tv FOX Friends FOX News September 5, 2017 3:00am-6:00am PDT
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hey, u.p.s., the driver left package under door knob like this and trapped us in our apartment. eventually went viral and they apologized. niles to have you back, by the way. rob: good to be back. "fox & friends" starts right now. heather: bye. >> a fox news alert. begging for war in the u.s. declaring enough is enough from kim jong un. >> our allies in south korea giving a show of force overnight. >> his abusive use of missiles and his nuclear threat show that he is begging for war. enough is enough. >> what we have got is a nuclear capable north korea. that's unacceptable. >> the next big battle he has got and congress has is the budget and tax reform. the president tweeting out big week coming up. >> the president is expected to announce his administration is ending daca. >> congress needs to do their job and solve the problem. >> florida preparing for what could be the second major hurricane to hit the
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u.s. this year. irma strengthening to a category 4 hurricane. >> harvey's death toll continues to rise. >> when the residents come back, the sun comes up today, they will once again come to this west houston neighborhood and see that it is still swamped with water. >> texas, we will rebuild and we will come back stronger than ever. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ brian: i think we have to stop wearing white pants. abby: no. it's the type of white pants. still wear the fabric winter go creamy white.
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brian: go creamy white not pure white. steve: glad i came back from vacation for that. brian: it's labor day. people in gear ready to go. steve: back to school. all the kids in the new york city area back today officially. brian: my kids will be back tomorrow. don't rush out of bed because mr. doocy told you to. steve: the kids in jersey are back today. it's that cross state rivalry thing. brian: there you go. that's why jersey is so much smarter. steve: our kids go back one day earlier. brian: teachers have to be in school today in new york. i wish we didn't have to start the show like this but too serious. north korea apparently spotted moving another missile in preparation for yet another possible launch. abby: japan is now considering evacuating citizens from south korea as nuclear threat continues to grow. steve: senior foreign affairs greg palkot is live in seoul, south korea with
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the very latest, greg? >> greetings from seoul, south korea, guys. we have been coming here for fox for the las 11 years. in fact for the first north korean nuclear test. i have got to tell you things here are a little bit edgier. as you noted, there are thoughts that there could be more trouble. reports coming now that north korea could be moving another intercontinental ballistic missile over to the east coast of that country. that happening overnight. no hard confirmation of this. no word on how close a possible launch could be. for the second day, south korean military have been involved in live fire exercises following yesterday's pretty aggressive land maneuvers. the navy out today including guided missile ships. all of this, of course, a response to the weekend's apparent nuclear test by the north koreaible regime of kim jong un. as one top analyst told me, that test was alarming, was significant, and a potential
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u.s. city buster. that was put on top of a missile. no wonder there are plans just in case of trouble. japanese officials announcing today they are working on seeing how they would get their citizens out of this country if there were problems. remember the 28,500 troops here. some 200,000 americans. plans to get those folks out, too. are afoot. just in case. remember, the dmz 25 miles away more trouble. back to you guys. steve: no killed. greg palkot in seoul, south korea says things are edgier if they do missile launch obviously it would be to show the united states that they have the capacity with the icbm on saturday probably on saturday because that's the anniversary of that nation. brian: have you a huge movement united nations. it's going to be a resolution this week much more significant than last week. they are going to be cracking down with major sanctions. they know they are serious if they talk about oil. some type of massive oil
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embargo. and they crack down on the number one trading partner of the north koreans, and that is china. whose exports to that country have been upped 22%. they are also buying zinc, ironer fish and electrical equipment at the same rated they were before these series of attacks. abby: how do you get china in the corner? how do you make them feel threatened enough that they actually take action? i think you need to make them and convince them that we will take action if it comes to that. nikki haley the u.n. ambassador was pretty strong on that saying north korea basically wants us to go to war with them. here is what she says. >> kim jong un's action cannot be seen as defensive. he wants to be acknowledged as a nuclear power. but being a nuclear power is not about using those terrible weapons to threaten others.
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nuclear powers understand their responsibilities. kim jong un shows no such understanding. his abus abusive use of missiles and thrts shows is he begging for war. we have kicked the can down the road long enough. there is no more road left. steve: that is the problem. we have kicked the can down the road so long now we are begging for war, according to our united nations ambassador. president trump has threatened to cut off all trade in anybody who does do some dealing with north korea. china has said, you know, that's just not fair. so you can't think about that. brian: right. steve: ultimately, it looks like the best changes we have is for some sort of sanctions and brian, to your point, united nations is going to consider pressing -- the united states pressing china to cut off all oil and all fuel because they get 90% of their stuff from china. so you cut that off and they go dark, literally. brian: you and your family
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your dad was an ambassador. you tell me if this matters. japan getting a nuclear defense -- nuclear missiles, would that matter to china? abby: that would matter hugely. what does china care about? the dominance in the region. you build up south korea. that's what president trump did yesterday build up south korea. brian: those weapons we got rid of 8 years ago we need those back that would get their attention. steve: there is plenty of saber rattling. colonel peters wrote this in the ne "new york post." i think he is for the military option. better dead a million north koreans than a thousand dead americans. the fundamental reason is to protect our people and territory. everything else is a grace note. and the words with regards to north korea's nuclear threats is we should have done something. brian: what do you think we should do? what do you think the options are?
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ralph peters o on to something that sounds similar to lindsey graham. talk about what happens and write us at friends@foxnews.com. at 11:00 today not the president of the united states but attorney general jeff sessions will have an announcement on the future of the dreamers. those kids who came here because their parents brought them here very young age not really their decision and whether they have a future fro in the u.s. or have to leave. president obama said you can stay but now there is an expiration date on that because 10 to 12 republican governors have sued the administration saying i want an answer. i want to end this dream act because it's unconstitutional. the president has until september 5th, 11:00 today he is going to make his announcement and it's very creative. abby: sounds like he is going to punt it off to congress. brian: where it belonged to begin with. abby: executive order formerly by president obama was unconstitutional. that's why we are doing away with daca. steve: it was not an executive order. the dhs changed the rules.
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they did not go to congress and write it out on paper. he called up the dhs secretary and said hey, let's make some changes. reportedly, president obama, who did just is going to speak out if the president does something and obviously they are going to do it today because those very states were going to sue the federal government today and it was unclear whether or not jeff sessions, the attorney general, would then have to defend the dreamer status. and, instead, is he going to turn around and say you know what? we're not going to defend it because we're going to get rid of it. brian: all those republicans especially. i don't mean to cut you off. abby: go ahead. brian: senator lankford, congressman -- we had congressman this morning i forgot. steve: sounds like tall guy? short guy? brian: we know speaker ryan and majority leader kevin mccarthy all come out and said yeah we should think of a way forward to keep the dreamers here, fine. think of it and give it back to the president and say how did this end up in my lap? i'm sitting here having to
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kick out, for example, if you have an 11th grader that was born somewhere else, and he has a ninth grade brother that was born here, the 11th grader goes and the ninth grader stays? i was getting calls to my radio show from these dreamers and i think there is 800,000. less than 1% have committed any type of crime to violate the dream act. so there has not gott to be a way forward here. abby: it's emotional. legal angle and emotional angle. have you 800,000 dreamers in this country. even the president has come out and we have seen him talk about the children in this country and what that means now giving it to congress. the question is what are they going to do? we heard over the weekend or late last week paul ryan who sided with nancy pelosi on this. brian: different from 2014 who secretary of defense you couldn't do this. steve: na addition to everything else, it's a political issue. and the reason they came up with the president -- former president of the united states did with this dreamer thing that dhs did is
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because congress couldn't do anything about immigration reform. now they have got six months to figure it out. abby: be a they will be forced to. mid terms next year. this is a controversial decision. daca is emotional for a lot of people. he is going to want to move on quickly today and get to tax reform. brian: meet with the big 6. all these people working hard to put together a program that's eventually going to get a vote for tax reform for the first time since the 1980s. steve: meanwhile it's 6:11 in new york city and jillian has headlines. jillian: good morning. welcome back the two of you. abby: we were here all day yesterday. jillian: good morning to you at home as well. florida under a state of emergency as hurricane irma sets its sights on the u.s. powerful life threatening category 4 packed with winds over 150 miles per hour and only getting stronger. puerto rico and other caribbean islands expected to feel irma's wrath later today before it could take
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aim at south florida where millions are now preparing for the worst. this after witnessing the destruction in texas where harvey is now blamed for at least 60 deaths. today is the deadline for healthcare companies to set their premiums for next year. some insurer essay prices could be up to 20% higher. congress will hold a series of meetings over the next two weeks on healthcare and stabilizing the declining insurance exchanges. insurers have been september 27th to commit to participate. open enrollment starts november 1st. you no longer need a ticket to hang around at the pittsburgh airport. today it becomes the first since 9/11 to allow non-fliers past security. but, first, they have to check in at special desk and have their name checked against no fly list. airport wants non-fliers to have access to shops and restaurants year around. sean spicer is heading back to the podium. former white house press secretary has a new gig as a public speaker. different podium.
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spicer was hired by worldwide speakers group that says quote audiences around the world will benefit from the same candor whit and insight spicer brought to the white house briefing room. he starts next week. what do you think about that? steve: going to a convention and looking for a speaker call up sean spicer. abby: he has a lot he can talk, about for sure. steve: no kidding. brian: we will see about his rates. 13 minutes after the hour. coming up. take a look at this. flames shooting from a plane engine right after takeoff. what the heck happened. steve: pushing for minimum wage hike. next guest says if they want their way, it's going to cost some of them their jobs ♪ that's what i want ♪ that's what i want ♪ that's what i want ♪ that's what i want ♪
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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. ♪ ♪ steve: thousands of union workers and big labor supporters rallying across the country yesterday on labor day pushing to raise the minimum rage to $15 campaign. they got it all wrong and risk earning less. here to explain is the california health institute director dr. kevin mcnamee. good morning to you. >> good morning. thanks for having me on your
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show. >> steve: i get it. if i was minimum wage i would wanted as much as i could get. you say ultimately that's a big thing, why? >> employers only have so much profit margin to go around to expand their business, increase marketing, buy product to sell. what results is when you increase minimum wage you shift profit from the owner who keeps the profit moving forward to the employee. no entrance, people who want to get starting job won't have that opportunity. second, is that the employer may have to cut back hours and/or employees. so have you increased unemployment. number of economic studies show that every time you increase the minimum wage, unemployment goes up in the area. steve: sure. >> it's actually a counter to what you think it would be. great for politicians. it gets them votes. >> steve: absolutely. it's a political thing. look at all those people who showed up in chicago yesterday. they are all going to love whoever has got the microphone saying hey, i want you to get as much money as possible. when you look at what has
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happened in the city of seattle, dr. mcnamee that started with good intentions now that has back fired on them, hasn't it? >> yes, it has. and, in fact, seattle has occurred that many of the restaurants and small businesses have gone out of business. small business is 65% of the economy. that's the real chug of the economy here in the united states is the small business owner. for example, in san francisco, since september of 2016, to january of 2019, 2017 of this year. they have had 60 restaurants close. so what you are doing is squeezing profit margins, businesses goes under, more people are unemployed. it's not rocket science here. great for votes. steve: right. >> bad for economic prosperity here in the u.s. steve: doctor, real quickly before you go, this is not theoretical to you. have you had to cut back on employees where you work, right? >> that's correct. i had last year a wonderful office manager had been with me for 13 years.
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she retired to sacramento. and as a result, i brought on someone else to replace her only have her a day and a half a week to do the same amount of work. my other company that i have, i had to cut back hours on all those employees. they were excited $15 an hour. i said i only have so much profit margin to go around. i had to reduce hours. this is what other employers are having to do. it's a shame. but that's what we are up against when politicians don't understand the way economics growth. face it, government knows three things to do. tax, spend and regulate. they do that all very well in the people's republic of california and we are stuck with the results. steve: there you are. that's the side of the story you didn't hear yesterday at those rallies. dr. mac namee thanks for joining us live from los angeles. >> thanks for having me. steve: coming up on this tuesday north korea claims they tested a hydrogen bomb five times more powerful than the one in nag psaki. what does that mean.
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abby: we are back with quick headlines. antifa could soon be declared a street gang in liberal california. trying to decide how to classify the far left group after violence broke out in berkeley. antifa is no different than a street gang and police start treating them accordingly. the mayor of new york also making a bold statement. bill de blasio thinks there should be a parade held in his honor. he tells new york magazine this when i think how crime
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has gone down four years. graduation rates and test scores gone up. you would assume they had be having parades out in the streets. brian, please take it abe. brian: thanks, abby. 24 minutes after the hour. fox news alert. allies in south korea show of force conducting live fire exercises at sea. this in direct response to north korea's claim that they successfully sted a hydrogen bomb five times more powerful than used in hiroshima ago nagasaki. dr. nicole saphier is a radiologist. she is here to break down the entire process of hydrogen bomb and its effects. first off which what makes the hydrogen bomb so dangerous. >> atomic bombs we have seen in the past with hiroshima and nagasaki that is by a process of. hydrogen bomb two-part.
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have you a very small f fission. process fusion. taking eye on particles and combusting together. massive explosion a thousand times to that of the bombs we have seen in the past. brian: real damage is the radiation, right? >> absolutely. breaking down two fold. what happens immediately and then the long-term effects. immediately if you have seen any pictures before, you see the big explosion, the big puff of smoke and light that's thermal radiation. what happens is it is emitted at the speed of sound. and speed of light. big blast of light and it can cause blindness and third degree burns on anyone that comes in contact with it. and at the core of it you have such a blast of heat that many things are disintegrated and on top of that, the force, pushes the oxygen out and you actually have buildings and strurecketsd crumbling because there is no oxygen.
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brian: unbelievable. because we hear radiation we think bad. we know radiation, your business is used to shrink tumors. >> absolutely. brian: and fight cancer. >> absolutely. that's what i do. the fundamental, the basics of medical radiation comes from all of our new york stock exchange from what happened in hiroshima and nagasaki. we used beta rays very similar from what you see from these blasts to kill tumor cells obviously at smaller dose, very fraction denies ated dose if you have a that can cause death in cells. brian: look at the nuclear tests we have had this guy unlike his father 84 missile test. 18 since president trump took over. in terms of the impact of these explosions, look how they ring listen on radio 5.3 january 2006. may 2009, 4 pin 7. october 4.3. this was over 6. they felt over 6 was the impact of this explosion.
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but when they sent the sniffer planes over, dr. saphier, they weren't able to pick up much radiation. does that show you that this was deep into the earth wants core. >> deep in the earth's core because of the seismic activity. nikki haley says enough is enough. she is right. they are getting serious. if they have a hydrogen bomb that is serious. the fact they haven't picked up any increase in radiation levels doesn't mean anything. we need to keep watching and monitoring that. brian: we have never taken to you this level your background. unfortunately we need your expertise in physics that of course i could not wait to end when i took it. i took that over biology. one of the biggest mistakes of my life. >> someone has to do it. brian: it's you. dr. nicole saphier thank you very much. >> thanks, brian. brian: set to reveal decision on so-called dreamer program in a few hours. who should get to decide its fate? the president or congress? judge napolitano is here. he usually is walking during
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his introduction now use ago full screen. more on that later. flooding danger not the only concern in houston this morning. that's where we find griff jenkins. griff? >> that's right. officials telling residents here to flush lines and avoid showers if you can. we have got that coming up. brian: but, first, happy birthday to actress are a quell quell welch, she is still hot >> in hawaii, the wind is blowing soft and quiet through the trees. i have chronic dry eye caused by reduced tear production due to inflammation.
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brian brian we are back with a fox news alert. all eyes on hurricane irma at this hour. the powerful life threatening category 4 now gaining strength as it sets its eyes on the u.s. the state of florida bracing for the monster storm packed with winds right now clocked at over 140 miles per hour. abby: unreal. millions are now in its path preparing for the worst after witnessing the destruction that we saw last week in texas. janice dean joins us live tracking the hurricane of irma's path. janice, what are you seeing now. what can we expect at this point? janice: strengthening storm. 150 mile-per-hour sustained winds. when it comes to textbook hurricanes that is looking pretty perfect right now. all fox all star quad drantsz are opening up. beautiful looking storm. dangerous and perhaps deadly. this is what we know right now. category 4. it's being influenced by the
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bermuda high. going to continue westward track perhaps clipping the northward wayward islands. espanola, bahamas and south florida need to be prepared. when we talk about the scale, cat 4. there is no reap why we couldn't see a cat 5 in the next couple of hours. waters are warm. nothing in its way. here is the tropical models, very good agreement as it comes closer to the bahamas. this is sunday. south florida the keys needs to watch this. if you live along the west coast of florida you need to be paying close attention and southeast coast as well as we could feel the impacts of this storm. here is what is steering it. bermuda high continue westward track. will it be influenced by this trough though? if it is it is going to move more northward and hover south of the keys and perhaps go into the gulf of mexico. here is the european model we go through the next couple of dateds through the bahamas. this could be a very dangerous storm and then moving over cuba we think
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with this model south florida, the keys, again, this is a potentially deadly destructive hurricane and then it makes its curve northward by the weighed that's jose, watching jose behind irma. back to you. steve: great. thank you very much. janice. i was in south florida over the weekend and you couldn't buy a bottle of water anywhere. abby: all right? steve: cleaned out in stores i was at people putting shutters up. abby: you learned what happened in texas. brian: guess gas. long time since florida has been hit by a hurricane. steve: last year there was a big one that caused a lot of damage. a lot of flooding. as hurricane irma intensifies harvey's death toll continues to rise as houston, texas, starts to dry out. abby: some are now facing new flooding threats and are being urged to conserve their water. brian: griff jenkins live in houston where people are being asked not to shower, griff? >> that's right. most of the city, according
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to the mayor is dry. but in the west houston area, flooding continues because of those reservoirs in two water treatment plants remain flooded as of last night. it had up to 8 feet there. and they want people to conservative the water to shower less, flush the toilet less. don't use the dish washer or the laundry. that of course has got people on edge. we sent a drone up yesterday. can you see this area in west houston. about 4600 homes reremain. there was evacuation still under effect. which is keeping people out of these really flooded homes. because of the power threat to their safety and effect to water has a lot of bacteria and real 4reu getting funky. we talked to one of those residents who couldn't go in to get her things, amy eick kel. here is what she had to do. >> i wanted to put things in plastic bins so it could last for a month. i don't want this swampy water in my house and contaminate everything.
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i'm incensed we can't go in to take care of our homes when we had no warning. >> we will have businesses opening and things getting back to normal except for this west houston area. the police behind me keeping residents out as they try to figure out what's going to happen with this flooded area. the officials say it's probably going to last probably another 14 to 15 did is, guys? steve: thank you very much. brian: get fema people flooding that area, pun intended to help these people out so they can get them the loans and get them the numbers and them all logged in. abby: congress, too. they are looking at the budget. brian: people from around that area to flood that area. steve: now that the floods are going down and warm there and mold starts. abby: not necessarily the amount of water but the fact that water was there. steve: get rid of that mold. jillian: good morning to you and to you at home as well. the aspiring pastor charged with murdering his wife
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after he claims he took too much cold medicine. he makes his first court appearance today. >> i had a dream and then i turned on the lights and she is dead on the floor. i have blood all over me and there is a bloody knife on the bed, and i think i did it. >> matthew phelps called police after waking up and finding his wife lauren stabbed to death in heir bed. she was laid to rest yesterday. flames shoot out of the engine of packed passenger plane moments after takeoff. pilots on the airlines jet say a bird got sucked into the left engine. the plane with nearly 250 people on board was heading to new york. the aircraft turning around safely making an emergency landing back in tokyo. no one was hurt. be on time or pay a fine. that's the new policy for students at a utah high school. get this, a first offense gets them a warning. if students are late to class a second time, this have to pay a $3 fine.
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after that it goes up to 5 bucks. if they can't pay, they can take a detention instead. the money collected will go toward a school fund that will go directly back to the students. interesting. and this is going to blow your mind. it did for me. iconic video game character, mario, guess what, he is no longer a plumber. >> woo hooh ♪ according to his new nintendo profile mario worked as a plumber, quote, a long time ago. he now focuses on sports and racing. fans on twitter not taking this news well at all. ment like you, brian. one tweeting quote what the heck nothing is sacred anymore. another tweet writing quote the vanishing working class. abby: that's what i was thinking keep the plumber. i like that. steve: is it is a political.
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steve: just the fact he never did. jillian: on to new things. sometimes you are due for a change. brian: do we have a moreio correspondent that we can tap into. steve: nintendo store is less than a block away. jillian: as long as they don't change the music though. brian: do you want to hear it again? ♪ jillian: okay. it's me, mario. steve: good luck with your new endeavor whatever it is. brian: keep the mustache. thanks, jillian. you also sat on my folder when you sat down. sorry about that. still ahead, a new jersey senator about to begin his federal corruption trial tomorrow. big detail missing about him in the headlines for the mainstream media. abby: trump administration set to reveal its decision on the dreamer program. just a few hours from now 11:00 a.m. who should get to decide its fate, the president or congress. judge andrew napolitano son deck. is he going to help us break this down.
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to writing in a series of 12 executive orders with barack obama. when those 12 executive orders were challenged in court, the court invalidated them saying this is for congress to do. mr. president, if you had done this quietly and below the radar screen like all of your predecessors had done and as president trump is doing today there would be nothing for us to invalidate. because this is for congress to write the law, and not you, you can't change the law. brian: we got the deadlines because the republican governors sued the federal government and saying this is unconstitutional, right. >> the reason they got this is because immigrants legal or illegal stay in the country, they are entitled
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to a social benefit net that's paid for by the states. here is the argument do you want to take 800,000 people largely productive and students and in the workforce and send them home? do you want to separate children from their parents? do you want to separate brothers and sisters from each other. abby: many aren't children any more. they have grown up here and gone to school here. the legal side do we get back to law and order in this country which president trump has been honing in on and the emotional side you are talking about. what does congress do. >> the legal side says they go. they can't stay here. the emotional side, even the economic side says you are going to kick 800,000 young people out of the united states of america that is going to be catastrophic for employers and families. brian: apple says they have over 100 daca people working for them. >> >> prediction. congress will find some
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common ground to permit most of these people to say. abby: they already have. paul ryan has already sided with nancy pelosi. >> paul ryan and nancy pelosi and barack obama and many republicans are on the same side of this. the donald trump that was a candidate is fiercely against. this we will see if he feels differently now that he is in the white house. steve: ultimately donald trump is doing it the right way. he is saying if you want to keep them in this country, congress, you do it. >> exactly. that's exactly what the fifth circuit of appeal had said. justice scalia had died and gorsuch was not on the court. they died 4 to 4. fifth circuit of opinions which governs texas is the law of the land. and that says congress decides and not the president would this be something that is not daca centric? >> that is a terrific question. many people in congress, republicans and democrats and the man in the white house who want to major immigration reform and this will be part of it. but knowing the way congress
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works, and if the president only gives them six months before he starts deporting these people, we will get a piece of legislation just on daca and won't get that big reform because they won't agree. brian: let's build the wall and let the dreamers stay. isn't that called compromise. >> yes that is cam pro-mize. abby: maybe it's a bargaining chip in some way. >> mr. president, not a bad idea. [laughter] brian: 12 minutes before the top of the hour. are college classes too stressful for our kids? one school is helping students cuddle their worries away. they got a dog. steve: who wouldn't hug that dog? brian: i know. please. steve: you know state media likes to spread propaganda. now getting help from people right here in the united states. we will tell you that on that story coming up from "fox & friends" live from new york city ♪ ♪ ♪ here i come ♪ (flourish spray noise)
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abby: welcome back. anti-trump resistant groups are spreading north korea propaganda. one group called refuse fascism calling you the u.s. for bullying. we should not be okay with a largest military power in the world bullying a small isolated country and terrorize the people of that entire region. this is a nightmare it is a night mayor for korean people and a nightmare for humanity. what's going on here. >> antifascism anti-american propaganda. it is. these groups have the antifa flag and taking advantage of
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this tense environment. they are old groups. they are old communists and anarchists. they have been around for decades in this country. they are a anti-american. can you see that in their politics. any politician who gets too close to them is really going to regret it. abby: they are well-known groups they have been around for some time and active even recently, right? >> well, they have been active for decades. antifa is something you would come across in europe. they still have problems with far right gangs. here they used to go to names like black group. they were big into protests in 2003. and back then same thing. they wore masks. these guys also said anti-fascist. the problem is they think everyone is a fascist who disagrees with them. side with old line communists. abby: what do they stand for? you are watching videos violence play out. watching this all too often across the country. what do they stand for?
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what is their goal? what do they want at the end? >> communism or a change in the western culture and western government. all of them despite having some are anarchists. those are two different government ideologies. they are all against the american system. they don't want the capitalist system. they have want to topple it. groups who fight against imperialists are their allies. abby: headlines i was reading you siding with north korea. north korea sending out ballistic missiles, it's a horrifying situation that's playing out with north korea. and have you these groups right here in the u.s. that are siding with them. >> i have read literature over the years. they think these groups are being bullied by america. you can't find a problem around the world where they can't find some way to blame the united states. a famine in africa. a dictatorship in north korea. they say that's all because of our unjust imperialist aggression. they think united states is a force for bad. that's why you see them trying to tear down statues
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and history. and attacking men and women at rallies. they will keep doing that until they are treated as a gang like the mayor of berkeley just suggested. europeans have dealt with these gangs, right wing and left wing players running around the city for years. also dealt a lot with the hooligan problem. that's the way these guys do it organized violence. they should learn from the british police and crack down on these guys like they are a gang. abby: unreal. thanks for joining us and helping us better understand these groups. >> thank you. abby: coming up. laura ingraham and newt gingrich. we have a big two hours coming up on "fox & friends." we'll be back after this ♪ ♪
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lyrica is believed to calm these nerves. i'm glad my doctor prescribed lyrica. for some, lyrica delivers effective relief for moderate to even severe fibromyalgia pain. and improves function. lyrica may cause serious allergic reactions, suicidal thoughts or actions. tell your doctor right away if you have these, new or worse depression, unusual changes in mood or behavior, swelling, trouble breathing, rash, hives, blisters, muscle pain with fever, tired feeling, or blurry vision. common side effects: dizziness, sleepiness, weight gain, swelling of hands, legs and feet. don't drink alcohol while taking lyrica. don't drive or use machinery until you know how lyrica affects you. those who've had a drug or alcohol problem may be more likely to misuse lyrica. with less pain, i can do more with my family. talk to your doctor today. see if lyrica can help. rob: a fox news alert. begging for war. u.s. declaring enough is
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enough from kim jong un. >> allies show of force overnight: his nuclear threats show he is begging for war. enough is enough. >> what we have got is a nuclear capable north korea. that's unacceptable. >> the next big battle he has got and congress has is the budget and tax reform. the president tweeting out big week coming up. >> the president is expected to announce his administration is ending dockca. >> congress needs to do their job and solve the problem. >> all eyes on hurricane irma at this hour. the powerful life-threatening category 4 now gaining strength as it sets its sights on the u.s. >> harvey's death toll continues to rise. >> when the residents come back and the sun comes up today they will once again come to this west houston neighborhood and see that it is still swamped with water. >> texas, we will rebuild and we will come back stronger than ever.
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♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ the radio's on ♪ make me want to roll my window down and cruise brian: cruise even though the summer is over. can you still cruise in the fall? steve: weren't we playing cruise because we just saw ted cruz. brian: i apologize i was unable to pick that. abby: can you pick up florida georgia line all year round. rolling down the windows and being in a convertible. brian: quick question. what am i doing now? watch. what did i just do? steve: you are doing brian kilmeade. brian: i looked over the camera and i am looking in the rear view mirror because that's where the summer is. steve: that's deep. brian: that was my best
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intim statioinimitation ever. steve: maybe you need a vacation. brian there it is right there. abby: what car are you driving? brian: my tahoe. abby: welcome back after this labor day weekend. brian: i can't smile for this story because north korea is getting serious. rogue regime reportedly spotted moving a missile in preparation for another possible launch according to south korean officials. abby: that is a quote. japan now considering evacuating citizens from south korea as the nuclear threat continues to grow. steve: this is a story we would like to see in rear view mirror but it's straight ahead. senior correspondent greg palkot is live in seoul, south korea with the latest where, greg, you have been there for over a decade off and on and people in south korea now are on edge this
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time, aren't they? >> absolutely, folks, greetings from seoul, south korea where the sense is edgier than we have seen in the past several times that we have been here. especially with comments like the one you just read from a north korean officials. one gift package that might be coming away at least somewhere in the direction of the united states, another icbm. another missile seen according to reports being moved by north korea to the east coast of that country. for possible launch. for the second day south korean military has been in action. live fire exercises. this time naval ships including a guided missile vessel going through the routines just in case. all of this, of course, of the respond to that weekend nuclear test by the north korean regime of kim jong un. i talked to one of my closest experts on this. he said the test was his words alarming, significant, put on top of a missile, a possible u.s. city buster.
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finally, as you noted, there are plans to get out of here just in case trouble that the japanese government is planning to get 60,000 citizens out if there is provocations coming from the north. there are something like 200,000 americans here. including 28,000 troops. again, they have been practiced getting out of here as well. again, yeah, we have been here numerous times. i think one of the biggs variables here, guys, is the trump administration. it's not clear on this peninsula exactly how president trump could act whether he might call kim jong un's bluff. back to you. brian: wow. and that's why. because they have ramped it up. so have we. thanks a lot, greg. i think on top of that you have a south korean leader who is liberal. he says let's talk. let's work out some type of diplomatic solution. however, that's not taking into account that you cannot go into talks like that with an aggressive leader. i don't think is he crazy
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but an aggressive leader. and have you absolutely no leverage. you are pleading with them to see it your way. that's not the way it works internationally. abby: you are exactly right. look, sanctions can only go so far. can you put substantials on china. north korea doesn't care about that. i don't think china necessarily cares about sanctions. what china is most concerned about is their position in that region. we have been talking about that this morning. they are very concerned about us taking action militarily in north korea. that's why it is so important to have that tough talk. we don't need to say we are going to war and actually doing that making them think that we will. if they do not force north korea to deescalate we will take action. steve: there is a story out of today that the united states is pressing china behind the scenes to cut off all oil and all fuel to north korea. and we have heard the president of the united states say that what he would like to do essentially is cut off trade with anybody who trades with north korea. so, in other words, the threat is, hey, china, if you don't cut things off, we're going to cut things off with you and we are
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talking about 40 or $50 billion a month in trade with, you know, with china. here's the thing. a trade war sure beats a shooting war. according to the "new york times." one of the administration officials says this is the last best chance at resolving it. and condi rice pointed this out yesterday. the administration is correct in the way they are portraying the situation for china. >> no personal president can tolerate a somewhat unhinged north korean leader because if he is not crazy, he is reckless. and what the administration is trying to do and i support what they are trying to do painting a very bleak picture for the chinese. that's the only country with any legal leverage. what the administration is saying to them is your choice now is either we do something about the north korean problem or you do something about the north korean problem. and hopefully that will get through to the chinese because the military solutions here are not very
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pretty. brian: they aren't. abby: she is spot on there. brian: as usual. she was at a book event. her book is excellent. she was at a book event in washington, d.c. but this is what they say if you break this down, what exactly is going on between north korea and china. evidently the key is, believe it or not, north korea sends workers into china. they do their job. they make cash. they go to these chinese foreign trading companies. they get that cash and they send it back to the government almost all of it. and that is what fuels literally fuels their missile program. many people think the key to really hurting north korea is start sanctioning these chinese trading companies and these chinese banks. chinese car companies ship autos there. they ship auto parts there. they have 14 million in trade since 2012 in just automobiles. every appliance in north korea is chinese-made. and they continue to do this. so that 84% of all trade in and out is from china and north korea. if you do not think china is the linchpin, you're not
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paying attention. abby: do you know what they're most concerned about if you do take action in north korea. do you know what is going to happen you will get millions of refugees over the border. they realize how serious it this is. how forceful do we have to continue to be to put them in that corner? steve: last thing china wants if something happens in north korea for all those u.s. troops and south koreans to be right there on the border. abby: exactly built up their military as well. brian: if japanese constitution and build up military again. give nuclear weapons to japan as well as taiwan and south korea that gets china's attention. steve: indeed. so, anyway, we would like to see that in our rear view mirror going back to the drive cruise thing. meanwhile 11:00 this morning, the attorney general of the united states jeff sessions is going to announce essentially a plan to phase out dockca.
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the reason it is 11:00 today is because texas and a number of other states were suing the federal government saying daca is unconstitutional and hey, administration, have you got to do something. and rather than have to defend it in court, jeff sessions is saying we're going to get rid of it because we're going to have congress come up with a solution. at least we're putting six months on the clock. ready, set, go. abby: six months enough time for congress or not enough? right? i think he is trying to give them at least a little bit of space to figure out what they want to do here. we had judge napolitano on here. he said actually it was barack obama who created this problem to begin with. here is what he said. >> every president since ronald reagan, since 1986 has said hands off on these folks. the only president that reduced that to writing in a series of 12 executive orders was barack obama. and when those 12 executive orders were challenged in court. the court invalidated them saying this is for congress to do. mr. president, if you had done this quietly and below the radar screen like all of your predecessors have done and as donald trump is doing
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today, there would be nothing for us to invalidate. brian: i love the way this was announced yesterday. if daca is suspended. president obama will put something on facebook. say it ain't so. steve: is he going to speak out. brian: by the way, like i said, the president decided he was frustrated with congress he did this through executive order and executive action. steve: president obama. brian: what he did in 2014 he says he couldn't do he agrees with judge snawntd in 2017. listen in 2011 when he was asked about this. >> with respect to the notion that i can just suspend deportations through executive order that's just not the case. because there are laws on the books that congress has passed. congress passes the law. the executive branch's job is to enforce and implement those laws and then the judiciary has to interpret
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the laws. there are enough laws on the books by congress that are very clear in terms of how we have to enforce our immigration system. that for me through executive order ignore those congressional mandates would not conform with my appropriate role as president. steve: what a great sound bite there the president of the united states years before he went ahead and enacted things through executive action, he said i can't do it. i need congress. so essentially and the reason did he that was ultimately was because congress would not do immigration reform and include that so now essentially, donald trump is doing what barack obama did not do. will he, donald trump, be able to get it accomplished? don't know, depends on congress. abby: you look back. that was a great sound bite. kudos to our producers for pulling that up in 2011. >> he was struggling with the same thing president trump is today. this is a difficult thing. it is emotional. you are also dealing with
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the legal angle of this. we saw a year later, a couple years later he reversed that and ended up doing it on its own. brian: watched it over the weekend and other people. there are controversial things about this president people want to criticize it really nothing to criticize here. is he openly saying how difficult it is this decision is to make. he is, i think, doing the right thing by kicking it back to congress to let them have the power that they yearn for. how could you possibly be critical of a guy who says i love kids, i'm a grandfather and father but there is a rule of law. let me try to work this out. i need a few extra days. what is wrong with that? >> well, this is a brilliant solution to a political situation. keep in mind. if anybody is surprised that president trump is ending dock carks you weren't paying attention during the campaign. balk how many times did he say if i'm elected i'm going to do something about the dreermts. as soon as he was elected he was asked about it and he goes i love them. we all love them. so now is he having congress do what they should have done in the first place. abby: the irony if we do
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hear from former president obama on this after pulling that clip back -- he is going to rile up that resistance movement and give them a reason to hate the president. brian: who has more twitter followers jillian or president obama? jillian: dechtsdly me. obviously. abby: hers is growing. brian: you have the sport as well as the news. jillian: i have no followers. that's okay. we are building. have you got to start somewhere. florida under a state of emergency as hurricane irma sets its sights on the u.s. powerful life threatening category 4 120r78 packed with winds more than 150 miles per hour and only getting stlonger. puerto rico and other caribbean islands expected to start feeling irma's wrath later today before it could take aim at south florida where millions are now preparing for the worse. this after witnessing the destruction in texas where harvey is now blamed for at least 60 deaths. violence running rampant in chicago this labor day weekend. 42 people shot. five of those victims are
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dead. poor no than 2500 people have been shot in chicago so far this year. that's only 350 less than 2016. >> the city's deadliest year in almost two decades. back to business in washington. on twitter president trump promising a big week ahead as congress returns to capitol hill today. pressure on lawmakers mounting to raise the debt ceiling, stop a government shutdown, pass the hurricane relief package and decide on daca and tax reform. that's what president trump will discuss when he meets with the so-called big six today. that includes the house speaker, the senate majority leader and the treasury secretary. back to you guys. steve: all right. abby: busy week ahead. thank you, jill yap. steve: houston starting to pick up the pieces after hurricane harvey. brian: va secretary david shulkin was with the president on saturday. i'm sure you saw him there. he is here next with what help looks like.
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brian: 60 people dead in the aftermath of hurricane harvey. tens of thousands still in shelters this morning. president trump and members of his cabinet including v.a. secretary david shulkin surveying the damage up close and personal and meeting with victims this weekend. what are they doing to respond especially when it comes to veterans in that area. david shulkin joins us now. mr. secretary, you just told me you have 550,000 veterans that have been affected by harvey? >> absolutely. wherever you go in the country you will see a lot of veterans particularly in texas. we have a high number of veterans in that area. brian: what are their needs in particular and how have you triaged it to attack it the ones that need it most. >> when you go through these types of emergencies you essentially check through the basic needs. house something number one. we still have 10,000 people in hotels and hundreds of thousands of people who have damaged houses. so that's the number one strategy. the second that you deal with is power.
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fortunately we have been able to restore power to almost all the texans through the medical care of the other two. we have really done a good job in working with local authorities, the federal authorities, and also the community groups to make sure that those basic needs are being met. brian: watching marcus luttrell over the weekend. he says he was traveling the streets with some his seal friends. he says he is seeing in the people that stare in their eyes that people have almost when they come out of war like they are in the middle of the battle. as you see the debris it looks like their home is let teller live blown up. do you worry about some of the veterans getting this reignited ptsd that you are already working on that marcus luttrell saw in the average every day american just trying to rebuild their lives? >> i think that absolutely is a concern. this is a major catastrophe. and one of the life upsetting issues that can happen when you lose your home and you are separated from your friends and families. but i have been down there twice now with vice
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president and again last saturday with president and mrs. trump. i can tell you communities are pulling together and people are supporting each other. it is really incredible to see the way people are sticking together down there. brian: mr. secretary, i know it's not exactly your job description. if people can't get cars. 14,000 down payment on the loan they are going to get. if they cannot begin to rebuild and throw out the stuff inside their house, that's when the frustration is going to mount. and the good start will be just a good start. >> i think there is no doubt. this is a long-term issue. that many of these problems are going to go on for months, if not years. that's when the president says that we're there for the long haul. and the governor is committed to helping people in the lounge haul. that's what we're going to have to be prepared for. brian: one of the most successful cabinet secretaries in america today david shulkin. thanks so much. >> thank you, brian. brian: newlywed murder mystery says cough medicine may have made him do it. can that defense hold up in
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court? we will debate that next. >> i had a dream and then i turned on the lights and she is dead on the floor. i think i did it. what twisted ankle? what muscle strain? advil makes pain a distant memory nothing works faster stronger or longer what pain? advil. super-cool notebooks, done. that's mom taking care of business. and with the "25 cent event", office depot officemax takes care of mom! now, all this just 25 cents each! ♪ taking care of business ♪ i'm living that yacht life, life, life ♪ ♪ top speed fifty knots life on the caribbean seas ♪ ♪ it's a champagne and models potpourri ♪
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steve: news by the numbers. 20%. that's how much health insurance could be going up. today is deadline day for health insurance companies to set their premiums for next year. next $1 million. that's how much money somebody recovering from hurricane harvey may have won. a winning powerball ticket sold in the storm ravaged city of houston over the weekend. and finally 5. that's how many cma nominations meranda lambert is up for including music video of the year for vice.
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♪ another fight ♪ another town ♪ when my path came running down. steve: nominated for single and album of the year. congratulations. abby: that is amazing. she is helping a lot of people out in houston: a murder mystery a man wakes up covered in his wife's blood. >> i had a dream and then i turned on the lights and she is dead on the floor. i have blood all over me and there's a bloody knife on the bed, and i think i did it. abby: that voice is 28-year-old matthew phelps. you can see him right there telling police he may have stabbed his wife lauren to death after is taking too much cold medicine. can that defense hold up in court? we will debate this now internist and board certified criminalist. thank you so much for being
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here, ladies. everyone on this show, the producers we have been talking about this for the last couple of days. i want to start with you on the medical side of this. because we know the impacts of strong medication. am beenel for one we know that can make you totally insane. when it comes to cold medicine, with it make that you delirious? >> believe it or not, yes. it's extraordinarily rare. but it can happen. so, this is very similar to benadryl called chlorfendrine. it's similar to benadryl. it doesn't relax your muscles enough. have a dream and have a sleep disorder. clinically asleep but your body is still able to get up walk around and potentially act out dreams you are having. abby: you wake up as a husband and your wife is dead all bloody next to you with a knife next to her. you just imagine if this is true what is he dealing with emotionally on this. you say there is precedent
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that there have been cases in the past where people have walked free from murdering someone that they loved. >> yes. this is all about what this man was thinking at the time of the murder. now, if he didn't know what he was doing, he could very well have a strong defense. there is two parts of a crime. it's the act of the crime of stabbing her but it's also the mental state. and if he didn't know what he was doing, he could get away scot-free. abby: what if he is just a killer and bad man he said you know what i have seen other people have been able to walk away from this yosha maybe i will get a better sentence or walk away. >> i think the prosecution and police are going to do everything they can to prevent that from happening. there is going to be an extensive investigation including potentially recreating the crime scene and perhaps finding a motive. why we want to do this? was there marital strife? was there trouble? that can help build the case against him. abby: tiffany, this makes everyone listening to this story this morning makes them nervous of like what if this were to happen to me.
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what if i were to take cold medicine i were sick or just wanted a good night's sleep and you cake up and kill someone you love. how should would he be thinking with this and making sure that he would never put in this situation? >> yeah. i think, you know, it's a very slippery slope and we have to be very careful if this guy does get off and it is proven that he really had no idea what he was doing. these medications are overof the counter medication and they are extraordinarily safe for the vast majority of the population. so i don't really think most people should worry about this happening to them. and i think a good question for the -- his attorneys and the police also is if he had an underlying sleep disorder. has he sleep walked before? did he talk in his sleep? if he did he probably had underlying disorder anyway which could have made the effect of the medication even worse. abby: either way this is a horrible, horrible story. tiffany, thank you for helping us better understand this is going to be a long road ahead.
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a fox news alert now. a state of emergency in the state of florida as hurricane irma sets its sights here on the u.s. when will it hit and where will it hit? janice dean is tracking it all and here for us next. hillary clinton just threw bernie sanders under the bus. more on that coming up ♪ that's okay ♪ to see how you do it ♪ let's get down to it ♪ hit me with your best shot ♪ why don't you hit me with your best shot ♪ kevin, meet your father.
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♪...from far away. but they ♪honly see his wrinkles.♪.. ♪he's gotta play it cool to seal the deal.♪ ♪better find a way to smooth things over.♪ ♪if only harry used some... ♪...bounce, to dry. ♪yeah! ♪he would be a less wrinkly, and winning at life.♪ steve: back with a fox news alert. all eyes on hurricane irma that swirling mass right there. the powerful life-threatening category 4 storm now gaining strength as it sets its sights perhaps on the united states. abby: florida and puerto rico under states of emergency right now racing for monster storm packed with winds over 150 miles per hour. brian: all right. millions in the projected path preparing for the worst
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after witnessing the destruction in texas. janice dean you told us about this a week and a half ago. and it's happening. janice: well, let's see, five days in forecast time is a long way to go. but if you live across the east coast, if you live across florida, the keys or even the gulf coast you need to pay really close attention to the path of hurricane irma. new advisory comes out at 8:00 a.m. will this be a category 5? the potential is there. we is a lot of warm water ahead of it. if it has less interaction with land then we are dealing with the potential for a strengthening storm system. the track right now i want you to pay not close attention to the center but more of this cone uncertainty. go out five days there is the potential for this to go into the gulf of mexico. there is the potential for this to hug along the coast. again we are five days out and we still have to add the potential for error. sea surface temperatures here potential for storm to strengthen to a category 5. that's the highest can you get on the simpson scale.
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two forecast models in very good agreement in the next couple of days very close to each other. bahamas, portions of cuba key west as well as south florida. look this is the euro going towards the gulf of mexico. this is my concern. we are too focused in on florida and don't pay attention to the fact that this could go into the gulf of mexico, it could also curve up the coast. so that's why i'm concerned. right now it looks like a potential south florida landfall and moving up towards the northeast coast line. also want it pay attention to jose behind it because jose is also going to be potentially a disorm in the next couple of days. this is the gfs model again. strong hurricane going out four or five days looks like south florida. don't keep your eye on this. the potential for it to go into the gulf of mexico is still a possibility. the potential for it to hug the coast still a possibility. but right now, watching south florida. again, five days out.
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we're looking at a potential landfall this weekend but, again, five days out really anything can happen. that's why we have that cone of uncertainty. don't pay attention to the center. pay attention to the whole potential path could go into the gulf of mexico. could hug the east coast as well. abby: go out and buy water. janice: we have time to prepare. if you live in an area that could potentially be influenced by a hurricane, you need to make your preparations now. steve: there is no suggestion this is headed for texas though, right? >> listen, if it goes into the gulf of mexico, it's anybody's game. that's why i'm concerned. there is the potential for this to push into the gulf of mexico and then we're going to, you know, watch the whole gulf coast. so, yes, there is the potential for that as well. steve: not good news. all right. thank you, janice. brian: 25 minutes before the top of the hour. in houston thousands of families facing horrific new reality as the cost of recovery from hurricane harvey sets in. abby: many of those people who lost everything did not have flood insurance. steve: will carr is live for
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thus morning in houston where victims are now weighing their options the water goes down, will, and the mold starts now they have to figure out what to do next. >> yeah. good morning, guys. in this community in west houston is still under evacuation. you can see, steve, just how much water is still out here. that's not stopping homeowners from coming back to see the extent of the damage. they are wading in. they are coming by boat. when they get here, they are seeing water everywhere. those impacted across the city, 85% did not have flood insurance. homeowner after homeowner tells us they simply never thought they would need it. they were told that they did not live in a floodplain. when you add all of this up. we asked two homeowners who live in this neighborhood what their message would be for anybody who potentially lives in the path of hurricane irma. >> heed those warnings and get all your personal belongings out. those are the only things that really matter. the family items, the memorabilia. the things
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that really matter. >> prepare. and get mentally prepared. and get supplies. i would also say as soon as you sense that it's coming your direction, do something with your cars. >> good advice because i can't tell you how many cars we have seen stranded like this. in floodwaters over the past couple of days. now, there is a little bit of help coming on the federal level. tomorrow the house is set to vote on a federal aid package of $8 billion. but, guys. you can only consider that a down payment on what is ultimately going to cost to rebuild this community. back to you. abby: thank you, will. steve: will is standing next to a submerged cadillac. i read this morning that 1 million automobiles have been destroyed by this particular flood. abby: that's about the least of their problems. brian: if you have comprehensive plans you will get a new car, right? steve: the peril is a lot of unscrupulous people will sell a flood car to somebody not knowing.
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brian: you should check, too. if you are a used car across the country if they are from texas. steve: go to car facts. brian: if ford, chrysler want to help flooding the zone with cars that these people are entitled to get. abby: they are stepping up to help. that's a great point, brian. we have headlines with jillian. good morning, guy jill january. jillian: good morning guys and good morning to you. president trump seems to be some hearts and minds. sharing new progressive after seeing the president and first lady hugging kids and serving meals. >> we want to get help that we need. >> how did it make you feel. >> it made me feel warm. >> i have a different opinion of him and now i think he is a wonderful man. >> those two women getting a selfie with a smiling president trump. hillary clinton throwing
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shade at bernie sanders in new book. presidential candidates tell all what happens next week. accuses democratic opponent vilifying her character. bernie couldn't make an argue. against me in this area on policy so he had to resort to innuendo and impugning my character. his attacks caused lasting damage. help sob the way for stressed out college students in texas. buddy the dog will be on the campus of north texas three times a week form residents to destress. all part of a workshop called dog breath. invites students to hang out with watching the office help with coping skills. brian: dogs just fighting with each other. steve: why do they need to destress? jillian: very stressful time right now in college, all right? how about this story? a man gets boxed into his apartment and it's exactly what it sounds like. california u.p.s. driver
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leaving this box wedged under the door knob. the angry customer tweeting, quote. hey, u.p.s., your driver left his package under our door knob and trapped us in our apartment. maintenance worker had to come move the box and free them. u.p.s. has apologized. i just have to tell you i spent the last 15 minutes looking up this social media account. is he a media manager. people have questioned whether or not this is real. look this is real. our handle doesn't turn up. steve: who took the picture? did somebody go let him out and then he. >> jillian: there are a couple different scenarios i have seen on twitter page one is he did recreate it after the fact. this did happen. and another says why would i recreate this? if you want to spend 15 minutes of your life can you look it up on twitter. abby: people will do anything to build their followers? >> i'm not implying that
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would happen here. now to a fox news alert. >> new warnings about n rk. are there getting ready to launch another missile? we will debate it next. steve: could your child's teacher be tied to antifa? this one is. [shouting [bleep] brian: and she is not only one. what's going on with our schools. ♪ [ "livin' thing" by electric light orchestra ] ♪ sailin' away on the crest of a wave, it's like magic ♪
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and it's also a story mail aabout people and while we make more e-commerce deliveries to homes than anyone else in the country, we never forget... that your business is our business the united states postal service. priority: you when i walked through for a cigarette, that's when i knew i had to quit. for real this time. that's why i'm using nicorette. only nicorette gum has patented dual-coated technology for great taste, plus intense craving relief. every great why needs a great how. ♪ ♪ ♪ brian: all right. some quick sports head lines right now. a home run for stanton a lot
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more than anyone ever expected. watch this. >> stanton drives it to right field. that's deep. and it is gone! brian: there it is. home run number 53 breaks the camera. leaving a major dent on the side. a crew quickly subbing it out for a new one that will cost somebody a lot of money. maybe a network. and critics of the nfl continues support collin capner neck. one legend is not. i'm talking about michael harris. he said it neff would have happened when he was playing for the pittsburgh steelers. he said that franco harris said this, quote: we had two of the meanest guys in football who i think would have dealt with it that way and they would have been joe green and jack lambert. harris goes on to say that america does have social issues to deal with you about kaepernick shouldn't bring his team and fellow players into the controversy. very similar to what jim brown said. now to something entirely different. steve? steve: all right. brian. thank you. we have a fox news alert.
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north korea promising more gift packages closed quote for the united states amid reports they have been spotted moving a missile to their east coast preparing for, perhaps, another launch this weekend. the u.s. declares enough is enough. >> his abusive use of missiles and nuclear threats show that he is begging for war. steve: begging for war. >> so what should happen next here for debate morgan ortega served in the state department under president george w. bush and david tafuri former state department official in the obama administration. good morning to both of you. morgan, let's start with you. president trump has made it very clear. he does not want north korea to have nuclear weapon that could possibly hit the united states. you are right. what we are looking at what and we saw u.n. yesterday and president trump's phone call to south korean president last night two significant new diplomatic measures that this administration is taking. first we saw nikki haley propose oil sanctions on north korea. that would be incredibly
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significant step that would involve the chinese. they probably don't want to do it. it would probably almost dismantle their economy it would hurt so much. the other thing we saw last night is president trump speak to the south korean president where they talked about allowing the south koreans to produce more nonnuclear antiballistic missiles which they have wanted to do for some time. although the left likes to argument trump's rhetoric is out of control. i think this administration is pursuing incredibly smart and diplomatic measures to try to avoid war. steve: you know, david, if china really wanted to help here all they would have to do is do what the administration wants them to is to cut off the fuel to north korea. north korea winds up with 80% of their stuff from china. so, if they don't want to shooting war, let's do something about a trade war. >> well, you're correct. china is a linchpin to finding a diplomatic solution because it has a lot of influence in north korea. more influence than any other country. north korea's economy depends on china.
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china says the right things but so far it hasn't done enough to aleve this crisis. so, if the u.s. were to have a policy to put more pressure on china, that's appropriate. i don't think we should start a trade war but we do need to pressure china. and we also need to draw even closer to our allies like japan and south korea. it's a little bit troubling that president trump is threatening a trade war with south korea. just as crisis has arisen when we need to be as close as possible to them when we have a coordinated military and diplomatic response to this crisis. >crisis. steve: morgan, president trump threatened to cut off. influence there is. that china better pay attention because we do $40 billion worth of trade with china every month. so if china wants our money, come on, help out. >> we spent the past three administrations running away from the chinese. running away from the north korean issue. no one has pressured china to the extent that they need to be pressured on this issue. so if the chinese don't want
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a military war. and they don't want an economic war, they are going to have to come to the table with us. because the current situation is unpalatable. so, yes, any sort of sanctions on north korea could cause their economy to really suffer. but the chinese need to be pressured. i think the administration is smart to pressure them and it's not about a trade war. it's about saying there has to be some sort of negotiated solution that we could all come to. it's about time that someone pressured the chinese and the way they should be. no one has done it for three or four decades. steve: david, i think you and morgan are on the same side regarding china. i'm going to give you the final word. >> one of the biggest problems here there is a limit how much sanctions can work. they work in lots of countries like iran for instance. north korea which is authoritarian police state where the leader of north korea is not account in any way. but they don't impact the north korean leader so we have to find a way to coerce
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the north korean leader to curb his erratic behavior. that's the key. military option is on the table and finding other ways to push him to do the right thing. steve: let's see what happens next. let's see what our president does. david and morgan, we thank you for joining us live. >> thank you. >> thanks, steve. steve: coming up on this tuesday. could your child's teacher be tied to antifa. this one is. [shouting] [bleep] off our streets. steve: incredible. she is not the only one. we are going to talk about that. plus, laura ingraham. chris cobach and newt gingrich all join us live. first on this day in 1882 america's first labor day parade was held in new york city. in 2005 president george w. bush nominated john roberts to be chief justice and in 1965, the beatles were topping the charts with this song. marie callender knows that a homemade turkey dinner
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steve: the fbi and the department of homeland security warning more antifa attacks are on the horizon classifying actions as domestic terrorist violence. brian: more democrats have got to push them back. this as we learn radical activists may be teaching your kids. take a look at this middle school teacher in action. >> that's a [bleep] off our streets. [bleep] >> you need to go, boy. >> be nice. [bleep] abby: that is a teacher in there. senior fellow at the independent women's forum.
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he shoe joins us. if i were a parent of a child that was taught by that teacher, i mean, i would be outraged. >> yeah. i sent my three children off to school this morning and i'm fairly confident i feel good about the school that they go to. the parents in berkeley should really be concerned about this. this is very disturbing video that's come out. she has now been charged with assault and with inciting a riot. is this the type of person we want alone in a classroom with children? and to imagine the things that she is telling them about how government works. the importance of the first amendment. this should all concern parents. steve: sure. julie, it should concern parents after she was suspended from work the teacher's union comes out and says you can't do that and she is back to work in no time. >> teacher's union has a habit of putting teachers that might not be fulfilling their duties above children. what i find interesting the double standard where are
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the child safety advocates? where are people who demand we have safe spaces on campus and speech codes and that we not invite speakers who might hurt people's feelings? there is a great deal of hypocrisy going on here. and we have video evidence that this woman clearly has a problem with anger management. brian: julie, is it just this one incident or are there others? >> we have had a problem in this country with teachers beginning to bring in politics in to the classroom, whether that a conversations about climate change, conversations about the election, even sex ed has become a little bit of a tough area. especially for conservative parents who think some subjects are best kept at home and kept within the family. brian: ask questions of your kids when they come home, what are you study and go over and where opinions came from. >> absolutely. abby: thank you so much. good to have you with us this morning. >> thanks for having me.
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steve: stick around on this tuesday that feels like a monday. laura ingram coming up, kris kobach and newt gingrich all coming up live from new york city. uses unique mistpro technology and helps block 6 key inflammatory substances with a gentle mist. most allergy pills only block one. and 6 is greater than one. rethink your allergy relief. flonase sensimist. ♪ . . . .
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your eyes. your tears. ask your eye doctor about restasis multidose™. ♪ >> fox news alert. begging for war? the u.s. declaring enough is enough from kim jong-un. >> our allies in south korea giving a show of force overnight. >> abusive use of missiles and his nuclear threat show that he is begging for war. enough is enough. >> no american president can tolerate a somewhat unhinged north korean leader because if he is not crazy he is reckless. >> the next big battle that he has got and congress has is the budget and tax reform. the president tweeting out, big week coming up. >> the president is expected to announce his administration is ending daca. >> congress needs to do their job and solve the problem. brian: all eyes on hurricane
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irma at this hour. the life-threatening category 4 gaining strength as it sets its sights on u.s. >> harvey death toll is beginning to rise. >> they come to the west houston neighborhood it is still swamped with water. >> texas, we will build and come back stronger than ever. ♪ ♪ ♪ anything can happen, anything can happen ♪ steve: anything can happen. we have three hours eve and every morning to prove that. come up to the mezzanine level.
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"fox & friends." world's number one morning cable news. brian: how many playlistses do you have, abby? abby: just one. i repeat it over and over again. brian: i am only one in america using an ipod. apple told me to stop. they stopped making them. steve: you can hear everything on the phone. brian: i have a wrist pad ipod i thought was cutting-edge. steve: you have it on your phone? just download them on your phone. brian: i have too many credit cards. steve: somebody who ran this weekend, laura ink ingram. ran to see the 'bama-fsu game. we had a great time. we were cheering for jalen hurts who will be in line for the
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heisman. the first game is little, getting kinks out. i understand saban was in his office 9:30 the next morning making sure the process he follows is adhered to. it's a lot of fun. a beautiful stadium. abby: get the kinks out. by the third hour we bring in laura ingraham and things are working perfectly. brian: alabama is going to be pretty good this year. >> they're okay. steve: roll tide. brian: another major issue the president didn't get much sleep over the weekend, he doesn't sleep much anyway. he said i will not make a decision when it comes to the dream act. i will wait to the very last day and announce it on tuesday. it will be 11:00. how do you feel about his decision to seemingly give it a six month stay and give congress six months to work out something more permanent for the people, for kids brought here as children? >> i think that, a couple of things we have to think about here. number one, americans are dreamers too. they have a lot of dreams that
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have not been fulfilled because of a straight roof reasons. a lot of them have to do with politicians not doing what they said they were going to do. american citizens want a better life. they want their kids to be in schools that aren't overcrowded. they want health care that doesn't rise, costs 20%, 18% a year. that is number one. number two, people have to understand what the deferred action for childhood arrivals is all about. we're not talking about mass deportation of people if donald trump doesn't do the middle or left wants him to do on this. it is about giving work permits and federal benefits to people who as advanced in the age of 36. people think we're talking about 10 or 11-year-old kids. the median age of dreamers is 22, 23 years old. those are things you have to take into account. you can have up to three misdemeanors and still apply for this, for this status. i think there are a lot of folks
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listened to my show, turned out for rallies at donald trump loved his america first message. i think there is ways to be compassionate to people, short of giving them work permits and federal benefits which i think what marco rubio campaigned for. donald trump and others even, ted cruz really criticized rubio for. is donald trump moving closer to rubio? that would be kind of shocking if you go back and look at some of the things that he campaigned on. brian: you make solid points as usual but i also think there are a lot of people call my radio show, they were saying i would have to go, i'm in 11th grade, my brother was born here, he is in ninth grade. there is a lot of situations like that. if you came here at two, i would say that you are, this is only country you have really known, right? >> well, i mean, all those things can be true but we still have a nation of laws and when
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we incent provides people who cross our borders illegally, and then create a whole new level of chain migration which people like tom cotton discussed and others, then we do set up a situation where the, if you're just an american-born citizen, you're kind of sitting there, isn't the government supposed to be mostly focused on whether i'm going to be able to pursue my dreams and pursue my happiness? for every sob story and there are many of them and unfortunately one you can pull out for illegal immigrants here i can up you a sob story or difficult circumstance from an american citizen as donald trump called them during the campaign, the forgotten men and women. those forgotten men and women that showed up, hispanics, african-americans, i would say to these people, how will we rebuild houston? don't we have african-americans and poor white people and hispanic people all over this country who are in middle
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america, who are in metropolitan areas, who could go get really important skills in the rebuild of houston? can't we help those people? i mean they're here. they're americans. or have green cards. they need a marketable skill too. so i think there are ways ways to move forward without completely going 180 what he campaigned on. brian: those people agree to sit on split-rail fence waiting for people to come pick them up like a lot of other people were doing. >> i don't think americans are lazy. donald trump campaigned on the fact that americans have traditionally worked at every level of society. we survived the became the world's greatest superpower without open borders and people coming here illegally. we did survive without dreamers. steve: laura, the president, then candidate donald trump i will end daca program. i love the dreamers. we love the dreamers.
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now what he has done he has, ultimately he could keep his campaign promise while at the same time do what barack obama did not do, and that would get legislative remedy, going to give them six months to figure out what to do. the president just tweeted two minutes ago, congress get ready to do your job -- daca. >> that's, that's fine. but we know what congress does. i mean the president has unique authority here. paul ryan, marco rubio, jeff flake, thom tillis, they, none of these people could win their own state if they ran for president. they didn't, and rubio didn't win florida. i like all these people personally. they did not have the nationalist, populist great instincts that president trump has. his instincts politically, when he ran for president were frankly brilliant. he beat the bushes, the obamas, big business, the media.
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he beat them all. not by moving to the middle on all the issues they say you're a mean person if you're not for the dreamers. you're a terrible, mean person. that is not what middle america said on donald trump. abby: there is legal side, laura. there is the emotional side. that is what former president obama is focused on. >> of course. abby: our producers pulled up sound back from 2011 talking about exactly that the roll of congress and the roll of the commander-in-chief. let's roll that type tape. >> with respect to the notion i can suspend deportations through executive order that is just not the case. because there are laws on the books that congress has passed. congress has passes the law. the executive branch's job is to enforce and implement those laws. then the judiciary has to interpret the laws. there are enough laws on the books by congress are very clear
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in terms how we have to enforce our immigration system. that for me to simply through executive order ignore those congressional mandates would not conform with my appropriate role as president. steve: so he was saying he couldn't do what he did and it is up to congress which is what president trump is going to do. >> that's true but executive order that he did sign, which was, you know, which was, geared toward giving work permits to people who are here illegally can be rescinded. that status can be removed by the chief executive officer of the united states. there are a lot of people around donald trump right now who are urging him, if you don't do this, they will think you're lacking in compassion. and i know he watches the show. what i will say to him, remember how you won the presidency. you won the presidency by defying all of these conventional wisdom mongers and
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usual suspects doing bidding of big business, silicon valley, all the other interest groups like la raza and all the rest. you won by standing for forgotten man of every background of every creed, every religion. those people need jobs. they need the government to do its job which includes the rule of law. we don't rule by emotion. we rule by law. if congress wants to push a basically a defacto amnesty of a million people, and think that somehow middle america will stand up and cheer, good luck. abby: they have got midterms a year from now, laura. >> good luck. brian: even senator tom cotton says legalize, he supports legalization of the daca deal. >> no, no. he says to do that if you do the raise act which limits legal immigration. i would add border patrol agents, wall. give it to congress, say, good luck, i mean, i don't think that would have been as popular in ohio and wisconsin and
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pennsylvania on the campaign trail. if that is what he was shouting from the podium during the campaign. i don't think people would have stood up and cheered. i think they wanted him to be the man he campaigned on on this issue. i interested in hearing my radio listeners today. brian: i'm sure he wants to do comprehensive, right now the sent 5th deal puts a deadline on this element of it. >> remember who elected you. that is what i would say. abby: maybe putting them on notice. >> one more thing, guys, i know we're out of time, electorally these million people, do republicans paul ryan think they will turn out and suddenly be reading adam smith and becoming republicans? okay. look at demographic changes in the country. see how that will work for republicans. steve: three hours now jeff sessions will announce, and congress can work on it next six months to see if they can do something about it. always a pleasure, laura. she will edit "lifezette"
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on-line and do a radio show. abby: a busy day. brian: march shoulder to shoulder with a terror leader. so mayor de blasio says he deserves a parade too. does he? abby: people marching pushing for a minimum wage hike. if stuart varney says if they have their way, they could be out of a job. oh, the irony. ♪ to most people, i look like most people. but on the inside, i feel chronic, widespread pain. fibromyalgia may be invisible to others, but my pain is real. fibromyalgia is thought to be caused by overactive nerves. lyrica is believed to calm these nerves. i'm glad my doctor prescribed lyrica. for some, lyrica delivers effective relief for moderate to even severe fibromyalgia pain.
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for any sort of discomfort in yours. preparation h. get comfortable with it. ♪ abby: welcome back. thousands of workers and june labor supporters marching pushing the fight for $15 campaign. our next guest says they have it wrong and they risk earning less. steve: here to explain. fox business network's stuart varney. i get it. you're at minimum wage, want as much as possible. what we learned for instance, through seattle, this is backfiring on people. >> absolutely right. the 15-dollar per hour movement i think actually in retreat. some places voted for much
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higher minimum wage now reversed that decision. for example, the state of maine. they voted last november, put up the minimum wage. they have just voted in june, bring it back down again because jobs were frankly disappearing. same story in st. louis, missouri. put up the minute women wage. get the reaction. down it comes. as you mentioned in seattle, a study of their minimum wage legislation, shows employers are hiring fewer people, and employing people especially in restaurants, for shorter hours. the bottom line, if you put labor costs up that much, you will have fewer people doing work at that level because employers can't afford to hire at that level. brian: there is an option, isn't there? >> technology. brian: i was in restaurant the other day, told me, there is no waitress. i went on a flat screen. saw the whole menu. ordered it. they only deliver the food. there is no more waitress. >> go to newark airport. use the example all the time, newark airport or any airport,
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the big restaurant with wait staff, are replaced by tablets. a runner brings you food from the kitchen to the table. brian: they have to explain to you how to use it but that is another story. >> that is for me. thank you, brian. abby: legislature handle this. why not let capitalism -- >> my point entirely. do not try to legislate higher inwages. that that politicizes whole thing. supply of labor at that price. that is how you do it. brian: market force, getting $15 at minimum wage. a lot of people making 15, they got two raises. they want moreses. there is response to minimum wage pushing up the floor. that will cut into margins to make the business adjust. >> you're absolutely right. you mentioned the floor, since when every single job in america had to pay enough money as a living wage for a person with a -- steve: you know why? it is all politics.
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>> its about unions. unions are demanding this. they need more dues-paying members. they're losing the members. it's a way getting back on track. it is not working. they're in retreat. abby: look what happened in maine. brian: unions want fees. do you want to give some of that $15 to union fees if they want to unionize to get higher minimum wage? >> are you asking me? brian: that is part of process. >> of course that is part of the process. $15 an hour. you have three hours. we have three minutes. brian: that is all you need. abby: see you stuart. steve: president trump already being slammed for a decision on the dreamers that he hasn't even had his attorney general announce yet. kansas secretary of state kris kobach wants to know. what about the americans? he will join us live. brian: late to class. pay a fine. new policy of one high school. what do you think. one of your older brothers is
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always late, he is senior, you're a freshman, you're stuck with the car with him. mom will pay a lot. ♪ super-cool notebooks, done. that's mom taking care of business. and with the "25 cent event", office depot officemax takes care of mom! now, all this just 25 cents each! ♪ taking care of business ♪ i'm... i'm so in love with you. ♪ ♪ whatever you want to do... ♪ ...is alright with me. ♪ ooo baby let's...
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jillian: good tuesday morning, back with a fox news alert. moments ago, hurricane irma intensifying to a category 5. the powerful life-threatening monster storm packed with wind of 155 miles per hour. florida under state of emergency as the hurricane sets its sights on the u.s. other island like puerto rico expected to feel irma's wrath today. expected to take aim at
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south florida where millions are preparing for the worse. sergeant steve perez drowned in his car driving to work during harvey's flooding. his wife urged him to stay home but he told her, quote, i have got work to do. the 60-year-old houston cop was with his department for more than three decades. leaves behind two adult children. you know longer need a ticket to hang around at the pittsburgh airport today. it becomes the first since 9/11, allah non-flyers past security. they have to check at special desk to have their name checked against the no-fly list. the airport wants non-flyers to have access to the restaurants and shops year-round. abby. abby: thank you, jillian. future of talk, president obama's so-called dreamer program, protects hunch thousands of immigrants brought here illegally as children. there is a catch. congress may have a six-month window to react and will they
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react. we have kris kobach, kansas secretary of state and president of the integrity commission. >> great to be here. abby: you will hear the announcement a couple hours from now. he says end daca and end it now. what are your thoughts. >> daca violates the united states constitution in two different ways t violates three different federal statutes. not just my opinion, you had lower federal courts already say that it is illegal and should end now. we shouldn't say we recognize it is illegal and we recognize it is violating our constitution but let's keep violating the constitution for six months or however long. we need to end it. we need to look after united states citizens first. it is a tough job market right now for u.s. citizens out there. young people coming out of high school right now, unemployment is 17%. underemployment, would like to full-time working part time, is 31%. for college graduates, 12% of
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unemployment. it's a tough job market. those in congress saying president should not get rid of daca amnesty. should remember our young u.s. citizens are having a tough time. why would you give amnesty to one million aliens to compete with them. abby: donald trump in his base in the campaign trail, got them riled up the mentality of america first. you point out the legal side of this. there is the emotional side. what do you do about people already here, 800,000 dreamers. what do you do about separating families? not everyone is a criminal. a lot are innocents. they have been living here most, all of their life. they have gone to school here. how do you balance the emotional side of this? >> let's remember, one of the things that the open borders says always says they're just children. no, average age, median age is 25 daca illegal alien. they could be 36 years old to get amnesty. they claim to come in before the
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age of 16. they're not children. secondly worried about keeping families together, illegal alien parents who brought them here should be removed to the home country along with the daca recipient alien. there is nothing wrong asking people to go home. if they have been able to violate our laws for 10 years or more, congratulations you got a huge benefit from the american taxpayer. got best education in the western hemisphere. if you want to go home, come in line and come in legally with hundreds of thousands of fellow countrymen doing the right way. abby: what will stop then parents coming over here to leave their children in the united states to have much better life? some, sound like go over to congress. what do you think will happen there? we have seen speaker paul ryan siding with nancy pelosi on emotional side of things we've been talking about. what do you think congress will do with this? >> well, the dream act amnesty, why these people are called dreamers has been in front of congress two dozen times since
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2001. it failed each time. given that track record it is likely to fail again. i hope it fails again because the last thing you want to do is create an amnesty, give work permits to 1.7 million people who will be competing against the most vulnerable of our u.s. citizens in the job market. i hope congress doesn't pass amnesty. if past is precedent they probably won't but bottom line, it is congress' job. the executive brand does not have the authority to do this. abby: even barack obama said that back in 2011 if you look back at tape we've been playing all morning. u.s. attorney general seven sessions making big announcement on talkca. we'll play it live on fox. i want to get your thoughts on a job temporarily blocking a texas law cracking down on sanctuary cities? what is going on here? >> it is a federal district court judge. she ruled temporarily the texas law that stops sanctuary cities is preliminarily enjoined. she found that it was in
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conflict with federal law. i reviewed the opinion. i think it is very weak. i don't think this injunction will last very long. ultimately the district court or more likely the fifth circuit court of appeals will overturn that. will allow anti-sanctuary city to go into effect. remember, congress has been trying to stop sanctuary cities. there is federal law on the books making sanctuary cities illegal. that is one of the reasons why i think the judge's temporary decision ultimately will not stand. abby: we'll see where it goes. good to have you here, secretary kobach. we'll see what happens on daca, what congress ends up doing. >> thank you. abby: fox news alert. north korea promising more gift packages for the united states as the rogue nation appears to be gearing up for another missile test. we're live in south korea right after this. also he marched shoulder to shoulder with terror leader. new york city mayor bill de blasio now says that he deserves his own parade too. does he?
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we'll have more on that. ♪ i am totally blind. and non-24 can throw my days and nights out of sync, keeping me from the things i love to do. talk to your doctor, and call 844-214-2424. listen up, heart disease.) you too, unnecessary er visits. and hey, unmanaged depression, don't get too comfortable. we're talking to you, cost inefficiencies and data without insights. and fragmented care- stop getting in the way of patient recovery
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experience amazing. it's a highly contagious disease that can be really serious... especially for my precious new grandchild. it's whooping cough. every family member, including those around new babies, should talk to their doctor or pharmacist about getting vaccinated. ♪ steve: 25 minutes before the top of the hour. the entertainment community coming together to help those impacted by hurricane harvey. hand in hand, benefit for hurricane harvey telethon will air next week on fox broadcast stations and every other major broadcast network. they will feature a special performance by country music icon and texas native george strait. brian: it may have been his initiative. jaime foxx will be there, matthew mcconaughey from
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texas, blake shelton and reese witter spoon. abby: airs live on fox news stations and replay on the west coast at 8:00 p.m. steve: watch for that a week from today. meanwhile back with a fox news alert. north korea promising quote, more gift packages, whatever that means, on the way to the u.s. of a. brian: rockets and explosions, that is what i would imagine. as the rogue regime moves a missile to a coastal position preparing for another possible launch. abby: senior foreign affairs correspondent greg palkot is live in seoul, south korea with the very latest. greg, how are people feeling where you are right at this moment? reporter: greeting from an edgy seoul, south korea, guys, where people are telling us they're looking at plans to get out just in case. this amid reports of north korea possibly getting ready to do something else that is, they're moving an intercontinental ballistic missile, according to the reports to the east coast of
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that country. no official confirmation after possible launch. it is confirmed that the south korean military is very active. another day of live fire exercises, this time on the sea with a group of ships, including a guided missile vessel all in response to response to this weekend's nuclear test of the north korean regime of kim jong-un. one analyst described paired with a ballistic missile a long-range missile, this could be a american city buster. no wonder folks are making plans. japanese government reportedly figuring out to get 60,000 citizens out of this country in case. there are 200,000 americans here, including 28,000 american troops. there are exercises to move them b. one final note, russian president vladmir putin says i would quote, is it could would be a global catastrophe if war broke out. the folks are listening closely
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to what president trump says, and possibly does. back to you. david: wow. steve: putin says no more sanctions. abby: hold hands and sing cue bayou. brian: they call the freeze, freeze initiative. you stop your military exercise and they will freeze -- nikki haley said, are you kidding me? we're being threatened and you want us to dial it down? steve: greg palkot in south korea. julia has headlines. >> an aspiring pastor charged with murdering his wife after he claim he drank too much cold medicine makes his first court appearance. matthew phelps woke up and found his wife stabbed in death in his bed. >> i was dreaming. i turned on the lights and she is dead on the floor. i think i did it. >> earlier a criminal defense
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attorney revealed possible phelps could walk free. this was about what this man was thinking at time of the murder. if he didn't know what he was doing, he could very well have a strong defense. jillian: lauren phelps was laid to rest yesterday. months after marching in puerto rican day parade that honored a convicted terrorist group leader, new york city mayor feels a parade should be held in his honor. telling "new york" magazine, when i think crime gone down four years, graduation rates up, test scores up, more jobs than ever in our history, you would assume they would be having parades out in the streets. end quote. be on time, pay a fine, a new policy for utah students. the first offense getting them a warning. if students are late to class a second time, they will pay a 3-dollar fine. after that going up to five bucks. if they can't pay they take detention instead. money collected will go toward a school fund going directly back to the students. >> in --
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this one will blow your mind. iconic videogame character mario, no longer a plumber. >> yahoo! jillian: according to the new nintendo profile, mario worked as a plumber a long time ago. he focuses on sports and racing. fans on twitter not taking the news well. one tweeting quote, what the heck? nothing is sacred anymore. another tweet reading quote, the vanishing working class. just a second ago, right before steve actually called me to come out here i said, what will happen to luigi? all the attention on mario right now. kate in the control room, looked it up, unknown at this point. steve: next thing we find out "ms. pac-man," not related to pac-man. >> what is going on. steve: whole world is crazy. abby: thanks, jillian. fox news alert, hurricane irma is monster category 5 as it
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barrels toward the u.s. janice dean with the very latest on the storm's path coming up next. steve: first former speaker newt gingrich will join us live. stick around. we'll be right back. 26.2 mil, that's a marathon. and he does it with dr. scholl's. only dr. scholl's has massaging gel insoles that provide all-day comfort to keep him feeling more energized. dr. scholl's. born to move. there's nothing more important than your health. so if you're on medicare or will be soon, you may want more than parts a and b here's why. medicare only covers about 80% of your part b medical expenses.
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what bad back?gels work so fast you'll ask what pulled hammy? advil liqui - gels make pain a distant memory nothing works faster stronger or longer what pain? advil. abby: back now with a fox news alert. hurricane irma intensifying to a category 5. now the powerful life-threatening monster storm packed with 175 mile-an-hour wind. it is only getting stronger believe it or not. brian: florida and puerto rico understates of emergency. they're bracing for the worst and they should. after witnessing the destruction in texas. steve: janice dean joins us right now. janice at 175 miles an hour which is what hurricane irma, that is the strongest storm in how long? >> 10 years. katrina at its peak was 175 miles an hour.
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the last time we saw hurricane this strong in strength in 2007. that is perfect textbook hurricane. very rare you see a cat-5 on satellite. now we got it. according to the national hurricane center we'll see cat-5 for next several days. weakening a little bit as it potentially goes across the bahamas. this is the cone of uncertainty. don't pay attention to the center of the storm. it potentially could go west. it could go east. could deal with east coast storm. a south florida storm. west coast florida, storm or keep that in mind. category 5, highest on saffir-simpson scale this is very dangerous storm. everyone in the path make preparations now. we have a few days ahead. computer models coming into agreement, south florida, keys, bahamas, east coast, west coast, gulf of mexico. pay attention. we'll keep on it. steve: get prepared right now. brian: 16 minutes before the top
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of the hour. president trump's latest tweet. i will share it with you. i am allowing japan and south korea to buy substantially increased amount of highly sophisticated military equipment from the united states. i know that was a request from south korea, they want to maybe lift the missile ban, the amount of missiles in their country. abby: something we've been talking about all morning long. let's bring in newt gingrich, former speaker of the house, author of "understanding trump." when you talk about dealing with china, what is most threatening to them, not necessarily sanctions, speaker. losing dominance in the region. nothing speaks of losing dominance, building up military of places like japan and south korea. >> well, the chinese i think are in a real box now because on one hand, they're primary sponsors of the north korean dictatorship. if they were to pull all of their support, it probably would be real risk of collapse. but they also know that the, they don't understand how kim
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jong-un and his power structure works. they don't know if pulling out all of those, means, for example, he would launch a war. there is no evidence right now that he would necessarily surrender or give in or become reasonable. and i think the chinese are very worried about the next steps. they're watching korea, south korea, and japan begin to arm in serious way. that will affect the chinese range of activities. i think that, they probably are faced with decisions at least as big as those president trump faces. steve: sure of the story out this morning, apparently south korean intel, north korea is starting to build up, sound like they're about to pop off another missile. mr. speaker another item we want to talk about, something else the president tweeted out about an hour ago. congress get ready to do your job, talkca. what he is talking about this morning, attorney general jeff sessions will come out and reveal the president's plan to phase out daca, say instead,
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because it is unconstitutional. congress you have six months. if you want to do something, do something. what do you think about the plan he has got? >> this is one of the best examples of real we've seen from president trump. he campaigned last year the fact that president obama's executive order was unconstitutional. his vice president, governor of indiana, thorizeed his attorney general to file a lawsuit saying it was unconstitutional. everyone of the president's major legal advisors says it was unconstitutional. he knew to ash trailly stop it would put 800,000 people at risk, who came here as children, who really, in many cases have no other country in their experience than the united states. and so i think he has come up with a very powerful model. congress, which did not want him to roll back arbitrarily, congress now has to do its job. it should be doable. shouldn't be that hard. lindsey graham for example, has
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a pretty good bill already, would allow daca to be codified by congress which would meet conservative constitutional objectives to an executive order. would allow the dreamers to stay in the u.s. without risk. i think actually real leadership on president trump's part to find a path that allows him to both protect dreamers and enforce the constitution simultaneously. brian: i have mean a lot of people would say we just heard speculated from kris kobach, listen the rules are the rules. you ran one way, stick with it. what about the other people waiting to get in from kenya and cuba, don't they matter? they waited in line, did things the right way. their parents didn't. do you understand the other side of that argument? >> sure. but i also know in the american tradition, and in the anglo-saxon tradition there are certain cold hard facts. 800,000 people here right now. vast majority came because their parents brought them. many, many cases they hit rally no, no other country. there is a factual question, are
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you prepared to cause huge pain to 800,000 people over theoretical principle? what trump said he will enforce the constitution, that keeps his campaign promise, but give congress the opportunity to fix it so it won't be unconstitutional. that is very practical approach. brian: would you tie the wall to that? >> i would not make 800,000 people hostages. i would say, let's fix that, and let's fix it, the wall. they're both doable. but i wouldn't want to diminish 800,000 people's lives into being a poker chip in a negotiating game. abby: can congress do this in six months? >> congress could do it in three weeks if they focus. this just -- we have a bill, that i've been working with on with several people that is a clean modification of this, says here is how to do it. lindsey graham has a bill. there is a bill in the house. it is not a technical problem. it's a question of getting in a
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room, finding the votes, picking one vehicle. you could put it on the continuing resolution. put it up as a free-standing bill. there are a lot of ways to get it done. they should get it done. steve: would be very revealing how some republicans you wondered how they felt about immigration, now their hand will be revealed. brian: thanks, newt gingrich. >> this is the worst case, by the way, because it is relatively innocent people who have been living in america for a long time. brian: or the easiest. abby: tough one. good to have you here. we'll see what happens. coming up, could your child's teacher be antifa. >> [bleep] get off our streets. get the [bleep] off our streets. >> here you go, boy. >> abby: turns out the middle school teacher is tied to an antifa group. she is not the only one. >> bleep. bleep. noise)
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>> i'm bill hemmer. irma will be with us at least a week if not longer. let's hope for the best. latest on the storm. decision day for daca. stay tuned for that announcement. congress is back. packed schedule. what gets done in september. is north korea about to test us again. join us in six minutes, top of the hour on "america's newsroom." ♪ brian: public school teacher shocking the nation. her violent radical views caught on camera. >> get the [bleep] off our streets. get the [bleep] off our streets. >> here you go, boy. >> be nice. be nice. >> get off our streets. brian: our next guest says only more proof, parents have the right to demand school choice for their kids. here to explain. author of this book. corrupt classroom.
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lances you think that was an example of what is wrong with public schools, in what way? >> i think what that, clip showed is that, not just, people who have views, all teachers have views. but when it comes to things that result in violence, protest, that is when certainly crosses the line. when you see that, that this happens not just in berkeley, for example, or northern california. it happens across the country. brian: what do you base your studies on? >> look at all the reports that have been reported throughout the country, you have seen that teachers who, are out there, who are making anti-trump comments, who are shooting president trump's image in classrooms with water guns, putting his image up on pinatas, urging students to whack at it, those incidents are terrible things that children should not have to endure in the classroom. brian: part of that president trump wants vouchers, vouchers
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for kids that can't afford private school. want to give the these people that option. >> that's right. president trump has been a great champion for school choice. if you endure a politicized classroom. endure a poor safety record in the school, bias around social engineering in the classroom you should have a choice. brian: in your book, corrupt classroom, can't get the voucher for private school. go down to the school council, let your voice be heard. >> unless you make waves you will not have the opportunity for your kid of the education you would like to see. brian: democrats say they're champions of the working class would be pro-vouchers to give same options people with money. all in the book. the corrupt classroom. lance, thank you very much. that is your back to school message. more "fox & friends" in a moment. don't go away. stuffy nose?
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fantastic. they've been working overtime. >> senator tom cotton and danica patrick cooking with friends with governor huckabee. i can't wait. run to radio if you have to run from tv. >> bill: it is now official. hurricane irma has strengthened to a category 5. path still uncertain. florida has already declared a state of emergency. much more on what is already a monster storm coming up in "america's newsroom." meanwhile, congress goes back to work in washington and president trump had a big fat message for them late last night. do your job. harvey aid, and other things. julie, nice to see you. >> good to see you,
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