tv FOX Friends FOX News September 18, 2017 3:00am-6:00am PDT
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furry creature was amazingly not injured. rob: finally the ugly. the kansas city chief never saw it coming. cameraman plowing right into her. she quickly bounced up to keep cheering. so embarrassing. heather: "fox & friends" starts right now. bye. >> president trump to take center stage as leaders around the globe convene in new york city. >> it's a new day at the gun. >> she is going to promote and advocate for the strength of democratic values. >> this is not a president who will apologize for america. this is a president who will affirm the united states' standing in the world. >> led by anthony lamar. >> they shouldn't be nervous about me carrying my weapon. i have never killed anybody. >> a carnival worker falls from a ferris wheel after cart set sideways. >> a another storms. >> maria strengthening to a hurricane. expected to just keep
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getting stronger. >> lights, camera, politics. liberal hollywood unleashing on president trump. >> i want to thank trump for making black people number one on the most oppressed list. >> don't talk to us about division in the country when you are going to use your platform to further divide the country. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ steve: live from new york city. if you are wondering why challenger the eagle is here and a bunch of kids and they are waving today it is constitution day on our plaza. 1789 the u.s. constitution was adopted. and today we are celebrating
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with nick adams who has written a great version especially for kids. brian: his organization flags just put out is released today on "fox & friends." student's constitution takes that sacred document signed in philadelphia and makes it come alive for kids so they can understand. ainsley: we can learn a thing or two out of this book. this is absolutely fabulous. i want to take this home for my daughter. pete: i think you can. ainsley: one of the best thing about being a parent you get to learn all this over again. steve: if you were in a hurry the first time as we all were. brian is off today. pete is. in ainsley great to have you back. ainsley: i went down to south beach for the weekend with a group of girlfriends. we had that planned for weeks even before this hurricane. everything is good down there. there are some people on the plane that worked for fema, for emergency responding groups. it's awesome to see everyone come together. the weather was great this he could would. and people were -- the restaurants were getting fuller and fuller and fuller
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as the days progressed. steve: the west coast is still pretty banged up. they are getting pachesd up. i understand tom price, the secretary for health and human services is going to survey the damage in keys later today. pete: absolutely. steve: meanwhile today, the president of the united states is going to be returning to new york city and he will create what is historically the biggest traffic jam of the year. ainsley: it is really is that's what we think about in new york when we hear the u.n. is meeting. steve: united nations general assembly convenes today for 10 days. pete: he will not take the podium today. that will be tomorrow a lot of speculation in anticipation of what he will use -- it is historic platform especially for the first time a president a president like donald trump who has had strong opinions. ainsley: he has been very critical of the u.n. he is he said the united nations has such great potential but right now it is just a club for people to get together, talk, and have a good time. so sad. he is going to meet with world leaders who are signed
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on to his 10-point plan to reform the u.n. and change it and make it better. steve: john moody, an executive here at fox news. he has something posted on foxnews.com. what he writes is what diplomats need to know president trump means every word of what is he going to tell you which is this: the united states is done for being blamed for everything that's going wrong in the world and paying to fix it. ainsley: that's true. steve: sounds a lot like what the president said when he was a private citizen before he assumed the presidency just in december of last year. >> the u.n. has such tremendous potential, not living up to its potential. there is tremendous potential but it is not living up. when you see the united nations solving problems? they don't. they cause problems. so, if it lives up to the potential it's a great thing. if it doesn't, it's a waste of time and money. pete: what an amazing moment is he going to have. u.n. stands for peace and security human rights and
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development. when he gets to stand at the podium nation stats and armies defend western states speak hard truths to this group that loves to meet, cocktail hour, sanctions, international revolutions and small anti-western countries like to group together and use the u.n. as a bludgeon against america. is he going to turbulent tables. ainsley: nikki haley will help him do that she was excellent pick for u.n. ambassador. steve: whether or not they are going to do anything with the paris accord and iran deal. pete: that's a big one. a lot of the signaling. there are still questions inside this administration which way they are going to go. h.r. mcmaster sees the country differently than others do. some equivocation, at least the perception of such. he will be able to shut the door on that if he wants to. steve: kellyanne conway is going to be with us here shortly. she will give us a preview. in the meantime it's 6:06 in new york city. we have a fox news alert. under siege after a third straight night of violent
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protests over the eacquittal of a former now police officer. ainsley: police arresting dozens of criminals and agitatoragevandalizing businessd causing significant damage. pete: griff with the latest on those clashes. >> good morning, steve, ainsley and pete. third night of violent protesters. the pattern is the same. it starts out peaceful with marches during the day. by nightfall what police are calling here criminals taking to the streets and just destroying small businesses just like this. you see that kid kicking in nail center last night. over 80 arrests last night. the total of three days over 120. it has caused a dozen or more officers who have been attacked by evening protesters, these agitators to be injured. fortunately none life-threatening, certainly the sort of thing you don't want to see. the city obviously three years after ferguson and
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what we saw play out there tonight. last night rather overnight. 80 arrests. the largest of the protest that we have seen so are fall. the local leaders, the mayor and chief lawrence o'toole saying this will not be tolerated. nonetheless, we talked to. so protesters, including one of their own. state representative bruce franks jr. here is what he had to say about the violence happening in the streets. take a listen. >> systematic racism. systematic injustice and it has to change. >> you have got hurt folks that feels like a system that's failed them. so i understanding folks being upset about broken windows. we have broken lives out here. that doesn't compare. >> now, over the weekend, we did talk with governor who tried to get in front of this. mobilizing the national guard here in missouri as well as giving the police every confidence that he has their back and this sort of violence won't be tolerated. we are told later this morning.
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there may be another march gathering as the people try and come to work on monday. but we will see the hope here with all leaders is that this does not continue to escalate. guys? pete: griff, thanks a lot. ainsley: i was reading they splattered red paint on the mayor's house and broke in a window of her house. pete: how does it advance their cause to kick in the window at a nail is a lob. at what point do you totally undue any legittism you may have. steve: unlike where they let protesters break up whatever they want to, the mayor and governor and police chief made it very clear if you break the law you will go to jail and a bunch of people did last night. pete: last night a lot of people were watching football but there was other stuff going on, too. steve: after 60i 6 "60 minutes" it was the hollywood. colbert opened up with song and dance number.
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if you missed it, the whole show morpsd into one great big we have a president named donald trump and we don't like him much. ainsley: shocker. celebrities. take a look. >> if he had won an hemi, i bet he wouldn't have run for president. the president has complained repeatedly that the emmys are rigged. emmys go to the winner of the popular vote unlike the presidency. >> mr. president, here is your emmy. >> back in 1980 in that movie we refused to be controlled by a sexist egotistical lying bigot. >> in 2017 we still refuse to be controlled by assess isn't a egotistical lying hypocritical bigot. >> i want to thank trump for making black people number one on the most oppressed list. he is the reason i'm probably up here. >> on a personal note i want to say thank you to hillary clinton for your grace and grit. and thank you my mother and sister. i'm so proud of you, mom. >> a little pro-hillary in
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there too, of course. >> the lady who played hillary on saturday night live. >> it's so predictable. you know, you want to laugh. steve: i beg to differ. there was a moment in the open that was absolutely unpredictable. pete: true. steve: stephen colbert was talking about how many people would be watching the 6th annual emmy awards how big would the crowd be? he went then to somebody who pushed out a podium from stage left yep, it's that guy from the white house. >> there anyone who could say how big the audience is? sean, do you know? [laughter] >> this will be the largest audience to witness an emmy, period. >> melissa mccarthy of
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course they showed her because she played sean spicer on "saturday night live" pulling out that podium. ainsley: is he not working at the white house now obviously. he has an agent. steve: he was out in hollywood last week. ainsley: got paid to go and do this. steve: i bet he was doing a rehearsal last week. have you got to figure that the president, donald trump is, probably watching that show and just thinking this is great. i'm driving them crazy. pete: triggered an entire audience and talking about me all night long. and maybe he inadvertently helps the ratings as well. or not. did you actually watch? let us know friends@foxnews.com. did you watch the emmys? do you care what a bunch of liberals clapping like seals for each other care about our president or not? steve: that's harsh. pete: it's kind of true. if you all agree, is it really courageous? i don't think so. steve: i like the idea of the seals. [laughter] pete. ainsley: let's hand it over to jillian who has headlines
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for us. you did a great job hurricane coverage. jillian: thank you very much. ainsley: i loved the live shots at the gas station. jillian: tankers pulling up? we had a hard time finding gas. it was definitely a big problem down there we are dealing with other headlines this morning, guys. let's get to that right now. including. this brand new chilling video possibly showing the london bucket bomber on his way to launch his attack. you can see a man walking with a bag similar to the one used to disguise an explosive that hurt 30 people. the surveillance clip filmed near a house raided by police belonging to an elderly couple ha has raised hundreds of refugee children including 18-year-old arrested in connection with the attack. a 21-year-old syrian refugee also under arrest as the u.k. lowers it's terror threat. the four americans injured in an hatching attack south of france are all boston college students. studying abroad outside a train station. two were treated for facial
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burns. the other two for shock. they are expected to be okay. police do not believe this was terror and describe the suspect as, quote, disurebsd. a new round of protests on display in the nfl. seattle seahawks defensive end michael bennet isn't just sitting during the national anthem anymore. is he now taking his protest to the field. take a look. here is he raising his fist into the air using the black power salute to celebrate a sack. ben can you recollectly accusing police racial profiling and exhe isive force at an arrest in casino last month. look at headlines. i will send it back to you guys. it's another step that we're seeing this play out on the field. ainsley: thank you, jillian. a fox news alert this morning. this someone of the london subway bombers, one of the suspected terrorists carrying a bag from his foster home to refugees 90 minutes before the explosion. former jihaddist turned counter terror exper exexpert
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mubin shaikh. pete: putting at risk don't use the t word when describing that's chelsea manning. >> are you an american traitor. >> no, i'm not. i believe that did i the best i could. us new grandchild. it's whooping cough. every family member, including those around new babies, should talk to their doctor or pharmacist about getting vaccinated. bp engineered a fleet of 32 brand new ships with advanced technology, so we can make sure oil and gas get where they need to go safely. because safety is never being satisfied. and always working to be better.
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what do you think about is that? >> harvard university changed their minds about making chelsea manning a visiting fellow on campus last week a dozen students at harvard want her reinstated. our next guest is a junior and says the school is right. for uninviting her. terrifying moments on a ferris wheel a carnival worker take as huge fall trying to rescue two kids.
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with speeds of 150 megabits per second across our entire network, to more companies, in more locations, than at&t. we do business where you do business. ♪ ♪ ainsley: here are quick headlines for you. the united states threatening to shut down the embassy in cuba after 21 diplomats got sick in havana after mysterious sonic attacks. >> serious issues with respect to the harm certain individuals have suffered. we have brought some of those people home. it's under review. ainsley: those americans suffered injuries like nausea, hearing loss and even mild brain damage. the cuban government has denied any involvement. and a major defense policy bill is expected to pass the senate today boosting the pentagon's budget by $700 billion and preventing the closure of excess military bases.
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the proposed bill also expands the u.s.' missile and defense system by more than $8 billion in the wake of continued aggression from north korea. pete? pete: thanks, ainsley. she leaked classified information and put american lives at risk. but chelsea manning still doesn't think that she did anything wrong. >> are you an american traitor? >> no. i'm not. and i believe that i did the best i could in my circumstances to make an ethical decision. pete: manning a former private in the army turned traitor making those arguments as several groups at harvard university are making a push to have her reinstated as a visiting fellow at the harvard kennedy school. harvard decided to let manning speak at the school but will not be giving her a year long visiting fellowship. ken hefner is the president of the republican club and he agrees with the dean of the kennedy school to revoke that fellowship. thanks for being there. first of all, as a republican, at harvard, do
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things like this surprise you anymore the fact that the kennedy school made that invitation to the first place to the the rest of the world views as a traitor. >> is it doesn't surprise me. things we have endured at harvard have been quite shocking. i think they ultimately ended up making the right decision. first and foremost i'm a believer in free speech. you have the right to speak at harvard. when we are talking who we are giving visiting fellowships too. public servants. people can look up to and say these are people who served our country. chelsea manning convicted of portraying our nation and putting american lives at risk to our enemies. that's not the kind of person that we should be going and saying hey, this is someone who we should be elevating. pete: question, ken, do you think most of your classmates or your faculty can you draw a distinction if you like would agree with your position or they should have kept this visiting
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fellowship. >> well, i think just from the vibes i'm getting, most people wanted her to keep the fellowship. i think a lot of folks get emotional about this issue. and for me i'm just looking at it as a plain and simple issue. what did she do? what are her actions. and how do those reflect on the type of people we should be having as fellows. pete: released 221,000 diplomatic cables. 240,000 army reports iraq and afghanistan from wikileaks endangering the lives of troops serving in those war zones as well as people representing them. groupings at harvard want to see her visiting fellowship reinstated. they put out a statement that said. this they said with the draw of chelsea manning's fellowship is outrage. critics not concerned with the law or safety of soldiers take issue with her exposure of unchecked military violence. do you think these groups who rant the harvard
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anti-islamophobia network. a lot of labor groups, harvard queer students and allies, do you think they are out of touch with say the rest of america views the actions of someone like former private bradley manning? >> well, i definitely agree that there is a harvard bubble in a lot of ways. i think on their, there are channels for people who go and raise issues when there are abuses in our intelligence community that do not involve breaking the law. if you truly believe in the rule of law, if you feel that the law is being violated, it doesn't make it right for you then to go and violate the law. and i think that in many ways this is a bit of an example of people being out of touch with the majority of americans think who see her as someone who is a convicted felon who has betrayed our country and that's what the courts have said. pete: absolutely. ken haeffner. graduate. i almost would have pulled my diploma out had they kept
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that fellowship. it's offensive. ken, thank you. i appreciate it we have another fox news alert here. all eyes on the atlantic. hurricane setting site on the caribbean and could become another monster storm. adam klotz has latest on that yet. charity raising money for kids fighting cancer almost called off over politics. a bald eagle and a proud new american who just wrote a constitution for kids. the name of his organization is flag. and you are going to hear from nick adams throughout this morning. first, happy birthday to dr. ben carson. he is 66 years old today. a great american. ♪ ♪
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dad! people spend less time lying awake with aches and pains with advil pm than with tylenol pm. advil pm combines the number one pain reliever with the number one sleep aid. gentle, non-habit forming advil pm. for a healing night's sleep. ainsley: this is a fox news alert. a new major threat to the caribbean island still working to recover from hurricane irma.
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steve: hurricane maria category 1 but scheduled to reach category 4 status in a couple of days. adam: incredibly busy across the entire atlantic. irma, jose and maria. you see it just far enough up the east coast that the impact isn't going to be overwhelming. that is currently a category 1 off the outer banks today and running to the north. we have got tropical storm watches and warnings stretching all the way from the mid-atlantic up to new england throughout the day today. the waters are going to be chop y the wind field maybe a little bit of wind reaching the coast. most of that wind staying out at sea. i do think folks along the water you will be noticing this one. yes, marie a this is the track of maria back behind it. currently a 1. jump up to category 4 here
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next couple of days and likely a 3 as it hits the lesser antilles tonight. running over puerto rico up into the bahamas. taking you into saturday. we have a little bit of time, guys, we are staying incrediincredibly active a lot o watch in the tropics. steve: who people hear it's following the irma track put up the shutters but it's going to take a turn. adam: we are talking bahamas and perhaps up the east coast. that's still the end of the week. pete: some places that have already been hit two or three times. steve: hammered. adam, thank you very much. ainsley: hand it over to jillian who has headlines for us. jillian: good morning to you and to you at home as well. carnival worker plummets to the gowned trying to save two young boys stuck on a ferris wheel. [screams] >> the worker losing his footing and fallings to the ground at the fair in north
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korea. no one seriously hurt, including the kids on the ride. >> i thought one of us was going to pass away. >> the ride has since past inspection and has reopened. first it was confederate soldiers, now our founding fathers are being attacked, including the writer of our declaration of independence. the dallas independent school district is reportedly considering whether to rename three schools bearing the names of thomas jefferson, james mattisson and benjamin franklin. the school district is now researching the founders' ties to slavery. a race benefiting kids with cancer is called off over politics. scrapping plans for triathlon at the president's national golf club in carolina days after changing the days tri at the trump to tri for good. he wants to avoid any more controversy. >> the ones that lose are
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the kids and we raise money for and athletes that come for a first-class event. jillian: organizers hope to reinstate the event next year. how about this? touching moment for dad getting to see in color for the first time. william read was born color blind. his family giving him color correcting glasses for his birthday. his reaction is simply incredible. >> look at the balloons. can you see with our ice now, baby? [crying] at one point he keeps adjusting his glasses going back and forth between his normal vision and how things look in color. got to love that. that's a look at your headlines on this monday. send it out to you, steve. steve: all right, jillian. thank you very much. as we celebrate the 230th
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anniversary of signing of the constitution today. australia i can't believe who couldn't wait to become an american has wrote constitution to help teach. ainsley: quickly on his way to become an american citizen and even met president trump. now he hopes continue to expire future generations to love this country as much as he does. pete: that's right his name is nick adams founder and director of flag foundation liberty and american greatness. thanks for being here this morning. >> good morning pete, ainsley and steve. how are you doing? >> pete: launching the student's constitution on this program. why did you set out to do this. >> first kid's friendly constitution. never been done before. we did it. because we need to make sure that the next generation of american leaders understand what makes this country the greatest on earth. and the only way that we can keep it the greatest country in the history of the world is to make sure that our
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students are tethered to the values and virtues contained within this constitution. we have made it relatable with graphic design and simple, plain, easy to understand english. but even a fifth grader can comprehend. steve: can i see the hands of kids that have ever celebrated constitution day before today? before today? ainsley: really? pete: they come from a very patriotic school. >> these students are from new hampshire. they have come all the way down. because they have been really passionate about this. they go to the founders academy. they have already experienced flag presentations. we go into elementary, middle and high schools talking to students about what makes america special. what makes it different. pete: the concerns here inside public classrooms right now kids aren't learning the declaration and the constitution. the idea behind this is if you have a kid who go goes to this public school can you request this. >> that's correct. this a special day. this is our launch. we are raising money to get
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this constitution into the hands of every age appropriate student across the united states of america. every single dollar that we raise today will go towards that we have a very generous donor who is matching gifts up to $100,000. to all the viewers out there, please go on to our website, flag u.s.a.org/give. ainsley: nic, we always hear about teaching children to find their passion and go into a field they are passionate about they find their calling. you barely survived a childhood cancer. you had a 5% chance of survival. born in another country. you come over here and teach our kids about the constitution. god has a big purpose for you in your life. what does it mean for you to be an american it means everything to me, ainsley. this is the greatest country in the world. this is a place where it's unlike anywhere else. you can fall down 5,000 times. get up 5001. can you blaze a trail. can you leave a legacy ambition is nurtured.
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risk is encouraged. you can really do anything. i want to make sure that our children understand that the day that they were born in the united states of america is the day that they won the lottery of life. and they got the most incredible head start imaginable. steve: i think there are a lot of people, educators perhaps as wealthying how do we get our hands on more information? the answer to that is. >> go to flag u.s.a.org/constitution. you can go on there. we are really, really excited. this is taking off. we have got more than 5,000 out there before our launch we want to make sure that we have hundreds of thousands if not millions out there. ainsley: great for adults, too. we need a refresher. pete: ainsley has been reading it all morning. ainsley: i'm excited about having a little one because i get to grow up with her and learn it all over again. steve: thanks for bringing challenger bald eagle. >> and shout out to dave's
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barbecue. pete: i will be going right over there. ainsley: thank you, nick. congratulations. come up on constitution day or the day after. we celebrate today. stowed is the official day, right? heart warming military surprise that will make you even prouder to be an american. steve: what do republicans in congress think about the president cutting deals with democrats especially when it comes to immigration? georgia senator david perdue here live. there he is in the green room. we are going to sit down with him next. ♪ together again ♪ walking real proud and talking real loud again ♪ in america ♪ you never did think that it would happen again
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yeah. must've been hot out there today, huh? yeah ok. yeah. beat even the toughest stains and odors with new super... ...concentrated tide sport. the new tide sport collection. it's got to be tide ♪ steve: all right. we have quick monday morning business headlines for you right now. first up, if you are hungry for chili's fridayally
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flower. you are out of luck. restaurant is slashing 40% of its offerings including that appetize tore simplify operations and improve the quality of the food. chili is sticking to 75 fan favorites including burgers, ribs. pete: that is true. their menu reads like -- steve: gigantic. rolling magazine may soon be under new ownership. founder planning to sell after years of struggling sales. if you are interested. you can buy rolling stone. ainsley: will there be a deal or no deal on daca. arkansas republican senator tom cotton says he has spoken to the president personally about it. >> i think the president has said publicly that there's not a deal that he wants to see a deal. in fact he called me a couple nights ago to say there is no deal. he want to make sure we protect the interests of american workers. they want to focus on a package of benefits for illegal immigrants.
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we want to put american worker interests first. pete: if there is going to be a deal done on damascusca. next guest says it has to include stuffer immigration language. steve: joining us right now georgia republican senator david perdue. >> good morning. ainsley: good morning, senator. steve: tell us about your idea to fix things and called the reyes act. >> i applaud the president for reaching out. this is going to have to be a bipartisan solution. any solution to the daca situation and, look, we all want a compassionate solution to that must include a fix for our archaic system. it eliminates chain migration and brings us merit based immigration. pete: two pieces of leverage on the table for republicans. this act which does fix antiquated system. also a concern for a lot of the people. also the wall and this idea that you need a permanent fix on the border as well. where do those two items fall into this negotiation. >> it's a big menu. we love to have everify. the wall. security for the border. raise u these are things that conservatives in
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america really want. if you look at the president's last year can you see that today, race is extremely popular. three fourths of americans want some sort of reform in immigration based on merit based as we have seen it. ainsley: establish as a skills based point system. prioritized immediate family households. eliminates visa lottery and places limit on permanent residence for refugees. why is this so important for you for the good folks down in georgia? >> go falcons. look, this is more than georgia. this is a bipartisan effort. actually, this was a democratic idea back in the 1990s when president clinton commission add group to stud i didn't mean congratulation in america. they came one a solution based on the immigration policies in canada and australia. these what we have done here. the president has been outspoken this the is time to go fix this. i believe he a right. steve: senator dick durbin was on television yesterday talking about the daca deal. listen to, this senator, then we will get your reaction. >> we are going forward. we are going forward with
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the understanding that we can work with the white house to come up with an agreement that includes daca, that includes citizenship for those who are protected under the dream act. and also has a substantial commitment to increased border protection. those are the two pillars of this understanding. steve: senator says it has a substantial commitment to increase border protection. that isn't the wall per se. how do you feel about building a portion of the wall? >> well, i think the first thing is a national security issue. parts of that border needs a wall. no question about it. this president said we are going to build a wall. we will build that wall. let's not miss this historic opportunity to fix them congratulation system to better our economy. that's what this is all about. only one in 15 immigrants that come in our country today come in based on work. the rest of it is chain migration. unfortunately the result of it half the immigrant households in this country are in our welfare system. that's not the american dream we want. pete: do you believe that senators like dick durbin are willing to act in good
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faith or just dedicated to amnesty for people they think should be here illegally and should stay. do you have any believe that a true bipartisan will happen where republicans aren't getting their lunch eat chn seems to happen all the time. >> it does. one side is really aligned behind priorities and other side of is a bunch of entrepreneurs. can you figure out which one is which. this is one the american people want solved. almost two thirds of americans believe this needs to be a merit based immigration system just like the president has outlined. tom cotton and i have been working on this for months. i can tell you it should be a bipartisan solution because the democrats had the first idea in the 1990s. this is a barbara jordan idea. pete: that was a former democratic party. bill clinton was strong on immigration. it has gone entirely left. >> we have got to solve. this american people, forget about partisan politics. they want to break through the gridlock and get this resolved. that's what the president wants. steve: good luck u peter peter senator dianne feinstein under fire for telling this to one of
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president trump's judicial no, ma'am niece. >> dogma and law are two different things. the dogma lives loudly within you. pete: one group is accusing her of anti-catholic bigotry and that's not all. ainsley: counselor to the president kellyanne conway is going to join us live in the next hour ♪ ♪ i am just trying to learn as much as i can about my culture. i put the gele on my head and i looked into the mirror and i was trying not to cry. because it's a hat, but it's like the most important hat i've ever owned. discover the story only your dna can tell. order your kit now at ancestrydna.com.
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professor, when you read your speeches, the conclusion one draws is that the dogma lives loudly within you. ains 80s the conservative judicial crisis network firing back with an ad campaign of anti-catholic bigotry. kerry is the chief council and policy director of the judicial crisis network and she joins us now. good morning to you. thank you for being with us. >> good to be here. ainsley: your network is criticizing senator feinstein saying she being anti-catholic it is bigotry. you think it crossed the line. why do yo dues that. >> we have a core constitutional principal that there is no test for office religious freedom. ham handed politically at a time when one fifth of americans are catholic including a growing latino
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population especially in dianne feinstein's own state. i don't know if she thinks it's time to go back to long dead anti-catholic bigotry in american politics or bigoted conservative woman willing to say and do anything to smear her. ainsley: the woman you are talking about her name is amy barrette. she is the mother of seven. she teaches. she is the professor at notre dame and president's pick for the seventh u.s. court of appeals. >> she would make excellent judge. for the very reason fine spine is attacking her. she wrote an article talking about how her beliefs morally. opposition to the death penalty conflict with the law you need to be faithful to the oath to uphold the law. if that means instrument olow could you see yourself from a case do you so. ainsley: what's wrong with that senator feinstein would be for that separation of church and state separate her views. >> if she would have read
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the article she would have gotten it clearly didn't. grasping at straws. this is exactly the right approach. a lot of liberal judges and justices will substitute their moral beliefs for what they have sworn to uphold in the laws of the country. professor barrett who is incredibly accomplished loved by her faculty across spectrum. you can be faithful to your beliefs but not impose that on a system. she said exactly the right thing. senator feinstein is 100 percent wrong in this. there are no religious tests for office she needs to go back and read the constitution herself. ainsley: thank you for being with us. counselor to the president kellyanne conway mark steyn and newt gingrich all join us live as "fox & friends" continues next. ♪ ♪ because you don't even know ♪ i can make your hands clap ♪ i can make your hands clap ♪ when we breathe in allergens, our bodies react by overproducing 6 key inflammatory substances
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america. this is a president who will affirm the standing in the world. >> pattern is the same it starts out peaceful and by nightfall criminals taking to the streets and destroying small businesses. >> carnival worker falls from ferris wheel while rescuing two young boys after cart upsets sideways. >> brand new chilling video showing the bucket bomber. >> i'm looking to see who other people he might have been involved with for an 18-year-old to make a bomb by himself is pretty odd. >> are you an american traitor. >> no, i'm not. >> chelsea manning is someone who has been convicted of betraying our nation. that's not the kind of person that we should be having fellow. >> you what really matters to donald trump is ratings. this will be the largest audience to witness an emmy, period.
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♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ talking about freedom ♪ i'm talking about freedom. steve: you can almost smell the apple pie, can't you? how much more american does that get than how we're celebrating u.s. constitution day. ainsley: uncle sam, lady liberty at this. pete: why might they be on stilts? yesterday was constitution day technically 230 years ago our constitution was signed in philadelphia. we are honoring it today by exclusively launching through flag a foundation the first kids constitution. steve: i know there are a number of people contacting us. they would like to get more information about this. i believe the website is flag u.s.a.org. pete: order a kid constitution for your child's classroom.
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grandchild's constitution. why don't we. ainsley: not just for kids, it's for ainsley, thoovment breaks it all down. simple and easy. teach your kids a lesson, learn a things or two. refresh history. pete: schools don't teach it the way they used to. steve: they don't. they don't teach it the way they used to because they interpret it in many different ways. some good, some add ba. pete. ainsley: the president is coming to new york this morning. he will address the world leaders at the u.n. this sis first time since becoming leader of the united states to address those world leaders. steve: man, will they get an earful. keep in mind, when he was running for president, donald trump wasn't holding back. in fact recollect shortly after he was elected president of the united states, he tweeted this out: the united nations has such great potential but right now it is just a club for people to get together, talk, and have a good time. so, sad.
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pete: right around that same time he went in front of television cameras and said similar things. take a listen: oh, we don't have it? we had before it. standing outside of mar-a-lago. ainsley: last december. pete: what has the u.n. ever done that's worked? if you come from a perspective of america first and you run against the global elites. u.n. headquarters is full of global elites, you are skeptical of their intentions and whether or not those intentions honor american's sovereignty or obsessed with international arrangements that barely ever do anything. how many u.n. sanctions or resolutions have ever been enforced. ainsley: he has called them elitists. these are diplomats. he said it's time to stop partying and talking and traveling around the world. we have got to get something done. talk about the iran nuclear problem. talk about what's happening in north korea. we need to talk about the paris climate accords, whether or not we are going to change that and fix it so it is helpful for the u.s. steve: that is the point of view the president is going to be coming into today.
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is he actually going to be speaking tomorrow. we do have that sound bite. here is he around christmas time at mar-a-lago talking about the united nations. >> the u.n. has such tremendous potential, not living up to its potential. there is such tremendous potential but it is not living up. when do you see the united nations solving problems? they don't. they cause problems. so, if it lives up to the potential, it's a great thing. if it doesn't, it's a waste of time and money. steve: keep in mind, president trump became president because he promised to change things. and he -- one of the promises was he was going to do his best to make the united nations more reflective of america. pete: he takes a common sense approach. we are one of the largest funders of this and turns it around and uses it a bludgeon against us and israel. is he going to elm if a sides sovereignty we have heard in his statements and talking about the need for military force. the ability to have force of arms. and then western values that you can talk about all you want. if you are not willing to
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advance them and stand up for them it doesn't change. have you two permanent members of the security council in china and russia that obstruct us at almost every turn. can you see how it feels like this body is in no way keeping with what puts american values first. ainsley: we had a great weekend. what were you doing yesterday watching football or emmys last night? chances are you were watching football because it was entire two hours or hour however long it was. i have seen clips of it i don't want to watch this stuff. same thing, all these celebrities bashing the president. they are not being respectful to the president. we ought to anticipate it we know they are going to do this. pete: they delivered true to form. take a listen. >> if he had won an emmy, i bet he wouldn't have run for president. the president has complained repeatedly that the emmys are rigged. because, unlike the presidency, emmys go to the winner of the popular vote. >> back in 1980 in that movie, we refused to be controlled by a sexist eggo tis particular call lying
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hypocritical bigot. >> and in 2017 we still refuse to be controlled assess isn't a ego tis take call lying bigot. >> my me and my wife had three children three years. we didn't have a child last year during the snl season. i wonder if there was a correlation. orange wig on it's birth control. trust me. with. >> we do have a story about impeachment. we abandoned that because would he say because we were worried someone else might get to it first. >> i want to thank trump for making black people number one on the most oppressed list. he is the reason i'm probably um here. >> on a personal note i want to say thank you to hillary clinton for your grace and grit. thank you my mother and sister. i'm so proud of you, mom. steve: she thanked hillary before her own mother. so hollywood did not let us down last night. we knew was that going to happen especially if stephen colbert is the host. every night for 90 minutes he bashes the president of the united states. the hollywood elites for the
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most part, 100 percent probably. at least in the 1990s supported hillary clinton for president of the united states and she lost. all those people in that audience are thinking maybe we don't have the power over of the people that we thought we did. keep in mind, half the country voted for donald trump. do you think half the country would sit through two or three hours of that stuff last night. >> no way. steve: probably not. from a pure business point of view, as a business model, stephen colbert is making money and good ratings. pete: have people watch his show. steve: absolutely. wouldn't you think that the emmy awards would try to represent all the people who watch television, not just people who hate donald trump? ainsley: they don't care. they have so much money. flying around in their private jets. they have so much money. they don't care what the american people think. they get more and more opinionated as their careers progress because they have so much money in the bank. they don't care. people in middle america and southern states they are the ones buying movie tickets
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and going and support their careers and private jets. they are biting the hands that feed them. pete: these are actors. pretending to be other people for the living. that is their credibility to speak on about politics. they don't like you. they look at that audience of people that think like them, clapping like seals for them because they all agree with each other and you are a ruby. you are not to be respected. you are deplorable. it's our money that funds their salaries because we watch their shows. you want to talk about hillary clinton? you don't think there is enough material about hillary clinton to make some pretty good cracks? she is going on i am blaming you two for the last two weeks and get get in a good dig there. steve: only mention i heard about her was the woman who played her on television thanked her. ainsley: entitled to their own opinion. the constitution allows them to say whatever they want to say and get up there and do that that is so disrespectful. you didn't see that when president obama -- there were a lot of people that
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didn't support him. steve: you saw it during the george bush years a lot. pete: hollywood playing themselves true to form. we have a. ainsley: you have a chance to go to the polls every four years. if you don't like the president you have a chance to vote him out or vote a woman in. pete: they will make a bunch of videos. steve: we asked you what you thought. we got a whole bunch of email and tweets and stuff. mario emailed us and said the awards show used to be about honoring their craft. now it's all about bashing and bullying those that do not agree. ainsley: it's so true. it's so negative. aren't we getting sick of it. pete: tweet from black intel obviously hollywood has made their choice to alienate 63 million americans who will not support their product. smart. great point. steve: hollywood detached from middle class, america issues, jobs, class, decency
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and values. pete: michael jordan once said republicans buy sneakers, too. why would i alienate one side or the other based on my political beliefs? will hollywood ever figure it out if you make stuff that americans love on both sides you are going to make a lot of money. steve: make more money. pete: we march money. ainsley: sterling brown got an award his speech was cut off. this is us. my whole family watches it big little lies i think is what it is called. i watched that whole series. nicole kidman got an award. wig little lies have you seen it, jillian. jillian: i have not. steve: i have never seen any of the shows before. you know, if i'm at home, i'm just watching cavuto. ainsley: our channels are always on fox. every now and then whether you have like two hours and children are asleep and get in bed with your glass of wine. want to watch some fun stuff, those are two good shows. jillian: i was watching football. the browns beating the
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cowboys. ainsley: your team won? jillian: no, they didn't. thanks, ainsley. brand new chilling video possibly showing the london bucket bomber on his way to launch his attack. you can see a man walking with a bag similar to the one used to disguise an explosive that hurt 30 people. earlier former judzist turned counter terrorism expert said this is a new kind of attack. >> a timer affixed to the device and that was also very odd. usually the explosives used by jihaddists terrorists anyway don't have timers. there is a level of extra planning that probably goes beyond this 18-year-old's capabilities. jillian: two suspects are in custody, including that 18-year-old and 21-year-old refugee. brand new video in overnight showing our military carrying out bombing drills with south korea and japan as tensions simmer with the north. this is the latest show of
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force since kim jong un test-fired another missile last week and tested a nuclear bomb earlier this month. over the weekend u.s. and south korea agreed to new harsh sanctions causing north korea's fuel prices to skyrocket. the four americans injured in the acid attack south of france are all boston college students. the students all studying abroad sprayed in the face. two were treated for facial burns. two others for shock. they are expected to be okay. police do not believe this is terror. and described the suspect as, quote, disturbed. a surprise homecoming for two young sisters that will make you proud to be an american. >> daddy. yea, daddy. >> construction ops supervisor benjamin is a cora surprising daughters in front of the entire class by wearing the school mascot.
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returning home from tennessee from five month deployment. got to love stories like that. steve: that's no mascot. that's my daddy. ainsley: remind you how amazing military is. when you away from your child like three days you miss them terribly. jillian: can you imagine a month? ainsley: no. i just can't. people who fight four our country are the strongest. steve: jillian, thank you. coming up on this monday, counselor to the united states kellyanne conway is going to be joining us live coming up. ainsley: and a third night of chaotic protests in st. louis after a former police officer is cleared of murder. that's where griff jenkins is live. griff? >> more than 80 arrests overnight. the third night of violence in the streets here in st. louis. we will show you thage territory, the criminal that kicked in this window when we come back. does psoriasis ever get in the way of a touching moment?
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what twisted ankle?ask what muscle strain? advil makes pain a distant memory nothing works faster stronger or longer what pain? advil. ♪ ainsley: we are back with a fox news alert. those criminals, those agitators vandizing the streets of st. louis for a third night in a row. pete: police arresting dozens of violently protesting or rioting the aconvict of a fellow
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officer. steve: griff jenkins in st. louis with the latest on the clashes. griff, there was violence last night and a bunch of people got arrested, right? >> that's right. more than 80 arrests last night. it's the third night, steve, and the police here calling them criminals because the patterns are the same. they start off peaceful during the day and different element comes out at night intent on descruction like this window. can you see the video of the diswra who kicked this window. in nothing peaceful about that protest. more than 120 people arrested over the three days since friday morning when officer jason stockley was acquitted of the 2011 shooting death of anthony lamar smith. the officials here all on the same page. governor, the mayor, as well as the police chief lawrence o'toole saying this sort of behavior will not be tolerated. nonetheless, we talked to some of those protesters, one individual a state rep
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bruise franks jr. said this is what the violence is about. take a listen. >> systematic racism and systematic justice and it has to change. >> have you got hurt folks that feels like a system that's failed us. so i understand folks being upset about broken windows. we very broken lives out here. that doesn't compare. >> now, what you are also seeing this morning are, of course, the people boarding up these windows. trying to fix the damage done. removing debris and destruction. sadly, most of the destruction was in mom and pop stores just like this one, a nail shop it cost upwards of 1,000 to $2,000 to replace that certainly one of the down sides to what's happening. we are told that a little bit later this morning there is a gathering point for protesters this morning to disrupt the morning traffic. we will see if that happens. the hope here for officials is, guys that this will not continue to grow night after night after night. last night being the largest
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and most struckive of the three nights. back to you. steve: that's right. got started on friday night. griff, thank you very much. live report from st. louis. ainsley: one officer had his jaw broken. another had his soldier dislocated. 5 police officers had to go to the hospital. 10 injured. pete: comment we have shattered lives not shattered windows. what abouwindow when are they going to start charging the democratic leaders who run those cities? >> hurricane maria taking direct aim at the devastated caribbean islands. it's only going to get stronger. adam clots is tracking this storm. ainsley: emmy awards turned president trump into a political punching bag. >> there is no way anyone could possibly watch that much tv other than the president who seems to have a lot of time for that sort of thing. hello, sir, thank you for joining us. [laughter] looking forward to the tweets.
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call today. comcast business. built for business. how many americans are now on back throg see if they qualify for social security benefits. the agency is hiring 500 new judges and 600 new staff to try to help catch up. next, five days. listen to this. ing that he when some christian neurologists believe the world is going to end. they claim bible verses are hinting another called x will collide. planet x is a hoax says nasa. what do you think? 10 miles. that is how far a stow away koala hitch as ride smiled the wheel well of a car inside australia. crews were able to remove
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the furry creature unharmed thank goodness. steve: meanwhile, one of highland's biggest nights of the year raised no time turning president trump into a political piñata. >> unliked presidency emmys go to the popular vote. >> unlike 1980 in that movie we refused to be controlled by a sexist egotistical lying hypocritical bigot. >> i want to say thank you to hillary clinton for your grace and grit. pete: hillary clinton even getting a thank you before her mom. here to react texas comedian and blogger chad. you called this show a one trick pony. why? >> well, there is only -- they are telling one joke. and it's going to get old. and, you know, the more they whine, the more we are going to win. because they are just driving the trump supporter base to be stronger and stronger. it really does get old. and the funny thing about it is, next year stephen colbert will not be hosting
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the emmys most likely and donald trump will till be president. i started calling it the enema awards we know there is a load of crap coming our way. last night certainly proved that pumps. ainsley: that goes well with the cheerios this morning. steve: hey, chad. >> it's pulling families together. people are turning their tvs off. they are not watching football because of they are tired of the protests. not watching partisan political rallies disguised as awards shows. beauty of the whole thing it's just a big participation trophy where everybody is getting together in these rooms and sounding off in their echo chamber and nobody listening. steve: chad, the ironic part is hollywood used to love donald trump before he ran for president as a republican. >> i don't know puck see i don'n see this or not. donald trump and al sharpton hanging out for dinner. steve: that's your screen
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saver? >> yeah. every day something to remind me of the hypocrisy of the left. and hollywood is no differential. you know, i said in an earlier hour interview. how many homeless people are on hollywood boulevard? i'm tired of the bleeding hearts that do nothing. these guys talk liberal but live conservative. so, you know, a lot of that was on display last night as they flew n their private jets and their limousines so much for their climate change and the loose rhetoric on things like that. so the hypocrisy is pretty deep. ainsley: chad, there are some conservatives in hollywood. many of them don't want to talk about their political beliefs because they are scared they will get black bald from these movies and frightened to be who they are. you are a comedian. what decided you to be so public. >> well, first of all, he believe in freef free speech. i believe in good comedy. i will laugh at a good joke at whoever's expense. i write good comedy. last night was not a good example of that i don't have anything necessarily to lose per se in n. that i believe in my convictions. i don't want to be a
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personal who has to be a chirping marion net that parrots out the narrative in order to get work. unfortunately you are right. there is a lot of folks in hollywood that have no choice but to claim that script and recite it every opportunity they get. pete: don't you think that someone who realize you had to chide both sides would actually be entertaining. steve: johnny carson back in the olden days. pete: why can't anyone realize that? >> i think a lot of folks have lost their guts. they really have. they have lost the nerve to be truly themselves and funny and to be individuals and stand out in the crowd. we have lost that it's an unfortunate situation that's out there. i'm afraid we are going to continue seeing that one trick pony trotted out time and again at every awards show. what i'm seeing is people are simply turning the tv. abby: what did you think about dolly parton's reaction. her eyes kind of opened up. but does that -- what did that tell you? what do you think? >> i love dolly.
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i love dolly. i really do. i think she got thrown into a difficult situation. i can't believe that anybody wants to listen to what hanoi jane has to say. that in itself is very interesting to me. i felt for dolly. i feel like she is getting a bad rap today on social media. she was tossed into a situation. maybe she did know. but she certainly at least let her reaction state that she was surprised by it. steve: yeah. well, i think we were all surprised how nonstop the beat-a-thon was for the president of the united states. chafd, thank you for joining us today from the big d. dallas. >> always a pleasure. steve: thank you, sir. straight ahead on this monday, president trump getting ready for a big week here in new york city. it is the week of the u.n. general assembly, including meetings with world leaders today. what can we expect? counselor to the president kellyanne conway here with a preview coming up next. pete: chilling new surveillance video may have captured one of the london subway bombers right there leaving his foster home.
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what could this mean for the investigation? aaron cohen here to discuss the latest coming up. ♪ ♪ 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. 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.
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israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu and french president emmanuel macron. pete: tomorrow president trump will take the stage in front of the general assembly for the first time. so, what can we expect when he does? here to weigh in kellyanne conway counselor to the president. kellyanne conway, good morning. thanks for joining us. >> good morning. pete: what will our president's message be in front of this group of global elites at the u.n.? >> president trump will be promoting peace. he'll be promoting prosperity and sovereignty and accountability. north korea is not a distinctly american problem. it is the world's challenge now.
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and the president will call upon our allies and others to come together to push back against a nuclear capable north korea. also you see the deterioration of democracy in venezuela. you see hot spots around the globe like syria. obviously the iran nuclear deal that was u.n. sanctioned is very much on this president's mind. he has been talking about that since he was a candidate. and but he will also promote prosperity. because prosperity is also everyone's business, to make sure that our sovereign nations pursue economic prosperity for its citizenry the way that they see fit and this president also has always called for a better balance, a better deal and trade deals for this country. is he putting american workers and american companies and american employers and american interests first. and how that goes into a u.n. addressed like this is making clear that he will always come to the table in good faith but that these deals need to benefit americans more. same thing with u.n. reform.
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and finally sovereignty and accountability. we need to be a sovereign nation with physical borders. this is a big part of the president's very busy september. where he will continue domestically too to be talking about the border wall, interior enforcement. other major tenets of his immigration plan and take really going on a road tour promoting his tax reform, tax relief plan. steve: absolutely. >> busy september. steve: no kidding. interesting he will be spending a couple days here talking about things. you brought up north korea. that really is a tough one. while he is going to speak before the assembled countries, it's really the country of china because they have cut off fuel supplies by 30%. they really have to do it 100 percent, kellyanne kellyanno be effective. >> the president has been engaging china almost from day one. because he has established a much better relationship with president xi. but at the same time, those diplomatic channels are not
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worked. obviously the economic saxes will. north korea sanctioned its own people. we all know that and so you do seat president himself commenting on twitter yesterday about the long gas lines. it is important, i believe, for the president to keep talking to china as well. ainsley: kellyanne, the president tweet the united nations had such great potential but right now it's just a club for people to get together, talk, have a good time, so sad. will you elaborate on that? a lot of people watching might not know what happens in the u.n. and when these world leaders get together? what does he mean by that specifically? >> i know you played a clip earlier too. thanks for recalling that clip from december 28th. i happened to be in the mar-a-lago that day had the president made those comments how the u.n. needs to be more responsive. it needs to be held accountable to member nations. member nations according to this president have to pull their weight and contribute financially and otherwise.
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we are very happy that u.n. reform is on the agenda. and this president, mr. trump, is certainly open to u.n. reform. and we're very happy that recently by 15-0 twice you had a unanimous vote agreeing to sanction north korea. so we know that there are aspects of the u.n. in that case the u.n. security council that work well in times of criticize. but thof -- times of crisis. the u.n. should be very responsive to its member states. the member states also should be responsive. there are some big things that can be worked on together. i think that's the president's point. is he going there. he is going there. the best time to reform a body and organization is from doing it from the inside. he is going there and i'm sure he will talk about that as well. the sovereignty and the accountability as well. aaccountability of the member nations and accountability of the organization to those member nations. steve: kellyanne, i saw an item on i think the hill.com where it said yesterday
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before the whole reckon sellation thing runs out it sounds like mitch mcconnell is going to try to bring up healthcare again before the end of september. is that a possibility? if they could get 50 u.s. senators to say yep, i'm on board, could that happen? >> it could happen. and you probably known the graham cassidy bill is gaining in steam. many of the governors like it. i'm told we're close to 50 votes or so in the senate. we know that mr. menendez is otherwise indisposed up in new jersey. that changes the mathematical calculus in the senate. this is important. this president wants to deliver coverage for those 29 million measures who don't have it, who were lied to about keeping their plan and keeping their doctor and who have been left out of the process. people have the worst possible outcome under obamacare. they have insurance card that they could not use. seeing their peopl premiums spiked. deductibles out of control.
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graham cassidy allowing the individual more freedom and allowing many of those important healthcare delivery aspects, components to go in to this so that repealing and replacing obamacare really takes hold is incredibly posh. now, the president keeps saying and is he right. he has been here for seven or 8 months. they have been talking this for 7 or 8 years. he is ready you put meaningful repeal and replace legislation on his desk and he will sign it. steve: does mitch have enough yeses? >> it looks like they are getting there. i speak to our legislative affairs office continuously. i know that senators graham and cassidy worked very hard along with former senator rick santorum on this alternative plan. and have, again, been, i think gaining support of many governors. that's key because to get those medicaid dollars toes governors who are closest to those in need is really important to healthcare reform. pete: kellyanne, i have heard a rumor when the year starts out first date you circle is the sunday night of emmys and make sure you
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don't miss it and pop popcorn and enjoy it your take from yesterday's three hour celebrity political rally? >> it did feel that way. i guess it's sort of the same -- it's the sameness. they get -- they got plucked and published and waxed and some didn't eat for two months and all for what? to sound the same? they have a right to speak. but if you are tuning in to watch -- if you are america tuning in to watch your favorite actresses and shows who is going to win and oh she lost. i love her show. there is very little of that it's between the emmys, the miss america pageant was very politicized. our sports have very politicize you had and it looks like the ratings are suffering. it looks like america is responding by tuning out because they want you to stick to your knitting. they wants you to in this case read the stuff other people write for you. and so welcome to their opinion but how does it really fit?
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i guess that feeling of the old, you know, the old sasa my street song one of these things does not belong here. on and on. culture of sameness that i talk about. look at the media research center news busters, 91 peforts coverage about president trump in the summer was negative. i felt the same last night watching it but i am so happy kate mckinnon was able to get her emmy. i know she thanked hillary clinton. it to be much more fun to play me. ainsley: she used to play sean spicer and melissa mccarthy they panned over to her when sean spicer came out. steve: this was shocking. >> is there anyone who could say how big the audience is? sean, do you know? [laughter]
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this will be the largest audience to witness an emmy, period. steve: that's funny. >> >> what did you think? >> i'm very happy my former white house colleague sean spicer is a man of good humor. he has been quoted recently saying life outside is much more he radi relaxed. i'm happy for him. this is something that hollywood lacks is intraspeculation and humor. back to also your original question. i would like to tie it all together here. people have the right to speak freely. that's very obvious. we live in the greatest democracy in the world that allows that we are doing it presently. again, to what end? in other words, it doesn't really -- you are alienating at least 63 million americans who spotted this president last time. you ever alienating many more who want the president to succeed. you are showing the world that you are so easy with an
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insult about our leader. i think that's really unfortunate, actually. steve: kellyanne, do you think the president of the united states will call alec baldwin today to congratulate him for winning an emmy for playing donald trump on "saturday night live"? >> let me predict the future, no. he probably barely noticed. he is addressing the united nations general assembly today there are a lot of things on the president of the united states docket. north korea, iran, north korea, healthcare reform. the border wall. is he a busy guy. steve: no phone call to alec baldwin. >> probably not. steve: new surveillance video may have actually captured one of the loan der subway bombers leaving his foster home. what could this mean for the investigation? aaron cohen here to discuss coming up. the foster family was honored by the queen by the way. ainsley: people on tv love to praise hillary clinton for staying with her husband bill clinton. they have a much different view when it comes to the trumps.
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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. this one is going to weaken and fall apart. he would not cerpsd about lee. jose and maria. maria will be the next major hurricane. this one running over the lesser antilles late tomorrow. islands already hit category 1 up to a 3 and a 4 at the time it finally passes over
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puerto rico. put it in to motion for you. you are looking. that's irma's path right there. likely running over the same areas. turning up into the baums imstill a category 3. turning out to sea a little bit. we are looking at hurricanes watches and warnings over the islands very active the next couple of days. pete, ainsley? pete: thank you, adam. appreciate it back with a fox news alert. chilling video appearing to show that teen, a refugee terrorist suspect carrying a bag as he left his u.k. foster home just before the london train bombing. police later raided his foster parents' home. elderly couple that had once been honored by the queen for taking in more than 260 foster kids, including more recently refugees, some of which were syrian refugees. ainsley: here to weigh in on this is member of israel's special counter terrorism unit and founder of a group called cherries. they manufacture law enforcement products for law enforcement readiness aaron cohen. thanks for joining us.
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>> good morning. ainsley: what do we know? this sounds great this family took in hundreds of foster children. then you realize some of these foster kids could be affiliated with terrorist attacks? what do you know? what are the details? >> it sounds to me more of a failed policy in britain as it pertains specifically to their immigration. they have hauls very lax laws. we see these type of laws across europe where they have very open border policy. the problem with having open border policy in allowing that policy to reach into pockets of the middle east, which involve a dozen or so country dries that is not only war torn but known to harbor terrorists, you are asking for terrorism. and essentially what we have seen here with this elder buy couple taken in over 260 refugees. it's impossible for an 80, 58-year-old couple to be actually able to vet these specific immigrants that came in specifically from syria.
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and i think it's a failed policy. and i think it's something that the brits need to be really careful. about. we don't want to go around honoring, you know, the types of actions or rewarding the types of actions for bringing these refugees in and then all of the sudden we are leading to a terror attack. you can't have countries at this particular day and age allowing terrorists to come into our borders without some type of vetting process, it's absolutely ludicrous. pete: you hunted terrorists. literally your jobs. get us inside the mind of this 18 or 20-year-old. not possible to know exactly what it is. they come as a refugee into a foster home. unwittingly this couple opens their home graciously in the west. is their mind set i'm coming here to use to you attack you? >> that's precisely what the mind set would be. you are talking 18, 192, 0-year-old teenager. from a very low class, low income family from an extremely i'm going to say it an extremely islamic
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driven country where the only thing he really understands are fundamental ideologies that are designed to align them with isis and al qaeda espoused values. pete: we have to end it right there because we are going to get cut off. ainsley: more "fox & friends" after the break. hey grandpa. hey, kid. really good to see you. you too. you tell grandma you were going fishing again? maybe. (vo) the best things in life keep going. that's why i got a subaru, too. introducing the all-new crosstrek. love is out there. find it in a subaru crosstrek. 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.
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your marriage. >> i hear that people say oh they have an arrangement. yeah, it's called a marriage. >> tell them to mind their own business. steve: mind their own business. but it appears they have run out of compliments now that president trump and first lady melania are in office. >> what's their relationship like? is she suffering from
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stockholm syndrome? >> he harbors her like a hostage in this trump tower. steve: ceo of concerned americconcerned womenfor americ. criticizing the trumps and pences and criticizing the clintons, aren't there? >> always. the mainstream media consider the clintons untouchable even though bill clinton seduced an intern in the oval office and the women who came out about their affairs were treated horribly by the clinton campaign. they are kind of untouchable. yet, they feel completely free to criticize the trumps and even the pences who go to such long -- to take such care to protect their marriage. i think it's just such a double standard and media bias. steve: i have a tweet from maxine waters the congresswoman from california. democrats can't trust trump. republicans can't trust trump and melania can't
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trust trump she tweets. >> first off maxine waters is certifiable. she said the tea partiers were going to hell. i know she thinks she is powerful. that is even over the top shall we say. you know, look, again, it's just a double standard. the first lady cannot even do right. they even went to the extent to criticize her shoes. to shoe shame her which by the way i love her shoes. most women do. it's just -- it's silly how far that we have come. you know, marriage is an important subject. i wish the media would treat it with that care. it's essential institution for our nation. it's essential for healthy nation. and 82% of children who live -- who are in married families fair better economically it's an important issue. steve: there certain solid a double standard. thanks for pointing it out. penny nance. president of concerned women for america. >> have a great day. steve: coming up, next hour
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of "fox & friends," we have newt gingrich and mark steyn. man, we have so much to talk about and they are in the next hour ♪ and the jay-z song was on ♪ put my hands up ♪ playing my song ♪ caused by reduced tear production due to inflammation, restasis multidose™ can help... with continued use twice a day, every day, one drop at a time. restasis multidose™ helps increase your eyes' natural ability to produce tears, which may be reduced by inflammation due to chronic dry eye. restasis multidose™ did not increase tear production in patients using anti-inflammatory eye drops or tear duct plugs. to help avoid eye injury and contamination, do not touch the bottle tip to your eye or other surfaces. wait 15 minutes after use before inserting contact lenses. the most common side effect is a temporary burning sensation.
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steve: all eyes on president trump this week as he prepares for his first united nations general assembly here in the big apple. >> the un needs to be more responsive that it needs to be held more accountable to the member nation. >> third night of protesters. the pattern is the same. it starts out peaceful and then by nightfall, criminals. more than 120 arrested. >> a ferris wheel rescuing two young boys after their car got stuck sideways. >> maria has officially strengthened to a hurricane. and it's expected to just keep getting stronger. brand-new chilling video showing the bucket bomber. >> i'm also looking to see what other people might have been involved with. for an 18-year-old to make a
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bomb by himself is pretty odd. >> liberal hollywood unleashing on president trump. >> i want to thank trump for making black people number one on the most depressed list. >> don't use your platform to further divide the country. ♪ ♪ ♪ steve: the president of the united states did not overnight at the white house last night. he was actually out at his place in new jersey, and he's heading here to screw up traffic. he and a bunch of other world leaders for the next two weeks. it's the united nations general assembly. brian: probably screw up the world view of a few global
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elites that love the un with all obsessive over the un. and maybe aren't the biggest fans. ainsley: oh, it's so much. i know most of you don't care because you don't live here in new york. but it really -- traffic is so bad. everyone takes the subway because they don't want -- it takes an hour to get a mile. steve: unless i have a motorcade. what mark steyn does, he's up in vermont today. he had a motorcade that took him to the location that we could talk about all the things -- ainsley: you're smart to avoid new york right now, mark. >> yeah. it's the week i hated in new york because it's hard to get a hotel and i always hate it when you get booked into a lousy hotel with the z list dictators like castro and all this guys. i think, in fact, trump at one point offered to let goin him pitch his tent at his golf
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club because they wouldn't let him pitch it in central park because i was pitching a tent there. it's the worst week to be in new york. it's terrible. ainsley: well, i'm sure you were watching football or something else. i'm sure you weren't watching the hollywood elitest offer the emmys. but we want to show a little clip of just the attack on this president and this administration, of course, the actors and actresses went to the microphone -- it was just ridiculous. watch this, and we'll talk about it. >> if he had won an emmy, i bet he wouldn't have run for president. the president has complained repeatedly that the emmys are rigged. because unlike the presidency, emmys go to the winner of the popular vote. >> back in 1980 in that movie, we refused to be controlled by a sexist eg bigot.
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>> and we still refuse to be controlled by a sexist lying hypocritical bigot. >> we didn't have a child last year during the snl season. i wonder if there's a correlation there. all of you men up there put an orange wig on. it's birth control. trust me. >> we did hear a story about impeachment but we abandoned that because we were worried that someone else might get to it first. >> i want to thank trump for making black people number one on the most depressed list. he's the reason i'm probably up here. >> on a very personal, i want to say thank you to hillary clinton for your grace and thank you to my mother and sister. i'm so proud of you, mom. steve: she actually thanked hillary before her own mother. >> yeah, i know. i wonder how her mom feels about that. look, i try not to be relaxed about this. i try not to play the leftist caricature of the right wing
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yelling at the cell. i watched the film 9:00 to 5:00 with lily tomlin, dolly part in,and i enjoyed if. i love that song. and now they're selling me it's not that they're insulting trump, it's that they're telling 63 million people who voted for trump that if you vote for trump, you can't just enjoy dolly pattern singing 9:00 to 5:00. you can't enjoy veep. and what's really pathetic about this is that these lines aren't even jokes. i mean, lily tomlin and dolly partin in their own ways are great writers. they would never write for themselves the material they spouted last night. mr. glover accepting an award and pretending somehow he's a depressed person in trump's america because blacks has been oppressed since january the 20th. he lives a life that is more
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privileged than 99.999% of humanity through the entirety of human history have ever lift. where does he get off playing the victim card at a time when real artists, cartoonists in france, directors in the netherlands, comedians in norway are being shot and firebombed and killed by a certain subject matter that these brave courageous artists never go anywhere near. it was a pathetic spectacle. pete: we had the counselor kellyanne conway on the program earlier. first of all, let's go to a clip of a cameo that happened last night surprised a lot of people when he walked on stage. take a look. >> is there anyone who could say how big the audience is? sean, do you know?
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[laughter] >> this will be the largest audience to witness an emmy period. >> very happy my former white house colleague sean spicer is a man of good humor. and he has quoted recently life outside is much more relaxed. so i'm very happy for him. this is a lot of folks in hollywood laugh, which is in good humor. >> good humor or too soon going to the folks that, of course, hated him? >> yeah. and the problem is all of this being a good sport thing only goes one way. it's, like, when sarah palin went on saturday night live with eric baldwin and was asked to play the tina faye character and eric baldwin said you're actually way hotter than tina faye or
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whatever it was and the good sportiness only goes one way. and it would be nice for it to go the other way sometimes. we know when it ends, all of them still despise sean spicer and regard him as the pr representative for the new literal hitler of our day. so i don't think it actually works -- it it works for him, but it, again, gets to the heart of the problem that when everything is political, everything is political, you cannot even have the small shared pleasure of a sitcom. i mean, it's actually jokes are one of the things that bind a nation. it's actually very important that a nation, a community of persons can share a joke. so if you're telling people, no, it's all about attitude now. it's all about politics, you can't actually put that to one side and laugh at billie crystal or bob hope or some guy on the stage in 1922 with
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huge shoes and a clown nose and a spouting soda siphon when you're saying that's all gone and jokes are all politics all the time. that's actually the death of civic glue in a small way. steve: well, we certainly were expecting a lot of trump bashing. we got it and sean spicer moment was shaking because we didn't see that coming. meanwhile, mark, on friday on our program, we were detailing what had just happened. there was somebody who left a bucket bomb on a subway. something like 20 people were injured. turns out, ultimately, it looks as if one of the suspects in the case came from a foster family that was recognized by the queen for taking in 260 foster children during their lives. turns out one of these kids a syrian refugee could be the guy who tried to kill as many people as he could. >> yeah. and i'm slightly amazed by this. i used to live at the tube
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station. i caught a train there every morning, and i'm slightly amazed at the way that this has been shrugged off and the mayor of london says this is just what it means to live in a big city now. no, it's what it means to live in a big city now because you and the entire western political class are committed to importing people every day of the week, a proportion of whom want to kill us. a refugee is taken out of the hell hole of syria and taken by an advanced society that offers great opportunities and instead, he decides his priorities is to take his bucket bomb to the station and blow up people as they're commuting to work. and trump's instincts a couple of years ago when he was running for the presidency were absolutely right on this. the syrian refugee problem has to be fixed in the middle east. and the western virtue
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signaling of upscale people in hollywood indicating that it would be really nice if america just took in some syrian refugees. as long as we don't move them from beverly hills or malibu or martha's vineyard, they can go and be in your neighborhood. this is actually what gets people killed, as we nearly saw in london last friday. >> yeah. if there were a lot of syrian refugees at the emmys. >> no. not even for the seat fillers when the guy -- you know, when you get up to get your reward for veep or hand male. even the seat fillers aren't refugees. where's the compassion? steve: mark steyn joining us from vermont today. mark, have a great day. >> good luck. >> always entertaining, for sure. >> good morning, jillian. to you as well. let's get you caught up on the news that you need to know this morning, beginning with this. new overnight. our military carrying out
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bombing drills with south korea and japan as tensions simmer with the north. this is the latest after kim jong-un test fired another missile over japan last week. the u.s. and south korea agreed to new, hard sanctions causing north korean fuel prices to skyrocket. all boston college students studying broad sprayed in the face outside a train station. two were treated for facial burns and the two other for shock. they're expected to be okay. police do not believe this is terror and described the suspect as disturbed. today, south florida students will return to class for the first time since hurricane irma. miami dade braque open for schools. providing free meals for every student in school for the next several weeks. it may have been the biggest tackle of the day and this
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kansas city chiefs cheerleader never saw it coming. oh, my goodness. the cameraman accidentally knock her down as he ran across the field. as you can see he was quick to get up and keep on cheering. you have to keep going. you have to get back into the action. ainsley: i wish it was closer. how did he mitt her? >> it happens. steve: coming up on this monday, fox news alert. the third straight night as more protests over the acquittal of a police officer. our own griff jenkins is live in missouri next. >> and democrats like new york mayor bill de blasio would like you to believe that charter schools aren't the best for our kids. well, they won't lie. the woman behind the most successful charter schools here in new york city is going
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friends, and we come back with this fox news alert. criminals vandalizing the streets of shrews for the third night in a row. ainsley: violating protesting the acquittal of a police officer. steve: griff jenkins with the latest on the sunday night clashes. griff. >> good morning. it was a third night. more than 80 arrests last night. the total over 120 for three days. you can see they're already boarding things up. the glass here. but the video from last night when they kicked in the window here, the police calling these agitators criminals. it follows the same pattern. the protesters come out and peacefully protest, they march around a little bit. by nightfall, a new element comes out. all of the officials here, police chief, the mayor saying that they will not tolerate this. that they will defend their city against these criminal acts. i spoke with governor over the weekend. he says we have the police's
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back. they won't tolerate it. however, we did speak with some of these protesters, including one state representative bruce franks jr. and he actually spoke to why the broken windows are happening. take a listen. >> i grabbed them because they need to know about this history right here. >> feels like a system has failed them. so i understand upset about broken windows. we have broken lives out here. that doesn't compare. >> but here's the reality. this business owner here at the nail center and dozens just like it are going to have to shell out thousands of dollars in their pocket to try and fix what's happening here overnight. it is the third night. the hope here amongst officials is that it will not continue to escalate as we follow it, there are some protests scheduled for this morning as well. we're going to see what happens. guys. steve: griff. ainsley: thanks, griff.
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so and those whoring with the acquittal. authoring with the judge, so they vandalize a nail salon. >> makes perfect sense. steve: to name one of the places. ainsley: right. president trump getting ready for his first un general assembly. so what should he tell the rest of the world? newt gingrich's advice coming up iraq and new york city mayor bill de blasio would like you to believe charter schools aren't the best for kids but the numbers don't lie. >> eva moskowitz is behind the most successful charter system in new york, and she's here to talk with us ♪ ♪ adapt supply chains based on trends, tweets and storms. and make adjustments on the fly. ♪ ♪ the ibm cloud. the cloud for enterprise. yours. the cloud for enterprise. afi sure had a lot on my mind. my 30-year marriage... ...my 3-month old business... plus...what if this happened again? i was given warfarin in the hospital, but wondered, was this the best treatment for me?
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so i made a point to talk to my doctor. he told me about eliquis. eliquis treats dvt and pe blood clots and reduces the risk of them happening again. not only does eliquis treat dvt and pe blood clots. eliquis also had significantly less major bleeding than the standard treatment. eliquis had both... ...and that turned around my thinking. don't stop eliquis unless your doctor tells you to. eliquis can cause serious and in rare cases fatal bleeding. don't take eliquis if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. if you had a spinal injection while on eliquis call your doctor right away if you have tingling, numbness, or muscle weakness. while taking eliquis, you may bruise more easily... and it may take longer than usual for bleeding to stop. seek immediate medical care for sudden signs of bleeding, like unusual bruising. eliquis may increase your bleeding risk if you take certain medicines. tell your doctor about all planned medical or dental procedures. eliquis treats dvt and pe blood clots. plus had less major bleeding. both made eliquis right for me. ask your doctor if switching to eliquis is right for you.
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after serious sonic attacks. >> a very serious issue with respect to the harm that certain individuals have suffered. we brought some of those people home. it's under review. >> those americans suffering injuries like nausea, hearing loss, and even mild brain damage. the cuban government, shockingly has denied any involvement those sonic attacks just apparently spontaneously occur. and a major defense policy bill is expected to pass the senate today boosting the pentagon's budget $700 billion. the proposed bill also spans our missile and defense systems by more than $8 billion, which makes a lot of sense in light of north korea. steve: thank you, pete. parents only want the best for their kids. and when it comes to kids' education, many are turning to charter schools over public schools. leading the charter school wave here in new york is success academy. new york city's largest and highest performing free public charter school network. a new memoir by its ceo and
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founder, the education of eva moskowitz offers a look behind the current on the school's success, and she joins us right now live. good morning to you. >> thanks for having me. steve: okay. so the education of eva moskowitz. what kind of education have you gotten in going up against these big political bosses who are trying to stand between you and a kid's education? >> well, i've learned that there are a lot of obstacles. the unions are on one side and parents are on the other side. and just parents want a better education for their kids than they had to themselves. but there is a ton of opposition to common sense practices. steve: and, see, that's the key. there's a ton of opposition to common sense practices. you say in your detail in your book, it's these teachers' unions and the politicians who are standing up for them. understanding a good education for the kids and ultimately what they wind up with. >> yeah. we've got kids trapped in failing schools here in new york city but also around the country.
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kids need a better education, and we've got to fix our schools if we're going to be a competitive economy and country. steve: you would think that if america's parents rose up, they could defeat a union, whatever union, but that just hasn't been the case. why have parents been so ineffective in this fight? >> well, the unions -- what i call the union political educational complex, it is strong. i have found it very, very hard to bust through. steve: when you look at, for instance, charter schools, success academy here in new york, and you compare it to other public schools, when you look at just the number, it is staggering how much better your schools are than the public schools. what's your secret? >> well, we're number one in the state of new york of all schools. we are number one in terms of student achievement, and we do that through academic rigor
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and through training teachers and training principals. steve: all right. well, the numbers don't lie. when it comes to 2017 spring testing, 45% of charter school students were proficient in english. 39% of public school students. what's going on right there? >> well, i can talk to you about success and in the book, i document how we are doing in terms of student achievement, and we are blowing others out of the water. steve: why? >> well, we're very rigorous. we require a level of parental investment. you know, schools can't educate children without parents. steve: right? >> parents have a responsibility too to make sure the homework's done, to bring kids to school on time every day, and we run a really, really tight ship. steve: if parents had the choice between a charter school and a regular failing public school, i would think most parents would choose the charter school. but, unfortunately, how many people did you turn away? how many families did you say i'm sorry, but we just don't
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have room for you. >> we only had 3,000 spots, and we had to turn away 28,000 parents. steve: that's unbelievable. during the campaign, president trump then complained -- then candidate trump was talking about if elected, he would like to see america's families have a school of choice. this ultimately is what we're talking about, isn't it? >> that is correct. i believe all parents should be able to choose the school they send their children to. i'm the mother of three. my husband and i want to make the choices for our three kids, and i see no reason other parents shouldn't have that same right. steve: and here in new york city the way it works is to get one of those spots at your school, it's a -- a lottery. you put your name in a hat, and if you're lucky enough, you get to have your child go to the school. >> it's a random lottery and, unfortunately, parents shouldn't have to get lucky to go send their kid to a grade school. that should be a right. steve: absolutely. well, it is one of the most confounding
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things. if you want to read the book, it is called the education of eva moskowitz. it is terrific. eva, thank you very much. >> thank you. steve: keep up the good work. >> thank you. steve: straight ahead on this monday, she was convicted of leaking government secrets. but don't call chelsea manning a traitor. the brand-new interview raising a lot of eyebrows on this monday morning. and then president trump getting ready to address the global elites across town at the un general assembly. what should his message be? newt gingrich has been thinking about that, and he has got an idea coming up next when it comes to heartburn trust the brand doctors trust for themselves. nexium 24hr is the number one choice of doctors and pharmacists for their own frequent heartburn. and all day all night protection. when it comes to frequent heartburn, trust nexium 24hr. will people know it means they'll get the lowest price guaranteed on our rooms by booking direct on choicehotels.com?
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it can seem like triggers pop up everywhere. luckily there's powerful, 24-hour, non-drowsy claritin. it provides relief of symptoms that can be triggered by over 200 different allergens. live claritin clear. steve: a fox news alert. all eyes on president trump as he arrived today for the first united nations general assembly of his presidency.
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ainsley: today, the president will meet with world leaders, including benjamin president benjamin netanyahu. >> and tomorrow the president will take the stage in front of the general assembly. so what should he say? well, let's ask newt gingrich, former speaker of the house, 2012 presidential candidate and author of the book understanding trump. mr. speaker, thank you for joining us this morning. if you were to advise the president what to say in front of this room of global elites, what would it be? >> well, i think he has three pretty powerful messages. first, that his vision of sovereignty and of america as a unique nation, his legitimate and doesn't threaten anybody else. he expects everybody else to also be unique nations. but i think somebody who cuts through all the globalism and reasserts the legitimacy of national sovereignty is a very important step for the un. second, the un has to reform itself. there are too many ways in which it is incompetent and
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inefficient and some ways dishonest. and third, the planet has to come together on north korea. north korea is the greatest danger of nuclear war that we have seen i think not just since the cold war. i think it's greater danger than the cuban missile crisis or other events during the cold war. there's a very real danger here that we're going to somehow end up in a nuclear exchange that will kill an enormous number of people. and the latin has to take that seriously. and all the elements of the planet, including russia and china, have to be brought to bear and convincing the north koreans to step down and to limit their ambitions. ainsley: what needs to happen that's not happening now when it comes to north korea? >> well, i think the chinese in particular have got to cut them off. there are all sorts of games being played, a lot of ways that the north korean economy continues to be financed by russia and china, and i think those two countries have to understand they are risking a real war on their border if they allow this to continue.
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the united states is not going to tolerate a dictatorship with icb ms with hydrogen warheads that could eliminate american cities. no president could responsibly take the risk of somebody like kim jong-un, literally wiping out seattle or chicago or los angeles. so if they don't want a preemptive war on their border, they have better get together and coerce the north koreans on standing down on their programs. steve: mr. speaker, a fellow by the name of john moody is one of the executives here at the fox news channel. he has an op-ed up at foxnews.com, and he says people need to realize everything that donald trump says is correct. believes the u.s. is everything wrong with the world and then pays to fix it.
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>> well, i don't know if trump is going to say that, but i think it's a fair thing to say. we have been the most generous country. we accept more illegal immigrants. we have put tens of billions of dollars into foreign aid, we put tens of billions of dollars in humanitarian aid trying to follow up after tsunamis and earthquakes. so i think it is reasonable to say to the world you have to do your fair share too. >> you're right. we fund 22% of the un, 28% of the peace-keeping mission. yet, oftentimes it's wielded against us whether it's international criminal court or the human rights condition against us and our easily in a antiwestern way. how do you change that dynamic? >> well, i think we have to look very seriously at whether or not in the long run you have to rethink the entire relationship and form some kind of organization of democracies. because you're exactly right. when you have the united states getting outvoted by
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disasters like venezuela or or other countries that are crashing, dictatorships like putin's government, which has been assassinating people. one of the uncovered stories of the last three or four years is how many people the russians have assassinated. and we pretend that they're morally equal. well, they're not. they may be facts, but they don't have the moral authority to tell us how we ought to live. and i think we need to be very clear about how we're reshaping and redesigning the un to be a limited discussion organization. not to have any pretenses of being a governing organizationment. >> something like a league of democracies has been a league of the past. this as a neutral construct. you have dictatorships sitting next to freedom-loving people hoping they agree on something. >> well, and you have very tiny countries with 10,000 or 15,000 people who have the same vote as the united states. i mean, it would be as though every county in the united
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states got to be a country, so we ha 3,300 votes at the un. that's what happens in these smaller countries. ainsley: mr. speaker, you know you're talking about all of your experience. you've worked for this country for many years, and we appreciate all of the hours of service that you have graciously given to our country. you now have a video course online where you're teaching people about our country, and it's called descending america. tell folks at home how they can be part of this. >> sure. you can go to defending america course.com. and i put it together because i was watching how crazy the antifa people are, how crazy some of the stuff on campuses is, and it seemed to be we need to be able to intellectually -- those of us who want to defend america and believe in the constitution and believe in the founding fathers, we need to be armed with the arguments and the stories and the facts to be able to take on the left and about defeat them intellectually. so this course is a really beginning point of trying to arm everybody who wants to defend america. whether it's on the right to bear arms or it's on america
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as a unique civilization or its issues of religious liberty. and we currently have six introductory lessons, and they're all available at defending america course.com. and it is an exciting viewpoint to be able to go on college campuses and take on the left and not back down. steve: well, thousands have signed up for it. again, it's defendingamericacourse.com. thank you for joining us. meanwhile, we have a fox news alert right now at the top of the hour. just beginning to recover from hurricane irma. ainsley: hurricane maria is now a category 1 storm, and it's expected to strengthen to a cat four as it approaches puerto rico and later hits that area this week. >> adam is tracking where it is headed. good morning, adam. >> good morning, guys, and actually, i have new information for you from a category one jumping to a category two storm.
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it is going to continue to intensify, and you're looking at a very active atlantic off the coast of the outer banks. that's a ways out there. not going to have a huge impact, but i think folks along the coast will notice rainy weather, increasing in the winds, definitely choppy seas. perhaps surfers out there the next couple of days. maria, that is the really big storm we're watching. category two moving over today into tonight. you see it jumping up to a cat four over puerto rico. turning out over the bahamas still a category three. this is taking you all the way to saturday, guys. see that turn? one we're going to be paying a close attention to. still a wider area, we're not sure where it's going to go over the weekend. steve: good news it's not going to hit florida but what about the carolinas? >> still hard to tell. ainsley: coming up, california on the cusp of becoming a
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sanctuary state. our next guest lost her son to an illegal in california. she has a powerful message for those lawmakers putting politics before public safety. >> and then as we celebrate 230 years of our great constitution, one organization is getting kids excited about patriotism. it's called flag, and they have a new student constitution out today. they're live on the applause, and you're going to hear all about it this morning ♪ there's nothing more important than your health.
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your bbut as you get older,ing. it naturally begins to change, causing a lack of sharpness, or even trouble with recall. thankfully, the breakthrough in prevagen helps your brain and actually improves memory. the secret is an ingredient originally discovered... in jellyfish. in clinical trials, prevagen has been shown to improve short-term memory. prevagen. the name to remember. >> good monday morning. we're back with breaking news. just moments ago, fox news confirming a few more navy officers are out of a job following the deadly collision. chapter an jeff bennett fired amid on going investigations. ten sailors died when the uss john mccain collided with an oil tanker off the coast of singapore in august. and seven service members. were killed when the uss
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fitzgerald slammed into a merchant ship in japan. that happened back in june. she was convicted of treason for leaking government secrets and then her sentence was commuted by president obama. but now, chelsea manning says she did nothing wrong. >> are you an american traitor? >> no. i'm not. and i believe that i did the best i could in my circumstances to make an ethical decision. >> manning making those comments in massachusetts just days after harvard university with drew her fellowship after backlash. served just seven years of her 35-year prison sentence. ainsley. ainsley: thanks, jillian. california lawmakers passing a bill effectively making it a sanctuary state protecting illegal immigrants. >> a very clear message to the trump administration. i think california, we value inclusivity, we value diversity. >> i think it shows we're going to protect our immigrant communities. we're going to make sure that
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it's clear, that they're safe, that they can work with police and not fear deportation. >> her son dominic was killed by an illegal in california, and she has been fighting legislation like this since her death. she joins us live now. supporters of this bill say this reflects who we are. for someone like you, you have a very different perspective. what is it? >> oh, i absolutely do. good morning. thanks for having me on, and, hi, ainsley. it's an insult. it's insanity on steroids. to claim that this is protecting the immigrant community, they don't protect anybody but their votes and their cheap labor, and they are placing every american and every legal immigrant like me in dire danger because everybody's going to flood to california like they flooded to other sanctuary cities.
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and at what point will politicians and mayors and governs finally stand up for us americans for those who belong here and take care of us? ainsley: for those who aren't familiar with your story, a lot of people know who you are because you were on the stage with the president, you wear your son's ashes in the necklace you wear around your neck. and i'm so sorry for your loss. you and i have talked many, many times about this, being a parent of an only child, i can't imagine what you're going through. but i want you to tell the folks at home who ant familiar with your story what it is, what happened to your son, and stricter immigration laws were in place, how that would have changed your family. >> i wouldn't talk to you right now. i wouldn't be fighting this right now if our laws were enforced and would be enforced. dominique was 30 years old. he was an employee of the riverside sheriff's department for the 9-1-1 dispatch center, and he was on his motorcycle
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on his way to work on 7:12/12 at 5:45 in the morning when an illegal from guatemala received probation decided not to obey our laws. he didn't care. and he droved his unregistered, unlicensed, and uninsured truck, turned it in front of my son, and hit him so hard that it through him into a wall and killed him instantly. and this is five years later, and my life changed that moment. and my son would still be alive. so many others would still be alive if our politicians and elected official would finally stand up for us. and i don't understand it. i still don't get it why they fight so hard for illegals who don't have a right to be
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here. >> turns out laws and a lack of law and order have consequences. this president has made fighting illegal immigration a signature part of his campaign and now his presidency. how do you feel what he has done so far as it pertains to daca, the raise act, building the wall, taking on these sanctuary states and cities. tell us how you feel about that. >> i will stand with my president. i fought for him. i elected him. there are things i wish we would be further on, and i would love to extend an invitation to my president to meet with me. meet me for ten minutes and let me refresh what we talked about on july 10th, 2015 and help him understand how important it is to not allow amnesty for anybody here. and i would also like to talk to geraldo herrera and some of the people on tv that talk about, well, these are people that no fault of their own.
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we can't continue like this. we have americans in need. we have people that need our government. i'm at loss how slow things are moving. how slow congress and senate are moving. and i just came back from dc last week with an organization that we created. seven families who lost loved ones because of illegals. we're out there pounding the pavement talking to people, and it's slow. >> i think your frustrations are shared by many. the dc swamp is deep and thick, and we appreciate your powerful story this morning. ainsley: good to see you again this morning. >> thank you so much, ainsley. ainsley: coming up, as we celebrate 230 years of our constitution, one organization is getting kids excited about patriotism, and they are here live. fact. people spend less time lying awake with aches and pains with advil pm than with tylenol pm.
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>> good morning i'm bill life in new york. president trump is a wild card. all eyes on him. but the biggest issue is clear. what could be done about north korea? also, republicans are ready to take a crack at repeal and replace yet again. how close are you? we will show you the votes on that. and an american student hit with an acid attack in europe. what we're learning about that today. we'll see you in six minutes join shannon and me at the top of the hour on america's newsroom. >> well, today we're celebrating the 230th anniversary of the constitution. and as we do, one organization is launching a constitution for kids to install patriotism in them at a early age. ainsley: nick adams is the founder and executive director of flag.
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and author of green card warrior, and he is back with more. congratulations on this book. >> thank you so much. this is the world's first kid-friendly constitution, and it has never, ever been done before. we've got the constitution in plain, easy to understand simple english that even a 5th grader can comprehend. steve: about two years ago, so many people reached out to you online, what happened to your website? >> our website flag usa.org crashed. it crashed because of the wonderful fox and friends viewers who have been so supportive of this constitution. so for those that want to give to us, for those that want to support us, want a constitution, please e-mail me directly. nick@flagusa.org, and we will make sure that you get a constitution. look, i'm often asked with the problem facing united states of america, and i always say to several generations now, we have not passed on what it means to be an american.
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we have not taught americanism. and i want our kids, our students to know what american values are that it's not multiculturism. individualism not collectivism. patriotism, not relativism. god not government. that it's faith not secularism. a quality of opportunity, not quality of outcome. and there's no better way of doing that than teaching them our founding documents. steve: and what would you like to say and from the sky with red, white, and blue? >> god bless america. >> fitting way to end constitution day here on the applause. well done. steve: once again, if people want to e-mail you. >> nick@flagusa.org. >> hit him up and get your constitution. the organization is flag. check it out don't let dust and allergens get between you and life's beautiful moments. flonase outperforms the #1 non-drowsy allergy pill. it helps block 6 key inflammatory substances that cause symptoms.
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>> happy birthday. the official day was yesterday. >> thank you. >> you guys are awesome. >> you are 22, right? >> yes. >> bill: well done. good morning, everybody. this will be an historic day for the president and for the united nations making his first appearance at the u.n. as lead of the free world today and participates in several meetings this morning before giving his address to the general assembly tomorrow, a bit of a wild card. hope you had a great weekend. >> shannon: this is a week of gridlock here in new york city. stay away if you can. i'm shannon bream. the president will depart trump tower for the u.n. in the next hour making the case the major body needs reform and north korea's continued nuclear testing. the door to diplomacy is
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