have faith in general mattis. >> i do. brian: how do we take out isis as quickly as possible? >> i will tell you three things quickly. we need to up our hard powered in game in mosul and iraq. complete two operations. special forces. more precision guided bombing using our allies. britain brian using iraq. >> absolutely. absolutely crucial. number two, we have to go after their finances. that's cutting off the smug imling. cut off cyber activity. brian: have we. >> we have not on smuggling. that's a huge way to choke off the money, brian. number three, we have got to go at them very hard in the cyber world because they get a lot of their funding from that piece of it. so three discreet steps. if we take those, we will be able to really -- brian: any indication we are moving in any of those areas?
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after all they are a phone call away for you. >> they are moving in those areas. in fact, secretary mattis, who is the perfect guy for this, he spent his lifetime fighting in this region is fighting constantly to up that game. we will probably send a few more thousand troops there that's the right thing to do. brian: new book out out called sea power. cold war ends with the navy. we don't need it. let's cut it back. what's happened since? >> unfortunately the russians have upped their game. they are going to deliver 100 ships into their navy in the next three or four years. the chinese have built a serious blue water navy. and the oceans are not an american lake anymore. that's what i write about in sea power. we have got to rebuild our fleet. brian: why do we care? >> the oceans carry 95% of the world's commerce. it's where our allies connect with us. above all, brine, it's where we are going to have the big geopolitical confrontations of the 21st century. brian: we do not have a secretary of the navy confirmed right now.
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>> no. brian: they have to go in and go to battle for part of this budget to rebuild this. >> yes. brian: the president in the 1980s mitt romney called they want their foreign policy back when he called for building more ships. admiral, what's your message. >> first of all, i think president obama would like to have that line back because he is going to be hearing it for the rest of his levee. mitt romney was exactly right. russia threatens us. we only have 275 ships in the u.s. navy, brian. we need a minimum of 350 that's got to get done over the next 10 years. we need a secretary of the navy in place to do this. trump administration has spoken proudly about doing. this let's see what happens. brian: great britain was a super power purely because of their navy and america came back that way. thanks so much. i appreciate it, admiral. congratulations on sea power. i will talk to you more about it on radio. >> sounds great, brian. brian: brand new corruption investigation just launched into, get, this the clintons. and democrats on the hill shifting the support of single payer healthcare.
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is that going to work? dr. sapphire is here and she says that won't work as far as she can tell. she will chat about it with ainsley unless she gives her the cold shoulder, which could happen ♪ come on and take a free ride this is boris calvo. boris grows mind-blowing coffee. and because we pay him a fair price, he improves his farm and invest in his community to make even better coffee. all for a smoother tasting cup. green mountain coffee.
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. . vo: some in congress are jeopardizing a once in a generation opportunity to fix america's broken tax code by pushing their harmful bat tax. the senate has said no way. president trump says it's too complicated and his top economic advisor says it will force consumers to pay more for everyday things they rely on.
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that's now the law in ontario, canada. the new measure considers it a potential form of child abuse. critics call the new law totalitarian. all right. ainsley over to you and the doctor. ainsley: all right. thank you so much, steve. democrats now seem to be shifting far left on healthcare and latching on to a single payer system. is that really the way to go? dr. nicole saphier joins us live now. hey, dr. saphier. >> good morning. ainsley: you're welcome. -- thank you for being with us. [laughter] a single pair is a government owned insurance plan, right? >> exactly ains apes why do democrats want this. >> advocating for all. our existing medicare system has high quality care because it is offset by the 170 million americans who are privately insured. if you take away that private sector, it's not medicare for all. it's more of cost rationing. so it's medicaid for all. and with that you are going to see drastic reduction in
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choice o of the physicians you are able to see and extensively long wait times. in the united states people get upset because it can take up to 47 days to go and see a neurosurgeon. do you know in canada it can take up to 47 weeks to see a neurosurgeon. ainsley: too late for some people. >> not necessarily but you are right it can be a treatable injury or disease now all of a sudden not only do you have lost wages from being out of work and conditions make it worse. in addition to long wait times in the united states, we see these high technology, cancer centers, treatment centers popping up everywhere. we have access to the best technology. when you are rationing things, that's the first thing that's going to be cut by budgets. in canada, or in the united states, have you more mri and pet scans in say new york city or in these large cities than they do in the entire canadian provinces so all of the sudden what you are used to be being able to go and get mri. now you may wait to a year for an mri. ainsley: wow.
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>> any premiums you have is going to be offset by payroll taxes and deductions there is a place for government in healthcare. we need robust support for our va systems, medicaid systems, medicare systems. but we need to maintain that private sector. it's very important to do that. ainsley: i have done so many stories on the v.a. you mentioned long wait times. i went out to arizona where they are having so many problems with the v.a. >> my home hospital. ainsley: we did talk to parents. their parents were on a list so long they died because of their illnesses or diseases because they couldn't get into the v.a. >> that could become the new normal. ainsley: that is crazy. i know many doctors don't like single payer system why is that? >> we want insurance for everybody. we want to treat everybody. however, when you start rationing costs, you will see fewer people going in to specialties, radiology, neurosurgeon, surgery in general and become more
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general practitioners. ainsley: why go to school for 15 years and make the same amount going to school for three years. >> important to have some aspect in healthcare. if you only had private sector you would be very efficient but people would suffer. it needs to be type balanced. we need to promote the market share for private insurers give people a choice but less big government in healthcare. we see how they run healthcare and that's the v.a. system. let's give it to the healthcare professionals. let's allow patient choice and get big government out. they more important things to deal with right now if you watch the news any day. national, international security but let's keep healthcare to the professionals and get big government out, more patient care. ainsley: thank you for being with us. >> thank you. ainsley: this guy's video goes viral. moment is incredible. is it real? we report. you decide. police had them on the radar and they were even featured on national tv in a documentary. why were the london bridge
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terrorists allowed to radicalize in plain sight? aaron cohen a former member of israel's counter terrorism unit answers that. first happy birthday to paul gee giaamonte he is 50 years old today. happy birthday, paul. ♪ your beat goes on and on and on and on ♪ boom, crash ♪ make me feel good ♪ come on to me ♪ come on to me ♪ can a toothpaste do everything well? this clean was like pow! my teeth are glowing. they are so white. step 1 cleans. step 2 whitens. crest [hd]. 6x cleaning*, 6x whitening*á i would switch to crest [hd] over what i was using before.
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dearthere's no other way to say this. it's over. i've found a permanent escape from monotony. together, we are perfectly balanced. our senses awake. our hearts racing as one. i know this is sudden, but they say...if you love something set it free. see you around, giulia ♪ ♪ like the oceans under the moon. ainsley: go up the stairs and can you find us.
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you will see the curvey couch. brian: we are in the process of installing an escalator. my thighs are too big. steve: aaron is special terrorism unit and leading manufacturer of law enforcement products for terrorism readiness. good to have you here on the brand new curvey couch. >> very good. i feel we are all connecting. brian: what's so connecting to all of us how one of the attackers, the 27-year-old nicknamed abs was hiding in plain sight. isis flag in the park. appearing on a documentary about terror. trying to radicalize about children. what else does he need to do, educate us. this is what you do for a living. >> you would think there would be surveillance at some point. cell phones would be downloaded there would be a lot of eyes not only looking at him but looking at anybody he is talking to and those phones would be getting tracked. this is an intelligence business. the moment a red flag indicator.
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the moment behaviorally profiling somebody waiting in line to board the flight we look for what's called red flags or microticks. this wasn't a microit was a macrotick. it's a beast. isis flag monster flag. proud of this organization. proud of it. so delusional to not start stacking on some surveillance it almost feels like intelligence failure. ainsley: what if this happened here? how would our intelligence community handle this? >> they would do the same thing we do in israel. immediately. somebody saw the flag call it into law enforcement call in the feds and the fbi would probably loop in their international counterparts, start running the license plates, start looking at the address. start cross-referencing all the databases. you start putting together a mosaic and start surveilling them. steve: this guy is when you look at the ark of the terrorism the last three months in great britain. perpetrator from each of those deals was on the radar of mi-5.
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they knew about this. somebody had dropped a dime on this guy before. he had connections to the 7/7 bombers. so when people are calling in they are going i think my neighbor is a terrorist. ora of political correctness i don't know. brian: is there in britain? >> i think. so a large muslim community inside of britain in some of these pockets. in some of these people are afraid to say no go zone. there is no go zone you can't go into. law enforcement won't go in there. brian: britain denies that. >> they can deny all they want. they can't deny what just happened in london on the bridge and in the cafe and on the street with all the people injured. i think the political correctness in prison is even worse than the states because that's british. brian: you get the sense theresa may this has to stop. we have been too tolerant. she has been too tolerant. interior minister. 20,000 people who have suspected terrorist ties and 300 are being surveilled
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directly right now. so this is no small country like it's a much more challenging than israel. >> it's colossal. and can i just tell to you surveil one person can take several dozen people to surveil 20,000 let me make it clear. the brits do not possess the capabilities to be able to tackle the intel job that they have to do. they don't have the capabilities. the americans here i think we do. in israel, it's very expensive. it costs a lot of time and manpower. here is the deal with the terrorists. intel, intel, intel, it's the most important thing. the reason why, scotland yard, the fbi, great investigators. we are great at like looking at everything outdoors and figuring out who committed the crime. i don't care. i don't care if the guy is connected to isis and i don't care if he is connected on twitter and has no connection to them and he has a little knife in his hand and all of a sudden he jumps into a van and gets gets on a london bridge which is a major, major national landmark with no -- on it two access points with zero police presence.
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brian: two bombs in the van molotov cocktails. >> you can be dangerous with a little bit of weaponry. i don't care whether it's a major connection or one of these known wostles or lone wolves or whatever they are calling them now the outcome is the same. profiles have to be created through the intel. ainsley: some liberals say they want open borders and everybody to be able to come in. would not going to vet. we are going to be a loving society and need to do everything in love. you look at what is happening in london, that's going to be us. that's what the president is saying if we don't get tighter on our border. that's why the president wants this ban on the country. he tweeted he said that's right. we need a travel ban for certain dangerous countries. not some politically correct term that won't help us protect our people. >> this country, let me tell you something. i spent my whole 20's in israel. i used to wear plain clothes. israel is a very diametrically opposed country when it comes to politics.
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when it comes to security, everyone is on the same page. i need donald trump to do whatever he has got. he has got to reach in there and start pulling this left over. he has to start speaking with them and connecting with them. i don't know how. for the greater good of the macroprotection of this country, given the fact that the borders are wide open. we can't even enforce a travel ban. call that muslim ban. it doesn't matter. it's a pause in order to be able to -- steve: the president took a lot of heat yesterday because he referred to it as a travel ban because his department of justice is trying to get it through the supreme court. >> there is no room in counter terror for political correctness. you get on a flight to go to israel. aleel will rip you apart. looking at your behavior. the point is the left has to -- you can hate i object anybody you want, as far as the security measures go, if they don't allow the president to do they can to make him look bad. don't allow him to at least give it a shot, we're gonna fail. ainsley: how did israel do it?
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how were you successful in that? >> there is a loft terrorism in israel. people get killed and it's very frequent. i responded -- ainsley: is it working then? >> yeah. we prevent hundreds and hundreds of attacks a year. brian: didn't stop the series of knife attacks. >> just like general diane said you can't protect every bridge and pipeline here is the overalmack crow plan exexact a very high price. the only thing we learned jihadis are afraid of is fear. there is a psychology involved here. and we have to start making them scared. steve: can i ask you about this. >> can't take a soft approach to soft targsteve: there was ong that was added to the equation. they do -- they are going to go to heaven the virgin story and all that stuff. 130 imams in london have referred to say funeral prayers for these terrorists in london which is unusual because they are performed on the deceased regardless of the circumstances. will that send a message? hey, nobody wants to send you
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to heaven if you're involved in something like this: >> look, it's a tough one because people can say what they want and they can -- there is a free speech thing that we are very proud to have in this country. you don't want to actually call this -- you don't want to step up and support that this was terror and you want to down play, okay, that's fine. you know what we're going to do we are going to infiltrate your mosque and madrasas. terrorists like a mob more dangerous. flip every one of you, get you on a payroll. we are going to find dirt and dig you out and find all your little dirt and we will get to you a point where we will get you out of this country and start flipping on every wood be terrorist. this is how this works. everybody who is not going to side with us and down play what just happened, every one of them needs to be targeted by the intelligence community and need to start flipping all of them. steve: how does that work though? >> developing sources, payoffs. digging up like i said dirt on -- everybody has a skeleton
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in the closet. it's a dirty business. brian: ramadan just got started. off to a roaring start. thank you so much. >> thank you. brian: tom shoe low standup comic grew up being tied to a tree by his mom and his dad darth vader with a boston accent. now out with a brand new book. it's all there and he is straight ahead. ainsley: is it time for the president to shift into high gear on healthcare and tax reform? stuart varney is going to weigh in on that next. hey, stuart. steve: good morning upstairs ♪ life is a highway ♪ i want to ride it all night long ♪ you're going my way ♪ i want to drive it all night long ♪
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back to "fox & friends." we have quick headlines for you. hillary clinton is under investigation once again. the senate judiciary committee launching a probe into her actions as secretary of state. the daily caller reporting clinton pressured government officials in bangladesh to drop a corruption investigation into mohammed unif businessman and clinton donor; clinton threatened her over the phone. stop what you are doing, take a look at this video. insane water slide move. guy shoots out of a tube, glides across the pool without sinking. watch again. take a look, there he goes. stands up. wait he is not done. puts on his shirt without missing a beat. this clip from gentleman make can a is going viral a lot of people questioning whether or not it's real. we want you to be the judge. make sure you let us know on facebook and twitter. i actually went to this girl's twitter account morgan and she is claiming it is real. she claims she doesn't know him.
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she was just there to shoot the video. steve: you be the judge. ainsley: i bet it is real. steve: whatever happened to healthcare and tax reform? ainsley: the president headed to capitol hill to address both today both the senate and the house. brian: all right, stuart varney, should would he be optimistic. you are getting ready to host varney and company 9 to noon on fox business. >> can president trump bring the party together, bring republican leadership into a meeting with him this afternoon and let's get going with tax reform. odds are against it because republican party is divided and the republican party and everybody else is distracted by president trump's tweeting. ainsley: i understand why they would be divided maybe on healthcare. but why on tax reform because tax reform can save. anyone who pays taxes will save you money and fewer brackets so everybody is going to be affected who pays taxes and it's going to lower your tags. >> yes. the republican party cannot agree what form of tax reform should take.
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should it be a simple cut in corporate tax rates and individual tax rates? just simple tax cuts? or should it be paid for with a border tax? or a consumption tax of some sort? the two wings of the republican party are miles apart on this. they do not agree on what kind of tax reform we should have. and the president faces an uphill struggle trying to bring them together when he is tweeting about travel bans overnight and distracting people from what's really going on with our economy. can we just please remember something? the core of the president's appeal in the election last year was cut taxes and get the economy going. that is republican bread and butter. and now we find we're in great trouble getting any kind of tax reform done this year. steve: one of the things the democrats are much better at than the republicans, that is having a unified front. as you said, the republicans are split. but they have got to remember what was it benjamin franklin who said we have got to hang together or we will hang separately? >> yes. that is true. this republican party also has
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to deal with a republican president who tweets wildly overnight about things which distract from the basic goal of tax reform. i'm sorry to complain about it but you know. brian: listen, those tweets actually -- they distract -- launch into investigations. but, the administration said healthcare this summer. by september, tax reform. that's what they put out yesterday. >> that looks very unlikely at this point. i think that the meeting this afternoon will be the republicans telling the president as much as the president tells the republicans. i think the republicans are going to say, mr. president, you've got to stop with the distraction. you laid off the twitter right before the election last year and you won. you laid off the twitter before did you your foreign trip and it was success. lay off it again and let's get tax reform done. i think that's the message the republican also deliver to the president.
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steve: you do know that a lot of his base loves the twitter stuff just because you go above the head of everybody else and go right into people's smart phones. >> this is politics. you are dealing with politics here. this is not a business negotiation. this is not a statement of we will do this. this is politics. have you got to take care of dc. you have got to take care of the swamp even though you hate it have you got to operate in that swamp. that's the message the republican also deliver. ainsley: when the president tweets about the six country ban his point is my hands are tied. i was elected for certain reasons and i'm not able to get anything passed that i think is best for our country. >> i cede the point it's a distraction. ainsley: courts blocking president trump's executive order are playing politics. could the u.s. supreme court have the same problem? judge andrew napolitano a weigh in on that. brian: what made successful comic and successful singer he
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♪ ♪ brian: tom shillue grew up when moms were mean and dads were tough and playgrounds were rough. ainsley: mean dads for a better america. he says that's exactly what helped him get through life. steve: joining us now is fox news contributor tom shillue. i know your mom and dad are watching now from arizona. they have not seen the book. what are they going to learn about how you grew up as a child in their book? >> i don't think they are
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going to be mad. brian: you don't know though. >> i don't know. i didn't let them read it i'm not going to let them read it ahead of time. they are not going to edit my book. steve: they will send you to your room. ainsley: said your mom tied you to your tree i'm sure she is mortified. >> i was tied for a tree for a good reason. i'm not saying you should tie your kids to a tree. i'm saying i was tied to a tree and look i'm fine. brian: what did you do. >> she wanted to let me play outside. i needed to get vitamin d. look at my skin. she wanted to get her work done. she was stay at home mom. she had five kids. she wants the kid to play in the yard. she doesn't want me to get hit by car. she tied me to tree. common sense solution. ainsley: long look. steve: let you loose one day and what did you do ran into the traffic. >> did i go not streets. guy honking his horn. people didn't get out of their cars. kids aren't as precious as they're told. honk, honk, get out of of my way, kid. my mother came out on the porch i walked right by her came out with the leash and
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handed it back to her. i knew where i was going. steve: darth raider. >> my dad used to wake me up with his breathing that's how we woke up on saturday morning. get in the car. we would get in the car. and we didn't know where we were going. he wouldn't tell us. wherever he went that was okay with us. brian: what do you mean. >> he was a mean dad but all dads were mean in the 70's. steve: ultimately they had a goal. >> they were raising children. some kids around. my dad had five kids. he was a disciplinarian. mean dad are willing to wait 50 years for a a thank you, do you know what i mean? brian: not going to get it in 20. >> the tv shows always end with the happy family? that's not the way tends. i was mad at my dad -- he wouldn't let me quit my paper route. i wanted to quit. i'm quitting. ainsley: losers are quitters. >> tell you the truth i'm still mad at him about that maybe i will get over it the
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thing is they are willing to discipline their kids because they are planning the long game. steve: right. >> i want to be a meaner dad. dads aren't as mean today but i think it's good for you. ainsley: funny thing is, i was watching your show for all these years. i loved you have. now love you more because we can all relate to this. >> that's the thing. brian: you are not saying you had a mean dad. ainsley: my dad was that disciplinarian. he was in the army for 22 years he was a disciplinarian. we love him. >> that's why our generation is so attached to star wars. makes sense. remember when darth vader was looking down at i am your father. that makes sense. steve: tonight have you a book launch carolines? >> carolines on broadway. people are going to come and everybody gets a book. we're going to do standup and get great old red eye guests. brian: tom see him on "the tonight show." >> we sing barbershop with
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jimmy fallon. steve: congratulations. brian: sorry about your childhood. steve: thank you, tom. coming up next, judge napolitano, come on up here, you are our next contestant. brian: dan bongino and laura ingraham. ♪ (vo) you can pass down a subaru forester. (dad) she's all yours. (vo) but you get to keep the memories. love. it's what makes a subaru, a subaru. it's ok that everybody ignoit's fine.n i drive. because i get a safe driving bonus check every six months i'm accident free. because i don't use my cellphone when i'm driving. even though my family does, and leaves me all alone. here's something else... i don't share it with mom. i don't. right, mom? i have a brand new putter you don't even know about!
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to precisely move your teeth to your best smile. see how invisalign® treatment can shape your smile up to 50% faster today at invisalign.com ♪ >> an intelligence contractor is under arrest this morning. >> 25-year-old bernie sanders supporter by the name of reality winner will be charged under the espionage act. >> i don't care if you are republican or democrat, i want people in handcuffs and i want to see people behind bars. somebody who leaked documents against the law has got to suffer the consequences. >> this is mind-blowing. >> one of the suspects on their radar and maybe for a while. how did he flip through again? >> no room in counter terror for political correctness. >> so delusional to not start stacking on surveillance, it almost feels like an intelligence failure. >> president trump will not stop fired fbi director james comey from testifying before congress this week. >> like so many behind
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hearings before it, it probably won't live up to its billing because there are a number of constraints on copiy and what he can say. >> today we are taking the first important step to clearing the runway for more jobs, lower prices, and much better transportation. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ big time ♪ big time ♪ i got to make it. brian: are we in this shot? ainsley: yeah, right here. the back of us. the first day of summer is the 21st. few weeks away. it's going to start heating up. steve: today is 6/6.
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june 6th. thank you for joining us in the second hour of this day. busy day. judge napolitano will be joining us in a minute but right now we have news with jillian. jillian: nature. we start wit isis taking credit for australian standoff left one man dead and three police officers hurt. [gunfire] police killing the 29-year-old somali refugee in a shootout after they say he murdered a man and lured a woman to an apartment building where he held her hostage. the suspect known criminal on parole had been acquitted of plot ago terror attack at sydney army base in 2010. and another alert right now, the muslim community in london widely condemning the deadly terror attacks. more than 130 british imams now refusing to bury the terrorists. secretary of state rex tillerson applauding that decision during his visit to new zealand.
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>> and i was actually encouraged when i heard on the news this morning that a number of imams in london have condemned these attackers and said they will not perform prayer services over their funerals which means they are condemning their souls. that is what has to be done. noonly the muslim faith can handle this. jillian: secretary of state is heading to somheading to snow ae heading to the u.s. developing the same system the pentagon uses. in a move to improve coverage for vets. president trump praising the decision. >> this is one of the biggest wins for our veterans in decades. and i congratulate secretary shulkin for making this very, very important decision. jillian: secretary shulkin says the v.a. will spend up to six months planning the new system. now a feel good story for you. graduating high school is always really exciting, right?
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it was extra special for one teenager whose soldier brother showed up to see her walk across the stage. take a look. [cheers] [laughter] jillian: god i love that army soldier derek thomas surprising his sister in texas he had been training for months at fort bragg and she clearly had no idea he was going to be there her father calling it an epic moment. congratulations to her and their family. back to you. ainsley: that is so sweet. brian: bring in andrew napolitano. fox news senior judicial analyst and off times things are braking as we are talking. we do have news we will get to in a short time. about the identification of a third assailant in the london attacks on saturday night. and we will go over that in a second. about you we also have the news of a huge leak. ainsley: the has charge governms
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charged and arrested 25-year-old reality winner for leaking classified documents to the media, judge. >> well, look, this is obviously a serious crime. the trump administration has been bedelved by leaks although this leak actually helps him because if what she leaked is accurate, russians are denying it of course, shows russian efforts, independent of trump, independent of the trump campaign to hack into american elections by putting cookies, we all know what those are. steve: phishing devices. >> on the web sights of people that run the elections, getting them to grab the cookie and then they can control the outcome of the numbers there. we don't know if they succeeded. steve: right. >> but we know that they tried and we know they had the software to do it because of what this woman leaked. look, she is going to be prosecuted. she took an oath not to leak. i'm not defending this. it's a form of espionage. but, for once i am happy to know the truth ivan though it came about as a result of a
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crime. steve: she had a top secret clearance. >> yes. steve: contractor with blur pluribus international corporation. they have top secret information on their devices. >> yes. steve: how shocking it is to get the secrets and get it out. apparently she printed it out on peeves paper, folded it up, took it out of the building and mailed it to the intercept. it's pretty easy to do. >> yes. it's mind boggling about how easy it is to do. i don't know if you remember the movie about edward snowden, but there is a scene in which he is playing with a rubik's cube and tosses the rubik's cube which is filled with computer chips to a security guard bypassing will safety device that would have alerted them that their device is in there. look, she probably had -- knew how to sneak something out of the building. obviously too easy to do it if this can happen. this could jeopardize her boss' contract with the government. brian: by the way, it should.
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if this 25-year-old, i'm sure she is not that unique although she seems bright, bernie sanders supporter who despises donald trump by her social media. how many contractors still have this incredible access that walk out with whatever they have not put the safeguards in yet. >> there are 60,000 people that work for the nsa. fewer than 5,000 are employees ever the government. do the math. 55,000 private americans employed by many, many, many contractors that are hired by the federal government. now, they all take the same oath and they all have the same security clearance and they all have the same laws that regulate them but they have different levels of the ease with which they can get things out of the building. steve: let's talk a little bit about what is happening on television on thursday. james comey, former fbi director is going to go up and testify in front of the senate intel committee in public and then behind closed doors. what do you think? you know, the people who hate donald trump hope he goes there and spills the beans and makes the president look terrible. at the same time, if he has
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got information that makes the president look terrible, he would have had an obligation earlier to reveal it. >> even though we are covering it and i will be part. brian: all the networks are covering it. >> everybody is covering, i have a feeling, just instinct actual feeling that there is less there than we anticipate and there is a lot of hype here and it might be a let down. i have a feel a lot of questions will go mr. comey, can you show us this document to which you referred? i can't show it to you in public because it's a classified document. what did so and so say to you at such and such a time? i can't tell paw because it's classified. i could be wrong but i will tell you this. he has been debriefed by bob mueller. the last thing a prosecutor wants is a potential star witness in another environment under oath testifying where the prosecutor is not there that tells me that bob mueller know what is jim comey is going to say and has approved what jim comey is going to say. whatever he said is not going to jeopardize any of the
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investigations bob mueller is running. so many constraints on what he can say i don't know that this is going to be the grand explosion that we're all talking about. brian: i admire and sarcasm included senator warner really wants to get to the bottom of this. clearly thinks there is obstruction of justice if you looked at his tone on sunday. and then have you senator susan collins who says listen, there is a difference between someone saying listen mike flynn is a good guy. is he fired. is he out of here. i hope you let him go as opposed to say-to-hey, i'm your boss, i'm telling you right now, general flynn is done. end this investigation. that's -- how he explains it is going to be key. >> i have two answers to that one, you are exactly correct. they are vastly different conversations. think about this the president is the chief executive officer of the united states government. he runs the executive branch. everybody in the executive branch works for him because he is the only one in the executive branch that answers to the people. should there be entities in the executive branch that are answerable to their own conscience and not to the president.
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stated differently, shouldn't the people who work for him ebay him? shouldn't he have the authority say do this do that or leave? that's the theory of government we had up until the nixon years. ainsley: you know he will go with the first one he was just saying i like this guy. just go easy on him versus the second one because that means the president is guilty of something but it also means he is guilty of not reporting it, correct? >> we don't know to whom he reported it. because we don't know to whom the memos were sent. if they just sat on his iphone he didn't report it to anywhere. if he reported it to the public integrity -- there are five memos, we will need to see what they say in conjunction with each other. we will need to see the tone and context. steve: also, regarding the memos is, is there a possibility somebody is going to say have you memos about donald trump. what about the hillary clinton memos can we see those too. >> yes. i hope that question is asked. brian: what about your intraxzs with loretta lynch. >> what about your interactions with barack obama. yes, yes, yes. ainsley: judge, president
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wants the supreme court to expedite this travel ban thing. i was thinking about this last night, what is the next process? what is the supreme court, when will they see it and make a decision. >> they will wait for the ninth circuit of appeals to rule which could come down any day now which could be as soon as today. they don't like to rule on something where the same issue is pending in the court below. the supreme court could say we're not ruling at all. go back and try these cases. there have been no trials. if they have to go back and try it and wait for a decision there and then appeal it to the appeals court and wait for a decision? do you know when this will get to the supreme court? at the end of president trump's present turn. brian: 120 days is up. >> other avenue is the supreme court say we are going to lift the stay during the trials. keep the stay. meaning the order is not enforced during the trials. they don't like to rule on cases that are not final. they don't like to rule in the midst of it. brian: did he hurt his case yesterday by using the word ban on a tweet and saying it was s. a ban and wish we had the original version.
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>> i think if his lawyers would have restrained him they would have chosen other words. i'm trying to be diplomatic. the short answer is yes, yes, yes. steve: famously jeff sessions recused himself regarding any issue russia. some question whether justice ginsburg should recuse herself regarding the travel ban because she said incendiary things about donald trump when he was running for president. >> she said terrible things. if i had a trial judge said the things about donald trump as she said and a case came before me and i didn't recuse myself, the appellate courts would kick me off the case in a heart beat. the rules for recusal, for getting off a case when you have prejudged it or appeared to have prejudged somebody in the case are different for the supreme court. where there are no recusal rules. say anything you want about the litigants still stay on the case. even the other 8 justices can't kick her off. brian: she will stick it out. >> she will stick it out. steve: before you were judge,
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you asp little boy who loved his birthday and today's the judge's birthday. ainsley: happy birthday to you. steve: we have ruled out a single cupcake for judge napolitano. ainsley: happy birthday. >> at my age you forget birthdays. brian: kelly is, this your fingerprint on top? the mark of zorro. ainsley: what are you going to do for your birthday? >> all types of good stuff. ainsley: we are glad you were born. steve: happy birthday judge napolitano. brian: getting emotional. >> thank you mom, thank you, dad. steve: are they watching. >> yes, they are. ainsley: thank you mom and dad, did you a great job. brian: he wants his certificates. ainsley: one of the smartest guys here. you will know the law backwards and forwards. i know you will say you went to law school. but not all lawyers do. brian: a woman shamed out of flying her flag on memorial day at her apartment complex.
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♪ >> the previous administration spent over $7 billion trying to upgrade the system and totally failed. >> americans can look forward to cheaper, faster and safer travel, a future where 20% of a ticket price doesn't go to the government and where you don't have to sit on a tarmac or circle for hours and hours over an airport. steve: there you have got the president yesterday during infrastructure week as part of his plan to revamp u.s. infrastructure. president trump vowing to update air traffic control including separating it from the faa and turning control over to private business. the fedex president david brosnak has met with the president and discusses it now. good morning to you. >> good morning, steve. great to be here. steve: great to have you as well. our air traffic control system right now, we all want to think it's safe but we are relying on world war ii
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technology, aren't we? >> well, that's true. i have to give a shoutout to the great men and women who work in the air traffic control system. steve: of course. >> people who do keep us safe. you are right. we are falling behind on the technology and the modernization of our air traffic control systems which is disappointing. because america should always lead. we should lead in this area. we would bring so much good to the flying public, the shipping public. i mean there is so many positive things. we would reduce fuel emissions. we would reduce fuel. the carbon. steve: david, it all sounds great. how would it work? >> well, how it would work is we would have a system in place like 60 other countries around the world do today. they have modernized their system. they have made the technology apply from the ground based systems to the airline systems. all of our planes already have the systems in place that use the technology. so you would have the faa
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doing the great job of controlling safety, and that's a priority for all of us. and then you would have the operations of the system, the advantage and funded by a nonprofit public/private partnership that frankly a lot of countries around the world do today. steve: would it be cheaper? obviously safer. would it be cheaper for us. a democrat said yesterday we don't know how much it's going to cost. it's t. could cost a lot more. >> the funding would be self-funded of course we already pay for the system today. we just want to modernize it we want to upgrade it to make our airports and the air traffic controllers have the ability to be more efficient, more productive, make it safer. quite frankly, probably make it more productive and cheaper in the long run. so i would say yes. steve: all right. very good. when it absolutely, positively has to be there overnight fedex is who you turn to. david is the president there david, thank you very much. >> thank you very much, steve.
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steve: all right. meanwhile, forget radical mosques turning vulnerable young men into terrorists, the new jihadi breeding ground, the internet. is it too big to monitor. former islamic extremist takes us inside new wave of radicalization. that is next. >> this program is brought to you by bp the ultrasound that can see inside patients, can also detect early signs of corrosion at our refineries. high-tech military cameras that see through walls, can inspect our pipelines to prevent leaks. remote-controlled aircraft, can help us identify potential problems and stop them in their tracks. at bp, safety is never being satisfied. and always working to be better.
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find love anywhere. he's cute. and buy things from, well, everywhere. how? because our phones have evolved. so isn't it time our networks did too? introducing america's largest, most reliable 4g lte combined with the most wifi hotspots. it's a new kind of network. xfinity mobile. bp. brian: a fox news alert now. british police identifying and this is new the third london terrorists in saturday's attack. he's this man, 22-year-old, not on their radar, much like the second one that rerevealed. unlike one of his fellow attackers first revealed and you are looking at him there. meanwhile google under fire for not revealing hateful rant that inspired these london terrorists. google insists it hasn't broken any rules. is this the new breeding ground for raddism? theresa may brought this up yesterday.
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joining us now former islamic extremist author of my journey out of islamic extremists. rashid. i wish we didn't need your expertise so often. >> thank you. brian: isis flag hanging out in a park siena documentary. you know british law. why wouldn't they move in on a guy like this. >> this guy i can tell you you are referring to not only had a isis flag last year physically attacked one of my members of staff, dr. samuel -- research. the police have just within two minutes cop firmed that he did physically attack one of my members of staff. we reported him to the police as an extremists. the police were very well aware of this guy and unfortunately, brian, it seems like we have become so accustomed in europe and britain to extremists who are living among us. that even when they appear in
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documentaries, telling us that they're extremists, telling us that they will not condemn isis, we, because we have become so accustomed to living among them, we don't pay any heed to it. and this is the result, what we see happen on london bridge. brian: you can't tell me the force that took this guy these three down in 8 minutes, know their instinct is to pick up the potential terrorists. the age of political correctness must stop. does anything change today? >> well, her stone tone has certainly changed. and there are a few things that she needs to do immediately to demonstrate this is not just all talk there has been over a decade since the 7/7 attacks that struck london. what we have been suggesting is that the government's counter extremism policy prevent meant to be working in communities to galvanize communities against jihadist insurgency running across europe this policy doesn't have any central coordination.
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so the minister of justice that manages the prison doesn't know what the department of education is doing that imagines the schools and universities. they don't know what the local government are doing. in the real world all of those things are quicked. what wquick -- connected. we have been urging forthwith appoint extremism -- a bit like your homeland security department. we don't have that at the moment. and we want that appointment to have teeth and power and accountable only to the prime minister. brian: that's some great points and stunning news that you had a confrontation with the killer. one of the three killers. now i have got to ask you about the possibility that theresa may is also right when she says social media is the problem. we have got to get cooperation from google, facebook, twitter and other major social media sites to pull down these radical imams in some cases that are radicalizing these people from afar. some from the grave.
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like this guy jabril who is a palestinian american and another guy like al-awlaki who has been dead for five, six, seven years. what could social media do? >> well, these people are definitely being radicalized on social media echo chambers. they are networked. they are connected with each other over social media. every case we have studied that we found they also have an offline element to them. they are connected offline, too. radicalization doesn't just occur online. there has to be that offline real world connection. through our studies we have found that same applies here with rashid. they were connected with the network now banned organization in the u.k. their leader was convicted for pledging allegiance to isis. and so theresa may's plans to regulate the internet one of the problems with them is that it is somewhat impractical because most of the social media companies are based in america. and you have the first amendment rights that we don't have here.
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and so somebody can be espousing completely outland dish extremist ideas. insofar as they are not specifically and directly advocating for targeted violence, social media companies protect their rights to espouse extremist ideas under the first amendment rights. the practical way forward would be to encourage what we call counter speech online and alternative narratives and a lot more needs to be done and a lot more can be invested in that work. brian: although there are monitors on all these sites trying to pull down stuff that obviously are inflammatory and spout violence. maashed thank you so much. >> my pleasure. brian: meanwhile just ahead, just everyone agrees that cathy griffith went too far what she did with president trump. the ladies o of "the view" feel differently. >> now they are piling on her like she is charles manson. get over it.
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brian: dan bongino we will see if he gets over it turns out socialism does pay. how bernie sanders is cashing in. i guess he has to divide all that money against all his followers ♪ i swear ♪ the world must prepare ♪ for when i'm a billionaire ♪ when i'm a billionaire ♪ oh, oh ♪ he greatest racehorse who ever lived? of course he was strong... ...intelligent. ...explosive. but the true secret to his perfection... was a heart, twice the size of an average horse.
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host of renegade republican dan bongino who joins us from down in palm beach gardens today. dan, good morning to you. ainsley: good morning. >> thanks for being here. thanks for promotion i was just a cop, not a detective. ryan brian if you stayed with it you would have been a detehat about the news finally arrest for anti-trump leaks. 25-year-old girl. her name is reality winner. and she has been arrested. charged with espionage for handing classified information to the press. what do you know about her? who is she? >> she a bernie sanders supporter which really tells you everything you need to know. i'm sure she don't united states all of her salary for redistribution efforts to fight income inequality. i'm speaking from experience here not with forked tongue. i resigned my i gave up salary and health benefits and everything because i felt the country was headed in the
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wrong direction under barack obama. here is my advice to these leakers. grow a spine you gutless punks. leave the government. stop taking our taxpayer money you thieves to basically destroy the united states from within which is what you are do doing. if this is your model of governing going forward, we are all really screwed. if we lose the presidency to a democrat, i would give the exact same advice to a trump supporter working in the government now. you do not do that. you swore an oath. brian: dan, my fear is there are so much more like this. i don't think this 25-year-old has to be that unique. you have to wonder what else they are doing? they're private tract contractors. what type of oversight are we giving them? >> yeah. sadly, there is a large cadre of losers right now working within the government amongst very patriotic people by the way. brian: absolutely. >> a lot of good people in there as well. whose loyalty is not to the government but to political ideology first. go find a new line of work you spineless cowards. you are in the wrong field.
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steve: over the last couple months donald trump the president has made it very clear that, you know, while the fbi and these various congressional committees are investigating the russia thing, he has said the real story are the leakers, these leakers. and so now they have made it very clear they are cracking down on people who steal top secrets and leak them to the press. >> yeah. i think what we need to do is we need to prosecute -- you know, they have those signs up you will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. steve: yeah. >> in this case they need to apply that this has to be a good solid 10 year sentence. maximum limit to set an example to everyone else if you do this there is not going to be any leniency. you are not going to get a smack on the wrist. ainsley: who has this type of information? who has classified information. when i heard she was 25 years old, i do know she worked in the air force and she speaks several middle eastern languages so, maybe that's why she was working for this
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company pluribus international. they have 22 locations all over the world. i'm sure they employ thousands of people. do they all have their hands on this classified information? >> yeah. here is the dirty little secret of classifications. i had a cssci. compartmentalized information there are way too many people within the united states government who have access to this. here's a way to fix this. anybody can talk about a problem. here is how we fix it tomorrow. we have to start a more vigorous polygraph program. these people should be polygraphed annually if not semi annually and you will stop this problem right away. when i start polygraphing these people and put them on the box you will see the sweat coming down their brow. brian: i think they should be sweating right now. so many comedians and commentators are lost their minds one of which is kathy griffin who actually ended up playing the victim card by the end of the week when she apologized in the middle of the week and decapitated the president at the beginning of the week and bill maher
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apologizing after friday show for using the "n" word. they both had sympathetic ears on the couch of "the view." listen to joy behar. >> bill maher is one of the good guys in this fight against trump right now that i believe that he is anyway. there seems to be fault on comedians and cathy griffith case which i think going to bring her on. there is a lot of overkill going on right now. she made a mistakes, she said -- she did something stupid. she said she is sorry. now they are piling on her like she is charles manson, get over it. steve: an assault on comedians. >> where is the bravery in hollywood anymore? what happened to the duke, john wayne or charleston heston. we have had in hollywood no guts at all. you want to be brave, stand up for something on principle, right? come out and say i can't stand donald trump. i don't like his politics. i can't stand his political ideology, but let's all agree right now that the mocked
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decapitation with blood down the face is probably not a good idea. but they have no guts. there is no bravery at all. they just fall off the cliff like a bunch of hollywood lemmings you they wanted applause line from the crowd. it's humiliating. brian: i many tired of calling for everyone to get tired. black lives matter. let joy behar call black lives matter and let them work it out. thanks a lot dan bongino. >> you got it good to be here. ainsley: hand it over to jillian who has headlines for us. jillian: good morning to you as well. just about an hour vice president mike pence will deliver the keynote speech at the 13th national prayer breakfast in washington, d.c. got some brand new video in right now showing nuns leading the meal blessing just moments ago. more than 1,000 people gather at the annual event to pray for the direction and leadership of the country.
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an apartment complex is backtracking after shaming a woman for hanging an american flag. kerry white says she received this note. you are seeing it on your screen right here from the missouri management company saying storage is not allowed on deck. take a listen. >> it's our country, support our country, support our troops. they go out and fight for our country and they defend us. so why wouldn't we want to fly an american flag fmla to support them? jillian: according to local reports management claims it was a misunderstanding and they talked to white about how to display her flag properly not really clear what that means. okay. but you have to see this. a giant black bear breaks into a family's home and after raiding the kitchen, the bear did something completely unexpected. ♪ jillian: the bear hitting keys on the piano as it stares out the window. at first the colorado family thought they had been burglarized. they were completely shocked by the impromptu performance
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on surveillance camera by the beartoven that you saw on the screen there. did you like that? steve: beartoven. jillian: i did not make that up. i can a k. not take credit. brian: if a bear knocks on by door. ainsley: jillian, have you heard about this? brian has put in the ring doorbell. you have probably seen the commercials for it anyone on his front door. brian: i get a message. ainsley: he can say i'mup stairs in my pajamas and i'm not coming down. brian: i don't speak bear. i might be in trouble. it would be good for the show. ainsley: let the bear in and learn bear. brian: do you know where the bears are? jersey, none in new york. steve: we have them in our backyard once a month. they're big. ainsley: that's crazy to me. steve: very interesting. coming up next on the rundown on this tuesday, turns out socialism really does pay. how bernie sanders is cashing in on that coming up.
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ainsley: susan rice says president trump's travel ban won't make us safer and could even cause more terror. gillian turner says she is right. she agrees with her. she is here to explain why coming up. brian: if we can convince her to walk ♪ go your own way ♪ tell me why ♪ everything turns around ♪ bees! bees! go! go! go! [ girl catching her breath } [ bees buzzing inside vehicle ] the all-new volkswagen atlas. with easy-access 3rd row. life's as big as you make it.
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usaa gives me the and the security just like the marines did. the process through usaa is so effortless, that you feel like you're a part of the family. i love that i can pass the membership to my children. we're the williams family, and we're usaa members for life. brian: time for news by the numbers. let's get started. one month how early off broadway play america after impeachment of president trump is closing. building the wall will end this weekend in new york city. no word on why some say it sucked. next 85%. that's how much food stamp participation has dropped in more than a dozen countries in alabama.
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the move comes after the state -- what did i say? countries. okay. counties in alabama. thanks, john. could you get closer when you correct me? that's john are. he is like 500 yards away he is screaming. the move comes after the state put work requirements into place. finally with john's permission i will read. this $1,052,000. that's how much senator bernie sanders, the former presidential candidate raked in last year. most of that money comes from an advance on his book "our revolution." now to john with a cue cue. ainsley: tell me when to go. as president trump doubles down on travel ban national security advisor susan rice is slamming the proposal. listen. >> there is really no evidence to suggest that by banning muslims or banning muslims from a particular set of six countries that we would make ourselves here in the united states safer. i think there is a very real
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risk that by stigmatizing and isolating muslims from particular countries and muslims in general that we alienate the very communities here in the united states whose cooperation we must need to detect and prevent these homegrown extremists from being able to carry out attacks. they need to feel that they are valued and part of this challenge thats we face together. ainsley: weren't those six countries identified under the obama administration and will a travel ban really make us unsafer -- or will it make us safer. i think a problem in the teleprompter. jillian turner is a former white house staff under george w. bush and barack obama and a fox news contributor. good to see you gillian. >> good morning. ainsley: you don't agree with the travel ban because it alienates these other countries that we need. so, part of the -- i have
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never been supportive of the travel ban. i'm supportive of the president's really smart agenda to continue to build this arab alliance to help the united states and the western world fight terrible. i think it's crucial. my worry is that i don't believe that this travel ban is going to cause or incite more terrorism. i don't agree -- i don't agree with that point but what i worry about. ainsley: can it only prevent some people that might have radical islam in their heart and they want terror? can't it prevent them from coming here? >> it might. but what it might also do is incite those countries, the countries in the ban are precisely the countries who we need as part of the arab coalition. not just for their military might and money because that's not happening. ainsley: you are saying a travel ban could insight more terror. >> no. i'm saying that what might happen is as a result of the ban we might alienate those nations that we want on our side. ainsley: the american people
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are saying why care about alienating terrorists and countries allowing terrorists to be trained. what about us? what about the people that are doing the right thing and their lives are at risk? >> it's not really -- first of all, i'm very supportive of extra screening measures, what the president calls extreme vetting, a little bit up for grabs, still. i would potentially support that. but, again, the countries that are in the travel ban are not countries that have perpetrated attacks on the u.s. soil there is a bit of a disconnect there that has not been addressed. ainsley: hypocrisy is amazing. where was the left? where was everybody in 2016. it was february of 2016 when president obama put out a list, the administration did. they released a list and called it the countries of concern. those are the seven countries that president trump originally had in his travel ban. where was the outrage from the left then if president obama was doing it? >> to me, i can't speak for the left, but for me, the
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difference is that what the obama administration proposed was an additional layer of screening and vetting for individuals coming from these countries. and part of the reasoning is that they don't have stable governments. as a result governments are not able to vouch for the people who are coming here. so, because of that, we need extra measures in place here before we allow them here. to me, that's very different than a blanket ban. the problem with a ban is that refugees applying for safe haven in this country may literally die while they are waiting to get here now. to me that's a big problem. that's not the american way. ainsley: grill gillian, thank you so much for being with us. >> thanks, ainsley. ainsley: is it ever okay to cash out 401(k)? what if you are thousands of dollars in debt? should do you that? author of retire inspired mr. chris hogan is answering your emails coming up next. that is a great question ♪ it ain't about the bump ♪ change change ♪ ain't about the bling bling
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♪ brian: they are the big questions we all ask, and is it, for example, is it ever okay to cash out a 401(k), not just because it rhymes. it might not be okay. and when are you too old to buy a home? ainsley: luckily here to answer your emails is ramsly solution expert and author of great book and man with a great voice mr. chris hogan. good to see you. >> good morning, y'all, a pleasure to be with you. steve: you as well. we have a bunch of questions. joseph in minnesota i'm 60 and just lost my job after 18 years. we have $87,000 in debt
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between our home and a car loan. should i cash out my 401(k) and use our savings to pay off this debt? ainsley: god bless him. that's stress. >> yeah. joseph, i would say, this i'm sorry to hear about your job loss. but one of the things you want to do is really take a collective deep breath and get focused on attacking debt. i don't want you to pull money out of your 401(k). remember you are saving for your dreams. this is money that you have intentionally put aside for 18 years. let's let that money continue to grow. reach out to your network. let's get a job. get some money coming. in maybe take on a second job and attack that debt. you can be debt free in about three to four years if you stay focused. ainsley: what if you just need like $10,000 to get you through until you get that next job. >> well then i would say definitely take on a second job. i'm not ever going to pull money out of 401(k) it stops the money from growing, you guys. when you have money interacting with time and compound interest. it's a beautiful thing. brian: talk to tammy in texas. 55 and plans to work until she
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is 70. she says i will be debt-free in a few months is it smart to buy a home in my age or focus my on retirement savings. >> congratulations on being almost debt free. couple months away. owning the home is an american dream. never too old to chase those dreams. you don't mention how much you have saved for retirement. so let's assume that you have enough. have you done your iraiq a at my website. build up emergency fund of three to six months of expenses and then save at least 10% for a down payment. one more crucial thing, tammy, only take out a 15-year fixed rate mortgage. that will allow to you attack that mortgage in 8 to 10 years. now you are completely debt free as you enter retirement. steve: go ahead and buy the house and don't ever touch your 401(k). that's the advice today from chris hogan. thank you so much. >> absolutely. good to be with you all. steve: we still have a great hour still ahead.
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it's awesome. safe driving bonus checks, only from allstate. ♪ >> the government charged and arrested a 25-year-old girl. her name is reality winner for leaking classified documents to the media. >> grow a spine, you gutless punk. leave the government to basically destroy the united states. >> this is mind-blowing. >> one of the suspects on their radar maybe for a while, so how did he flip through yet again? >> we have become so accustom in europe and in britain to extremists that even when they appear in documentaries telling us they're extremists, we don't pay any heed to it. and this is the result.
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>> president trump will not stop james comey from testifying this week. >> there are so many constraints that he can say, i don't know if this is the grand explosion we're talking about. >> graduating high school is special; right? but it was special for one teenager who saw his brother walk across the stage. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ainsley: i love when you put the date up there now so you can see and then look underneath our can you have beeny couch. brian: and it was my idea to put the date up there.
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we were just going to put up a random date. steve: it's good to have the date because anything else is old news. ainsley: we have information about the terrorist attack in london. steve: we do. we start with a fox news alert. british authorities identified the third london terrorist. brian: he's joseph, an italian national. an italian newspaper says he was stopped at the airport trying to go to syria last year and then put on a watch list. but someone must have but i make. ainsley: he's the guy on the far right. the other two have been identified. an australian nurse, her family says she was killed after running back to help people on the london bridge. brian: incredible. steve: let's bring in laura ingram, she's a fox news contributor. laura, it is stunning as we start to connect the dots of who these three killers were. because at least one of them was on tv last year on
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something called the jihad ease next door waiving an isis flag. so why wasn't he on 24-hour surveillance? >> i think part of the problem is that the sheer number of in london and uk is staggering. we're not talking about a couple hundred. we're talking about thousands and thousands. we saw this same problem in belgium. we've seen this happen time and again in europe where individuals are on watch lists, they're persons of interest for intelligence authorities but i think they're overwhelmed. and it goes back to the initial problem that we've talked about so many times on this show that that's why it's so important that before you
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allow people to come into your country, you have a very good sense that they are interested in being, you know, part of the british experience, they're not interested in undermining the culture or carrying out horrific attacks. how you really do that type of extreme vetting is progressive very, very difficult. especially with a mass migration into western europe. brian: and, laura, the problem is a lot of times they're second generation. next thing you know manchester bombing, this was the case with the libya tie. and this one we know in detail the parents were in pakistan left in the '90s because they were threatened. so they come to britain, and they instill the british culture so well, sarcasm included, that they were radicalized via the internet. >> think about, brian, how long we were all talking about that hate preacher.
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how long was he doing what he was doing? spewing this vile hatred, insight violence in his sermons -- i don't even want to call them sermons. hate speech. he was doing them for years and years and years. it was only last year he was sentenced for five and a half years of prison for insightment of violence. we have video after video on youtube or news outless where we can see radical islamists going that you a public charge and chastising women for the height of their skirts. about language. this is happening right now in britain and everyone is just, like, well, this is what we're going to have to live with. we're going to have to live with this. this is the cost of living in an open society. i grew up in the 1970s, and i know we had hijacking in the '80s and so forth, but we didn't have this type of thing going on. brian: yeah, people weren't running over us and then trying to stab us to death.
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ainsley: that's why the left is trying to be so pc and trying to love everybody. >> until the knife is at your throat. ainsley: we have to look as a country and what can we learn from them? these were at a park. they were at a park with isis flags and a local network channel 4 had them on doing doing their documentary and nobody arrested them. imagine if that was in the parks here. >> well, there will be a lot of people saying that's free speech and celebrate it. ainsley: with isis flags. >> yeah. all of that looks staged, by the way. didn't that look like that was all -- okay. we're going to go in there, and we're going to put our flag on the ground. that entire thing was made for tv and the journalists who were part of it, it's all part of the scam with the antiisis that cnn was staging the other day. this is all part of the show. but the thing that's really sad about it, guys, is that
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innocence brits and people traveling all over europe. now the price they have to pay for multiculturism is the risk that you're walking on the sidewalk and a man or woman will purposefully mow you down. and then while you're maybe finishing your cappuccino in a cafe or having a drink, somebody will put your knife to the threat in attempt to behead you. that's what we have to leave with in a open society with all of these other multiculturists britain to become. this is the nirvana they want to create. steve: something we have today is we have the name of a lyric. reality winner, apparently that's her real name. she's a trump hater. she has used the #nevermypresident. she appears to be a bernie sanders supporter. she worked for the contractor international, she had top secret clearance, and she just mailed off to intercept, which is the media publication
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outlet a secret. a top secret regarding russian hacking. she wanted to make donald trump look bad and ultimately what sort of justice can she face? i'm asking lawyer ingram the lawyer now. >> she's subject five years in prison without the presence of a lawyer. but she made them willingly according to the reports. so she's already convicted herself of some of the lesser crimes. but obviously she's in real trouble. you know, there's a lot about this that is interesting, number one. why did it take so long to find out that this woman was leaking? i'm glad we found out. but this is just the tip of the iceberg, guys. there are people bureaud into the federal government who have an antitrump bias, an antitrump agenda, and they will use every tool in their disposal to try to embarrass
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the administration and hurt what they're trying to accomplish on the international level and the domestic level. and this is just someone you would say at a random anarchist protest. she's a radical. brian: and the islamic society of america. >> lovely. brian: said some vile things about our president. you have to go through all of these contractors right now, and you have to go through questioning, polygraph, whatever it takes today. because you know that she's not the only one. >> no. no. this is a situation that is rotting from within and the rot, just like rot in a tree, you have to cut it out and try to regrow the plants. this is a deep rot within our government and the contracting world. we saw this in the last administration. there were a lot of problems with leaking in the last administration during the bush administration. this is not new.
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but the veracity of the leaks and the intention behind them is much more politically based, versus just, oh, everybody should know this information. this is geared toward one thing. getting trump out of office, and she's a radical. she should never have been working in this. she speaks three languages. she's a linguist. but this has got to stop, and this has got to stop now. ainsley: i'm looking at twitter. the president just tweeted saying the fake mainstream media is trying so hard to not get me used social media. they hate that i can get the honest and unfiltered message out. what's your response? >> well, i think he has an enormous following. and when he has a point to make that is kind of pulls up the way from the verbiage of the day, he can be really effective. they don't like that, that's for sure. the only caveat i would throw is tweeting out the
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investigation that's on going. i do not think that will help donald trump. if i were giving advice in the white house, i would say you're not going to win the investigation with james comey in the press. you're going to win it with great lawyering, but you're not going to win it through tweeting. you're going to win it with smart organization of your legal team and great strategy. but you're not going to twin with the twitter war. steve: from twitter to talking laura, go do your radio show. >> thank you, guys. ainsley: let's hand it over to jillian who has headlines for us. >> an update in the face of terror. an australia newspaper giving us our first look at the suspect in the terror stand off that left one man dead and three on police officers hurt. isis claiming responsibility. [gunfire]
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>> police killing a 29-year-old somalia refugee in a shoot-out after he murdered a man and lured a woman into an apartment building where he then held her hostage. a known criminal had been acquitted of plotting a terror attack at a sydney army base in 2010. president trump vowing cheaper, faster, and safer traveler as part of a campaign promise to overhaul the nation's infrastructure. the proposed plan separating air traffic control from the federal aviation administration. instead, turning overcontrol of the nation's skies giving the responsibility to private businesses. the faa overseas safety. the president of fedex joining us earlier praising the move. >> we're falling behind on the technology and the modernization of our air traffic control systems, which is disappointing because america should always lead. >> the proposal requires congressional approval. and a group of veterans getting a special thank you.
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former president george w. bush and house speaker paul ryan visiting the adapted training foundation in dallas. meeting with ten victims who have lost their limbs or have some sort of impairment. and you see photos like this, you hear stories like this, and you know that's moments they'll never forget. ainsley: think about what all of those individuals have seen fighting for our country. steve: jillian, thank you. hillary clinton is back and now she's slamming the president's response to the attack in london. >> we're building leaders by building bridges. steve: is that really an answer? head henry live from washington coming up next. brian: i don't even know what that means. i can't wait for her to tell me. and have you seen this? one guy's water slide stunt going viral. jillian think so it's real, i
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brian: all right. hillary clinton's back taking a swipe at president trump's response to london's latest terror attack. ainsley: the defeated presidential candidate also calling for more bridges instead of walls. steve: yeah, we know what that means. chief national correspondent ed henry is live in washington, d.c. ed, what's she been up to now? ainsley: ed, you liked that, didn't you? you liked more bridges. >> authorship it's so good how you frame it, ainsley, it brings a smile to my face. ainsley: we need more bridges. >> we need more smiles. and hillary clinton was not bringing smiles last night. instead of the previous talks where she's blaming everyone but herself for why she lost in the last election, last night she was in baltimore for a democratic congressman and she basically blasted trump without ever naming him but decided to get in the middle of the fight he had with the london mayor and she picked
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which side? the mayor of london. watch. >> this is a time for us to reach out to the world. to understand more about what is happening, not just in our own country but indeed across the globe. it's a time for steady, determined leadership. like we are seeing from local authorities in london, including the mayor of london. yes, we're building leaders by building bridges. not walls. >> so if you caught that, she's saying the steady, determined leadership is coming not from the president of the united states but from the mayor of london. she went on to say we should not be trash talking and stoking fear among americans right now. remarkable we are here well over six months after the election, and she's still stoking all of it. brian: al gore came out and
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remember, had a much more crushing loss. very close, and he took it in a very classy way. she is a member of the resistance indicating she's going to run again. >> the door's open for her clearly, in her eyes, and in the eyes of some of her advisers because they're not shutting the door on that, and her comments continue to go after the president, number one, and number two, as you say, she stated directly, brian a few weeks back, she wants to be a leader part of the resistance. steve: sure and there are all of these stories now on the internet and how top democrats want her to go. >> just need smiles like ainsley says. steve: there you go. president trump vowing to fight isis. but are democrats willing to step up and fight radical islamists with the president? brian: and you have a police officer dragged by a suspect on the run. what happened next? stick around. we'll tell you. when i look
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in the mirror everyday. when i look in the mirror everyday. everyday, i think how fortunate i am. i think is today going to be the day, that we find a cure? i think how much i can do to help change people's lives. that helps me to keep going to cure this. my great great grandfather lived to be 118 years old. i've heard many stories from patients and their physicians about what they are going through. i often told people "oh i'm going to easily live to be 100" and, uh, it looks like i might not make it to retirement age. we are continually learning and unraveling what is behind this disease.
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brian: all right. some quick headlines now starting right here. two states considering new laws that would do away with concealed carry permits. in north carolina, lawmakers will vote this week whether or not to allow adults 18 or older to carry guns. right now, they must be 21. and also a consideration in michigan. both states already allow open carry. and on this day in 1944, more
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than 160,000 u.s. and ally brave troops rush the beaches of normalitiy, it was the largest air, land, and sea invasion in world's history. u.s. german and french dignitaries took place in a ceremony in france this weekend commemorating the anniversary of d-day. steve: fox alert. british police identifying the third london terrorist. that man right there, the 22-year-old was not on their radar, unlike one of his fellow attackers. ainsley: president trump pledging his support to the uk and doubling down on his vow to destroy isis. but are democrats in congress, are they ready to step up and fight radical islam with him? joining us now is democratic senator and senate intel committee joe manchin. thank you for being with us. >> thank you for having me, ainsley. ainsley: how can you answer that question? >> i can tell you, i'm ready to fight any time, any place, anywhere.
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we're not going to allow terrorism wreak havoc in west virginia or any other state in the nation. i think the people who can help us most are the muslim communities around this country. as small as they may be and as large as they may be, they're the ones we have to talk to to make sure they're monitoring social media, the mosque, to help us. the vetting process is very severe and strict right now, and it can even be better. so we're working every way we possibly can. and we know areas of the world that people come from can be truly a problem. and we have to be very careful. if there's no dna, if we don't have any background of these people, they shouldn't be allowed to come. if we can vet them, and we know they're no harm, and they want the freedoms we have, then we should go through this process. steve: if we can vet them, are you okay with extreme vetting? because now the administration is going to start looking at an applicant's social media history for a number of years
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back. >> oh, absolutely. absolutely. that social media gives you a roadmap. steve: it does. >> it does give you a roadmap of what these people have been thinking, what's been kind of in their environment they've been in, what's inspiring them, what they're interested in, what has attracted them. it tells us everything. ainsley: so where was the outrage. you know, i've got a list here of all of the countries of concern. this was from the obama administration released in 2016. the same countries that president trump wants to ban notice, president obama was naming them countries of concern. where was the outrage then from the democrats? >> well, we should have always been concerned. i don't know why we're making this such a political thing. i know some people in the democratic party and republican party is it agree or disagree or have different views on this. i don't know how any of us can disagree on making this country safe. we know that we have to target on our back. we are the largest christian peace-loving nation in the world, and we are the western
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nation of the superpower of the world. we know that we have a target. with that, we have to be more vigilant than any other place in the world. and we're going to do that, and i'm going to support the president. i'll support anybody in this government that makes sure that i'm keeping west virginia safe doing everything i can to keep my state safe and this entire country. steve: we're all together on safety and security indeed, senator. but clearly democrats up on capitol hill not going to help the president when it comes to health care or tax reform. and yet when you take a look at how the president suggested that members of your party are obstructing his agenda because you're not allowing him to bring, for instance, the ambassadors. i think they've been only able to nominate ten ambassadors so far because they say obstruction by the democrats. >> well, steve, let me explain the republicans have the majority in the senate.
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that means mitch mcconnell sets the agenda. with nuclear option, harry reid pulled the nuclear option. which i disagree. i think judges who have lifetime terms should go through the 61 vote rule. but once the administration wants to put their team together, they should do on simple majority, 51. there's 52 republicans. i have voted as a democrat mostly with the president's request on putting his team together. they don't need one democrat to do whatever they want to do. they can bring it before the committee, the committee has the majority, the committee kicks it out, it goes to the floor, mitch puts it on, they need 51, and it's done. steve: so, senator, just to be clear, you're saying it's mitch mcconnell's fault? >> mitch mcconnell has total control of this and their committee chairman. they don't need any democrats at all to put the president's team together. whoever he recommends, they can do. and i've been one who has been very sympathetic towards an
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administration, the executive should have a light to put their time, will and pleasure. they come and go with the president. so let him put his team together. if they fail, then you can throw everybody out in four years. then you don't have longer term. ainsley: what was your reaction they're not going to block james comey on wednesday? >> i think it was a wise decision. we have to get at this behind us. let's be as transparent as possible. we will follow the intel. the intel will take you to the facts, and you act on that. the leaks are extremely bothersome to me. this young lady, there's going to be -- i mean, she has a price to pay for that. i can assure you when i take -- if i try to take something out of the skip and my intel meeting and high classified, i know there's going to be a horrific price for me to pay. this person has to pay a price
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and everyone else that has access to this information is going to pay a price, so i think prosecution is in order. >> well, i think the department of justice would agree with you because they arrested her a couple of days ago. all right. senator joe manchin, thank you very much for joining us. ainsley: thank you. >> steve, thanks for having me. ainsley, thank you. tell brian we said hi. steve: he can hear you. brian: i can hear you. ainsley: did you hear him? he said he can hear you. steve: next up on the run down on this tuesday, a brand-new corrupt investigation just launched into the clinton family. ainsley: and did you catch this moment on fox and friends yesterday? >> congratulations on the gorgeous new studio. could you at least get me new plants out here on the planter? ainsley: well, we have a big surprise for janice. what could it be? steve: and it's raining. ainsley: men.
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we wanna welcome everyone to the father daughter dance. walk, move and earn money... ...for out-of-pocket medical expenses. he's ok! unitedhealthcare ♪ ♪ ainsley: where have you been? does anybody have a rock we can put on top of brian? brian: name one other song. ainsley: one hit wonder. brian: i can retire now. thank you. >> i thought i lived under a rock. i'm starting to get concerned, brian. brian: there must have been a game on during their second album.
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>> good morning, guys. hillary clinton is under investigation once again. the senate judiciary committee launching a probe into her actions as secretary of state. the daily caller of reporting russian officials to drop the investigation, a clinton and foundation donor. the prime minister clinton threatened her over the phone. terrifying moments for a sheriff deputy dragged by a fleeing suspect. the chilling scene captured on his body camera in florida. take a look. >> step out of the vehicle now. don't do it. don't do it. son of a (bleep). >> oh, my goodness. his deputy had pulled over the driver for speeding. that's when he found out he had two open warrants.
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the driver, as you can see took took a off dragging the deputy several feet. he only suffers minor cuts and bruises. the suspect was seen right here after crashing into a tree. he's charged with aggravated battery. if you're going to get gas this morning, make sure you check the pump before you fill up because this guy found a big surprise hiding inside. >> oh, my dear god. >> it's a snake. a four-foot snake in the pump in georgia. the guy says he loves snakes and wasn't scared at all. probably 1% of the population. he took the reptile to some nearby woods and let it go. it turned out it was a nonvenomous rat snake but still, it's a snake. oh, my goodness. okay. and let's move on from that. you have got to see this insane water slide move. a guy shoots out of the tube and glides across the pole. you're going to take another look right here. here he comes sliding across the pole, standing up on the pavement, and then, you know,
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without missing a beat, flips on his shirt. the flip from jamaica going viral. now, a lot of people are questioning whether or not it's real. we wanted you to be the judge of that. and we did get comments in. someone sent us an e-mail. steve: not just somebody. somebody who you know, charles payne actually tweeted kilmeade, ainsley, saw the tease for water slide, still think mine was better. do you remember that? there's payne on this show in his clothes. brian: i've never seen that one. that is one, terrible slide. >> oh, no. you know what? brian: right after that, he got a prime time show. no more morning show. and, by the way, just quick word on pilot, had another
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show from 1971 to 1973. it went so well, they broke up again for another 12 years. in 2014, they got together and broke up again. ainsley: do we have that song january? >> we're going to work on it. steve: maybe after this segment. ainsley: all right. we are settling into our new home here. this is our new set in studio f after its unveiling why had he. but janice dean had one problem with it. >> congratulations on the gorgeous new studio. could you at least get me some new plants out here on the planter? steve: janice dean, it sure sounded like you were complaining. luckily today, we have guys to the rescue. brian: shaken and sandy diaz. >> and i'm so happy to say that the rain ended here. and starting tomorrow, the temperature is going to go up, and it's going to be sunny skies by the weekend. so did you hear me sort of complaining about the fact that we have this brand-new
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studio, and i need some new planters to make it beautiful out here? >> absolutely we heard all about that. we were, like, let's go help our friend out. >> i love it. now, here's the problem. i have a purple thumb. i am not good with plants at all. >> and that's one thing. you want to set yourself up for success. so plants that are easier to maintain like succulents, marigolds. >> easy to maintain. >> so you want plants that just add water. >> just add water? >> so tell me how to set my marigolds. >> the first you want to do is nutrients. you can buy it together or mixed. two-thirds of the way. i also brought you a gift. gloves, so you can be a green thumb. so you want it two-thirds. you put the bowl in here. you don't want to drowned it. and then you from the rest up with. >> put miracle grow in there.
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and then you have to water. make sure you have the right water can. sometimes you plant the way on you. >> but this is for the planter out here. so you mean you have to maintain these things? >> well, they're low maintenance plants. they don't need much maintenance. just sun in the morning and shade in the afternoon. and water two to three times a week. >> so you guys are going to install these for me right back here? >> we'll make it nice and pretty so next time you're there, you get a -- >> i love it. how about you guys? are you guys going to help me make this planter beautiful? we're making the plaza beautiful again. i love it. do you guys have a website i can go to in just case? >> yeah, sdsquared.com. >> and i heard, steve ducey, these guys helped you in your backyard; correct? steve: not so far but those guys have a great company. janice, i have bad news position position 211 about 20 years ago on this show, i
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planted flowers on our building; right? next day went out, somebody stole them. >> oh, no. we're going to be security. thank you so much. beautiful new plaza thanks to my new friends. positio steve: keeping america beautiful. coming up on our tuesday telecast, south carolina senator lindseyy graham says he may have been a victim of unmasking by the old obama administration. senator rand paul was one of the first to make the same claim. he will join brian to react coming up next. brian: and every kid opens a lemonade stand coming up. this kid's stand was so successful, he scored a $50,000 deal with shark tank and here to talk about all of his success. nice. ainsley: how cute
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taking amiodarone with harvoni can cause a serious slowing of your heart rate. common side effects of harvoni include tiredness, headache and weakness. ready to let go of hep c? ask your hep c specialist about harvoni. brian: the senate intelligence committee has invited officials foreign intelligence detection. meanwhile, lindseyy graham speaking out saying he may have been swaled by the obama administration. so what's being done to crack down on the unmasking of americans for political purposes if indeed that happened? joining us right now, connecticut senator rand paul. who was the first senator to come out as a possible victim of surveillance under the obama administration. senator, have your concerns about this been raised over the last few weeks? >> yes. and i've sent
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severallers to the house intelligence committee and also the white house asking political figures were presidential candidates unmasked by the obama administration? if the obama admin used intelligence for political purposes, this is a really, really serious abuse of power and must be investigated. there are rumors swirling about susan rice. there are rumors now swirling about samantha powers. so we need to know. were they actually looking into people's phone calls for political purposes. if that happened, really, we have to do something about it. we cannot live in fear of our own intelligence community. brian: senator, why would they look in you? to unmask senator rand paul to connecticut? >> i have no idea because i don't have any ties to russia, surely. i don't believe i met the ambassador. i might have met him once at a reception. but for them to draw any link to me and a foreign country would be a strep of, i don't know why they have, unless for political purposes.
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brian: susan rice has been so out front. did a sunday show this sunday. if she wants to continue to say i won't come in front of congress, that's not going to stand. why not to you guys? >> yeah. that is a real question. but the other thing about this is careful logs i am told is cannot of all of this. so if susan rice unmasked anybody, we should have a record of it. but it goes to the top echelon, we had revealing documents. and we cannot have anybody in the intelligence community. they have every power to suck up every bit of transmission of every communication they made. we can't have them releasing that to the public. so general flynn's conversation was released. she may have unmasked them. but it may have been analysts. and there are has been a computer trail of who released these documents.
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brian: you're talking about a 25-year-old adviser who leaked out information about how russians may or may not hacked into certain voting machines on election day. i'm thinking that this doesn't start and end with her. should thereby massive polygraphs of all of these private contractors? >> something has to be done, and that's one option. i can say what really concerns me is when chuck schumer, who's one of the people who gets intelligence. there's only eight people in congress that really know even a tenth of what's going on. when chuck schumer said that president trump needs to be worried that the cia can get him six ways to sunday, that is alarming because chuck schumer is one of the eight congressman or senators that's privileged to know at least a small amount of what's going on in our intelligence community. we cannot live in fear of our own intelligence community. so, yes, absolutely from top to bottom we need a reform, and we need to go in and say the american people need to have oversight of this because
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we can't let them listen to the president's phone calls and blackmail the president. something has to change. brian: rand paul, you were the first on the record to cite concerns about the nsa. and now sadly your concerns are coming true with that revelation that came out yesterday. senator paul, always a great guest. thanks so much. >> thank you. brian: straight ahead, every kid opens a lemonade stand growing up. this kid's stand was so successful, he scored a $50,000 deal with shark tank. he's here live to talk about all of his success. but first, another very successful person, shannon, who would not get on shark tank. she doesn't have anything she invented. >> that you know of. i keep it under rafts until just the right time when i can maximize the impact. how about that? brian: that will be great. say hello. >> he's right here. but we also have news coming up today. the president and the vice president headed to capitol hill today. they need a big legislative win. so health care, tax reform, can they get it done?
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and we're getting breaking details. first the london attacker, a 25-year-old intelligence contractor accused of leaking nsa documents, how much time she could face behind bars. all coming up at the top of the hour do more. add one a day women's complete with key nutrients we may need. plus it supports bone health with calcium and vitamin d. one a day women's in gummies and tablets.
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ainsley: this 11-year-old ceo started a lemonade stand so that he could buy a set of legos. brian: and just two years later, he scored a deal on shark tank with a $50,000 investment for his company. steve: so now where does he stand? the creator of jack stands joins us right now. >> good morning. brian: are you the youngest kid who has ever gotten money from shark tank? >> one of them. brian: and you had a very simple business model.
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give us your business model. >> so this all started because i wanted a will go owe star wars death star that cost $400. but i was 8 years old back then, so i was, like -- i asked my dad if i could get it. he said i could, but i would have to pay for it. and i was, like, how am i going to make that much money, i'm old 8 years old. so i started my own lemonade stand and then ended up getting enough money. brian: but you have a unique lemonade, don't you? >> yes. so i had such a great time, i wanted to share my experience with other kids to inspire them to create their own stand. that's what my business is all about. and this system, i'm really excited to work with -- nationwide. ainsley: so when you went on shark tank, you told them your business plan. why did you need your help? >> well, we needed their help because we need -- i wanted to
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franchise out and get -- expand inside colorado. but also outside. so with the help of santa cruz organic, we're going to be able to do that. steve: you know, i think every kid i know has started a lemonade stand where they have it in front of their house. but you're the only one who franchises it. if people would like more information so people across the country would perhaps like a jack stand, how do they get ahold of you? >> sure. so they can go to santa cruz organic.com or tag tag santa cruz organic on facebook. >> have you ever done weather before? >> nope. >> i think you would be fantastic. steve: we would like to franchise him. good luck. >> thank you. [applause] >> thank you. ainsley: congratulations, jack. steve: all right. we're going to step aside. thanks, jack. stick around. i've been blind since birth. i go through periods where it's hard to sleep at night, and stay awake during the day. learn about non-24 by calling 844-844-2424.
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it's ok that everybody ibonus check every sixng months i'm accident free. because i don't use my cellphone when i'm driving. even though my family does, and leaves me all alone. here's something else... i don't share it with mom. i don't. right, mom? i have a brand new putter you don't even know about! it's awesome. safe driving bonus checks, only from allstate. sometimes i leave the seat up on purpose. switching to allstate is worth it. >> how is jack making money? a glass of orange juice is how much? >> a glass of lemonade is $2.75.
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>> congratulations. >> if you have to run away from jack, run to the radio. >> bill: thank you, guys, good morning. fox news alert now. new developments out of london. british police i.d. a third london attacker, 22 years old, believed to be an italian national of moroccan descent and one of the killers was featured in a documentary raising the question how these men could slip through their fingers so easily. we're looking at that today. first, though, big day ahead for republicans and president trump. he and the vice president will meet with lawmakers to try to get the gears of congress ranging up again on their domestic agenda. remember that? wow. bill hemmer, welcome to "america's newsroom." big two hours ahead. how are you
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