tv Fox and Friends Saturday FOX News May 12, 2018 3:00am-7:00am PDT
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>> a new peace offering from secretary of state mike pompeo. economic help for north korea but only if it fully ditches its nukes. >> if north korea takes bold action the united states is willing to work with north korea to achieve prosperity. >> pulling out of the iran nuclear deal will make it harder to negotiate successfully with north korea. or anyone else. >> may have had a spy in or interacting with the trump campaign during the 2016 election. >> like the sickest spy novel i ever read except it actually happened. >> everybody is meeting hysteria with more hysteria and we are all becoming
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hysterical and it's getting worse. this is your time to rise. ♪ ♪ he love a country girl ♪ i love a friday night ♪ and i love this life ♪ abby: some people may be out celebrating this friday night but nope, we are up. we are here. he had sewed excited. pete: if you are up and readready to go, if you are in california you might still be up. abby: that's okay. we don't judge on this show. whatever time it is we are happy with that. pete: little intoxicated in california, you are watching us, we welcome you just like every up and at. >> it was a remarkable week. >> by the way have you an
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embassy opening in early next week. you can't keep up with the space with what is happening and the world stage. abby: so far president trump and the presidency this was the biggest, most important week when it comes to foreign policy and probably the tom of that is north korea and secretary of state mike pompeo, he now says that there will be economic benefits to north korea if they denuclearize. take a listen to this. >> if chairman kim chooses the right path there is a path of prosperity to north korea and north korean people. if north korea takes bold action to quickly denuclearize, the united states is prepared to work with north korea to awheef prosperity on the par with our south korean friends. if he is prepared to fully denuclearize it would be an activity that undertook to ensure that we didn't end up in the same place that we had ended up before. it will require robust rasks program and one that we will undertake with partners around the world which will
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achieve that outcome in a way that, frankly, no agreement before it has ever set forth. ed: think about how important mike pompeo has become. abby: no honeymoon period. ed: he basically has not slept in a couple of weeks. think about the trust the president has in mike pompeo the kind of trust did he not have in rex tillerson, clearly, they were not on the same page, he has now made two secret missions to north korea in a matter of weeks. going back to easter weekend. that shows you the trust the commander-in-chief has in him but also shows just how sensitive these diplomatic negotiations have been. so far, the fact that they have brought home these americans without any conditions and said we're not sitting at the table with you on june 12th unless you bring those americans home. abby: ed, you you were anchoring on fox and how proud you had must have been as an american when those americans landed on u.s. soil. what is going on in north korea should be a reminder for all of us when this
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comes to diplomacy for years and years we stayed in a box that we do things a certain way. president trump has not been in politics until now and done it completely differently, i'm going to push the envelope here, i'm going to get tough and, yeah, i might threaten to go to war with north korea. we are dealing with irrational players. seeing we should handle diplomacy differently could end differently. pete: exactly. you might say this is the pace of a coo. not the pace of a swamp. not the conventional wisdom. it was armageddon. we were going to go to nuclear war on the peninsula. here we are, we got a date set june 12th for kim jong un and president trump in singapore to sit down. they say it will just be the two of them. obviously an interpreter, maybe a few others. we will see how that all shakes out. think about the stakes of that meeting and that moment. what it takes for that moment to come to fruition is the last 18 months. is everything that went into it. you can't magically create that moment. did he that and i think yesterday that was mike pompeo when he was speaking the sound we showed with the
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foreign minister of south korea. it's been a full-court press step-by-step to lay the groundwork for something meaningful. what this trump white house knows you can't pull an iran deal 2.0. you have to do the real deal. there is no sun set clause. there is no money upfront. you can't keep testing your missiles. either you give it up or not. ed: hillary clinton not satisfied. the former secretary of state, again, will not go away. she has now taken the floor to australia. abby: she has down the tour in the u.s. ed: she is down under now literally. kind of a low blow because she is going overseas and blasting the president about the iran deal. watch. >> pulling out of the iran nuclear deal will make it harder to negotiate successfully with north korea or anyone else. pulling out of that agreement makes america less safe and less trusted and iran more dangerous. as secretary of state, i
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helped negotiate the crippling international sanctions that brought iran to the table. it would be much harder a second time now that our credibility is shot. pete: less safe, less trusted, iran more dangerous. everything team obama did is guilty of in iran is what they are criticizing trump for on north korea or preemptively trying to criticize him of. say better be verifiable your deal wasn't visible in iran. couldn't check the military sites. no money. you gave iran $1.7 billion cash up front. abby: where is that cash going by the way? to build up that program until syria. pete: support terrorism around the world. talk about less safe. grew under their watch, less trusted. executive action never ratified by congress. iran more dangerous? ed: last fall on social media, it was ben rhodes, the architect of the iran nuclear deal within the obama administration who was on twitter attacking the
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president again and again about north korea. and saying this rhetoric is leading us to armageddon as you said a moment ago. and so you have the person who crafted the weak iran nuclear deal criticizing this president over north korea. what's working out now? the north korea part of this. because we are back from the brink. abby: have you john kerry meeting with iranian officials. so hillary clinton is over in melbourne, australia saying the same message. she also hit on her race for the presidency as she is still talking about as we all know. talk about how there are some americans who feel uneasy about women in leadership positions. here she is. >> there is still a very large proportion of the population that is uneasy with women in positions of leadership. and so, the easiest way to kind of avoid having to look at someone on her merits is to dismiss her on her looks. in the second debate in wandering around that little
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stage, it was very clear that trump was stalking me. looming over me, trying to intimidate me. and he was doing it very deliberately. he was sending a message to people watching, look, i am the big person on the stage. this is what a president looks like. we have never had a president who looks like that. abby: wow. you still play the woman card. i would argue we have more women in leadership positions and powerful positions, particularly in government and wanting to run for office than we ever have before. i don't know what she is trying to get at here. pete: i'm uneasy sitting next to you every morning. leadership, i'm not comfortable. i mean, come on. ed: someone tweeted yesterday women, there are people who don't want women in leadership right now. yeah, they are in the states of wisconsin, michigan, pennsylvania. the states that she lost. because it wasn't about being a woman. it was being the candidate that a lot of people in this country just were not comfortablcomfortable with.
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pete: people wanted to vote for a woman. they are ready to. they are the most accepting pop plus iacceptingpopulist in . she didn't give a reason. you are sexist, america. abby: do you know ohio think might be cringing through all of this is the democratic party. they want a restart. they want a better future. they want to win the presidential election. when you have the clintons continuously talking about what happened in the past it doesn't bode well. ed: global grievance tour. you say what happened tour has now gone global. pete: very true. ed: oprah winfrey giving commencement address talking to grads and seemed to be going after the president by suggesting you have to fight hysteria. abby: yeah. she was speaking to th usc grads in los angeles. here is some of what she said about fighting that hysteria. >> this is what i know. the problem is everybody is meeting hysteria with more
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hysteria. and then we just are all becoming hysterical. and it's getting worse. this moment in time, this is your time to rise. it is. even though you can't go anywhere, you can't stand in line at starbucks, you can't go to a party, you can't go to any place without everywhere you turn people are talking about how bad things are. how terrible it is. if they go low, thank you, michelle obama. if they go low. [cheers and applause] we go to the polls. abby: you remember that oscar speech that she gave a few months ago, social media going crazy about oprah winfrey running for president. she has come out and said she is not going to run. goes back to graduation speeches. do they want to be told how to think? this is that time to motivate them to go out and get that job and live a life they are proud of and live
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their dreams. why does it have to get so political? pete: i don't know. good question. i have no idea what she said. absolutely devoid of any substance whatsoever. we go to the polls. we're all liberal democrats. we go to the polls. we reject trump. what about the conservatives in the audience? apparently talking to a so-called journalism audience. so-called journalism audience. but it's just. ed: what do you think about the global grievance tour. should it end? pete: do you understand what she said? abby: following closely this morning, four troopers injured in a shootout. ambushed while trying to execute a warrant. arrived at the home of a wanted drug suspect. police firing back, killing the suspect before the building burst into flames as you can see there investigators say it appears the house was booby trapped and the suspect may have
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used surveillance cameras to see them coming. all troopers are expected to make a full recovery. also. this president trump declaring a major disaster in hawaii following desks on devastation on the big island. calling for help of a kilauea volcano activity. this opens the door to federal assistance and demonstrates a solid partnership with the federal government as we work to keep hawaii residents safe. cost for residents could exceed $2.9 million over the next month. don't expect to hear whether or not president trump will speak with mueller's team until after his historic summit with north korea. rudy giuliani telling the associated press, quote: several things delayed us with the primary. one thing the whole situation with north korea, i wouldn't want to take his concentration off something far, far more important. rudy recently said he would help wrap things up in a matter of weeks. that makes sense.
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there a lot on their plate. ed: president trump nominated for the nobel peace prize. we have the debate. ed: called it the preemptive peace prize. now last man stand something making a return to a very friendly place. >> let's say grace. >> that's how you get to live here rent-free with your husband. >> mom gets to live here rent-free with her husband. >> you know she has got you there, honey u >> vo: they're getting more out of life by starting with miracle-gro potting mix and plant food.
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for us, it's time to get tested. at a comfort inn with a glow taround them, so people watching will be like, "wow, maybe i'll glow too if i book direct at choicehotels.com." who glows? just say, badda book. badda boom. book now at choicehotels.com. >> after freeing three american hostages president trump being floated for the nobel peace prize. the critics call the award
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unjustified. they forget president obama was giving the prize only after nine months in office. here to debate matt schlapp and radio talk show host jamila bey. good morning. >> >> good to be here. >> is it time for the president to get the nobel peace prize. >> there is still a lot of progress to be made in iran and north korea. i think it's a very fair case to make for donald trump because he has actually gone against the consensus. the international consensus in these two important -- with these two important issues. and, irving has been rooting against him, it seems like oh he is going to cause war. oh, this is going to result in irresponsible risk. and what it's actually done is he has gone back to what reagan knew. you get peace when you project strength. i think he has a good case to make. ed: jamila, what was the case for barack obama just nine months in? >> quite frankly, the nobel committee, i would argue,
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gave that prize on a number of factors and few had to do with what the president at the time actually had accomplished. i think that there was a symbolic component of the nobel peace prize that went to barack obama. and nine months in, whether you like the guy, whether you didn't like the guy, that's really no time to judge a presidency on its merits. he had, what, seven years and three months longer to go in the terms he served as president. ed: pardon me, you are acknowledging that it was symbolism for barack obama as the first african-american president. it wasn't really based on his accomplishments. >> i am saying that. i'm also saying that the nobel committee, who selects, who wins the peace prize would have a number of factors they can choose from. many of them are subjective and to be blunt, you know, nine months in, you don't even get a baby after nine months. you need another few weeks before you get your little
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strapping boy or girl to take home with you. so, yeah. ed: chat, what's your sense of because the iran nuclear deal was a hot issue this week. and the fact is that this president, president trump says, that it was a disaster. >> yeah. that's right, ed. let me go back on this question about why barack obama got the peace prize. barack obama got the nobel peace prize because he went around this country, ran for president and actually went around europe and apologized for gitmo and our forces being in iraq. and he said he was going to close gitmo and pull out our forces. he did neither of those things. that's why a lot of people who voted for him to get the prides have second thoughts. >> i got to admit, matt's correct. and when we consider the fact that a lot of this awarding of this prize, which, you know, has really no consequence in the long run. it's a prize. not a idea about here is
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what have you actually done. when we consider that abroad right now, trump's approval rating is not particularly strong that you have got a number of european nations and folks who are in the ear of the nobel people saying oh, well, we don't know what he has done. i think it's a hard road awho he. i don't think this is something that -- this award is something that this president should be banking on. >> he's not. ed: you are saying because european leaders don't like this president and whispering in the ear nobel prize committee. >> i didn't say he shouldn't get it. ed: aren't those accomplishments around the world that might merit a prize like this? >> of course they are. the thing is, this is really a popularity award. sorry, i wish it had more substance to it than that. if he gets it, great. if he doesn't, we're still going to be trying to do the
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best for american people. we're still going to do the best peace around the world. >> i'm not worried about any european leaders whispering to each other. one of the reasons why donald trump is the president is that we're saying to europe and to the consensus in europe, hey, guys, we're going to lead. america is going to lead by doing what's in america's interest. if you want to come along with us, great. what we're seeing around the globe is, donald trump is leading and it's actually better and safer for america. ed: all right, matt and jamila, have to leave it there. good debate. >> thank you. ed: meanwhile, whoopi goldberg wants our president waterboarded, really? >> remember how the gentleman in the white house talked about torture on the campaign trail, well, what i would like to say is i would like you to try it. he had dread james mitchell helped develop the enhanced interrogation program. he is here next. fire and fury apparently a big hit at the tehran book fair.
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pete: peteed, i like what you did with stairway walk. challenging president trump to be waterboarded. watch. this remember how the gentleman in the white house talked about torture on the campaign trail. what i would like to say is i would like you to try it i think people who have actually been tortured, who are saying this is not a good thing, you should listen to them because you have never been tortured. and neither has dick cheney. pete: that was whoopi. bring in the author of enhanced interrogation dr. james mitchell helped develop the cia's intear congratulation program and interrogated khalid sheikh mohammed. what do you make of whoopi's comments and how they reflect the media's view of what you had to do to keep our country safe? >> well, honestly who thinks what whoopi goldberg thinks. i'm tempted to completely dismiss it. on second thought, maybe she could show us how it's done.
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the next time there is credible intelligence of another catastrophic attack with the potential to kill thousands of people in the united states, maybe she could go to unsafe place in the world and interrogate the terrorists and i will stay back home. i will stay safe with my family and criticize her like she criticized us. i think what she is doing really is value signaling. preening in front of an audience that likes her to show how much more morally superior she is to us. i would say as a psychologist that she needs to be careful the reason for that is a strong willed man like donald trump, if he is exposed to the water board, he is not going to think like whoopi goldberg sees. he may see his harshness and think that's exactly what we need. we may need to be doing more of that remember, when they were trying to decide whether or not waterboarding was legal, i waterboarded an assistant attorney general of the united states. he got up off the waterboard
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and decided that not only was it legal. not only was it not torture. but it didn't violate our treaties with other countries. so, i think she just needs to be cautious. pete: when you water boared that assistant a.g. the idea was you want this to see what this feels like. he or she stood up and said it brought me to the precipice, i probably would give up information but ultimately i'm safe and just fine afterwards. >> actually, it was the other way around. he demanded that we waterboarded him so he could decide whether or not it was torture. and then in the run up to doing that i waterboarded a cia attorney, a woman, who would not allow us to waterboard the attorney general, the assistant attorney general until she was waterboarded. and both of them said essentially the same thing. it sucked. i wouldn't want to do it again. but i don't think it's torture. now, the laws have changed. and that's the other thing that i think your viewers probably should be aware of. this is a tempest and a teapot. the laws have changed.
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the moral landscape has changed. waterboarding is off the table now. so, fussing and getting hysterical about waterboarding is an irrelevant waste of time. it's simply value signaling. >> dr. mitchell could there be a world again where waterboarding isn't off the table? have we forgotten what our enemy also do to us? >> i actually don't think it's necessary right now, given our current threat situation and the capabilities of our organization. but future bad guys ever get a nuclear weapon, can you bet your as it's going to be on the table again. no president of the united states is going to allow a terrorist to set off a nuclear bomb in new york city or los angeles or chicago or seattle or portland because they want to maintain the moral high ground. if they do, they ought to be ran out of town on a rail because that's just despicable. pete: dr. james mitchell, author of enhanced interrogation.
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you know of what you speak, sir. thank you for joining us this morning. we appreciate it. >> thank you. pete: did the fbi spy on trump. that's the question as the investigators become the investigated. >> if for any reason we find out that this person, this asset of theirs was, in fact, surveying or spring on the trump campaign prior to that time, then they have got an issue. pete: dan bongino here to weigh in on that live next. gubernatorial candidate throwing political correctness out the window in latest campaign ad. he's here live coming up. >> i got a big truck just in case i need to round up criminal illegals and take them home myself. yep, i just said that i'm brian kempf. m show me minivans with no reported accidents. boom. love it. [struggles] show me the carfax.
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>> remember, the fbi has been goin doggedly sticking with this story that that what initiated this cowrpted intelligence probe was a tip they got in july about this supposed drunken conversation of a junior campaign aide named george papadopoulos. if for any reason we find out that this person, this asset of theirs was, in fact, surveying or spying on the trump campaign prior to that time, then they have got an issue, right? because that's no longer their origin story and they must have had something else that they were basing this
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on whether it be the dossier or some other information that they were using as a reason to go out and surveil the trump campaign. ed: so the suspense is growing about exactly what was going on with the fbi, the cia, and the trump campaign and where this investigation started. let's go to dan bongino down in florida. good morning, dan. >> hey, good to be here. good to see you all. ed: dan, it seems like the plot keeps thickening. >> i have been telling you all on this show forever that the trump team was framed and was set up and, of course, you know, the liberals and some of the anti-trumpers say oh, that's a conspiracy theory. except for the fact that most of it actually happened and now we're getting conversation on a lot of it. guys, think about what kim strassel by the way was an epic piece in the "wall street journal" she wrote. think about what she said in that piece, a human intelligence asset, working for the fbi, may have been embedded or working together information on the opposition political candidate in the form of the trump team while obama was
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in office? do you understand what that means? that a human intelligence asset was spying on the trump people? in addition to unmasking? in addition to foreign intelligence passing information to the united states on the trump team as cnn themselves reported? it's crazy. ed: who was running the fbi in 2016? >> jim comey. that's why jim comey is running scared right now. abby: big question remains, dan, what evidence are they using to surveil the -- if this ends up being true, if they were surveying the trump campaign before any of this we knew about, are they using the dossier that we know was funded by democrats? are they using james comey's memos that were basically his diaries and personal feelings about president trump? what evidence are they using that gives them the access that they need to monitor people? >> abby, here is the disturbing part about this. the evidence, it seems to have been they found a crime, excuse me, they found a person that and manufactured a crime. not that they had a crime and then found the evidence
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later on. the person was trump. they targeted trump from the beginning. it appears that there were intelligence assets and people in the obama administration and political operatives hell bent on making trump and trump's team what i call dirtying them up. it's a law enforcement term. make them look bad. what we're going to do is send people in there, sources, and we're going to try to get them to admit to things they did or didn't do. what we would call a setup. now, the list of suspects by the way is really short on this. and a lot of people have an idea of who this source is. i can tell you this. all the names are deeply troubling because some of them have connections to foreign intelligence and people who worked for foreign intelligence outlets before which gives this thing is a whole other disturbing angle we haven't even touched yet. pete: ed, this is before the comey memos and dossier. what kim strassel and others were saying essentially fbi asset put inside the trump campaign to provide them information. what would -- we have asked
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this before, was the premise that they really thought there was maybe some collusion or conversations with russia or would it have been purely a political motive we don't like this guy, we want inside his campaign? >> i believe intelligence operators in the united states at a high level. some of them who were more political than intelligence, unfortunately. but, pete, as you know, the intelligence community has no law enforcement authority at all. they could not open an investigation formally into trump without the fbi. i believe when it becomes public what happened with you were level managers in the cia. that they pushed the fbi and basically used these sources to get information to push the fbi into opening a formal counter intelligence investigation into trump because central intelligence agency cunts do it. they are not a law enforcement entity. that's what happened and that's where this source is going to come into play. one more thing, the date matters here. kim nailed it in that piece.
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if that george papadopoulos meeting in may. if this source entered the intelligence scene before that, that means the fbi's whole story about how this started is bunk. it's garbage. >> as ed says who was head of the fbi. someone nervous about that when asked about devin nunes asking for classified info. he says that is dangerous to ask for. here is what he said. >> i thought everyone understood that the absolute core of the intelligence community, including the fbi, is its human sources. that's really all the fbi is that's really all the cia is you cannot overstate the danger in that kind of behavior to the security of united states. >> what do you make of that response? >> abby, there is a lot in there let me unpack this for you. it is dangerous what jim comey said the nunes investigation to him, comey. it's going to uncover a couple things. jim comey hid this investigation from congressional oversight which he was obligated to do
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by procedure for 8 months he was supposed to give quarterly briefings. he hid this investigation into trump for 8 months. another thing, he is right. the fbi is sources. sources are a gold mine for the fbi. here is the problem abby, you have to verify the sources. jim comey was the fbi director where they used unverified garbage to investigate the now put of the united states, former presidential candidate. ed: we just showed a picture. >> he failed in his duties. ed: also demanding questions about fbi memos and information that might show whether or not michael flynn really lied to the fbi, which is a whole another question getting into all weekend long because that's a big story as well. dan bongino, thanks for coming. in turning now to h other headlines we are following. nra is suing andrew cuomo and the state alleging a, quote: back lifting campaign. accuses cuomo in the financial services department to try to get bank insurers to cut ties with the gun group.
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this comes after nra find insurance broker for $7 million claiming it didn't have a license to do business in the state. the nra is seeking millions in damages. starbucks telling employees let anyone use their bathrooms. the new policy change comes after the controversial aarrest of two back men at a store in philadelphia in april sparking nationwide outrage. the coffee chain says it wants all paying and nonpaying customers to feel welcome. the company plans to close thousands of stores on may 29th for racial bias trach. call it a blue collar comedy come back. first it was roseanne and now last man standing is making a return. >> let's say grace. >> that's how you get to live here rent free with your husband. >> mom gets to live here rent-free with her husband. [laughter] >> you know, she's got you there, honey. >> great show. fox officially reviving the tv comedy for seventh season.
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abc canceling the conservative political show last year starring tim allen. thanks to all you guys for the support we are back. tim allen is fabulous. pete: pointing out at the time there was no reason to cancel it the ratings were good. looked suspicious. abby: it lives on. rick, it is raining outside. rick: happy weekend going to be a nasty one out there. almost all weekend. i will show you what's going on. kind of take a look right here. this is where the warm air is hot again across the south across parts of the deep south. heavy rain across florida. this pattern is going to stick with us for the better part of the next week. big showers moving into south florida. really try there. so you need it. going to get a little bit too fast. see localized flooding. this is this other boundary here where you notice the rain isn't moving one way or the other. it's raining over this same spot and that means areas from around detroit over towards parts of wisconsin and then all the way in towards parts of new york and so we are going to be looking at very heavy rain.
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we also have some severe weather threats especially where you see darker orange. that's where we could be significant wind later on today. so we'll watch for that not that much in the way of a tornado threat but certainly can't rule out isolated tornado. here is how the future radar looks. this sticks with us all day today and all day tomorrow. so that saturday and sunday, there you go. just to the south of it though, it's really hot. going to be into the 90's d.c. big cut off between d.c. and up here. abby: sounds like you need a weather man umbrella. rick: i gave you a pink one yesterday. ed: coming up, see no junk food eat no junk food. one mayor thinks he found the solution to obesity and dealing with it we'll explain. abby: job openings plummeting. how far can the job economy go? s
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every scar tells a story, and you can tell a lot more stories when your truck is a chevy silverado. the most dependable, longest-lasting, full-size pickups on the road. so let's promote our spring travel deal on choicehotels.com like this. earn one free night when you stay just twice this spring. allergies. or, badda book. badda boom. book now at choicehotels.com ...nausea, heartburn, when indigestion, upset stomach, diarrhea! nausea, heartburn, indigestion,
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upset stomach, diarrhea! here's pepto bismol! ah. nausea, heartburn, indigestion, upset stomach, diarrhea. hispanic unemployment, likewise, is the lowest, think of it, in the history, in the history of our country. it's the lowest. ed: here to break it all down fox business network christian -- >> there is a little of a
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hesitate hesitation but it is there. ed: no hesitation with the economy right now. >> definitely not with the latest numbers we saw. unemployment 3.9%. haven't seen it that low since 2,000. sounds like great news. have almost literally a great job for every single american in the country. march hitting a record number of 211,000 which you mentioned early on. the problem is that the fact that the neighbor market is shrinking. more joining and. aging baby boomers, fewer births, millennials, younger generation. that's making it more difficult for businesses to try to find good, quality people. abby: what's the long-term plan here? people are excited about tax cuts. feel like things are doing well. small businesses are doing well. how far can it go? >> in regard to tax cuts, we are not seeing the gains when it comes to companies. companies are bringing back money from overseas. apple a great example. everybody loves to use apple. bringing money back into the united states. they are not necessarily taking that money and reinvesting in employees.
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instead, they are taking that money and buying back shares. apple being the example buying back $100 billion worth of shares. they are doing m and a. mergers and accusations instead of saying let me increase the sal ril of my employees so they can continue to buy products that vin ceased because of inflation or because of oil prices. pete: hopefully over time when you have low employment the demand forces wages up but we will see where that goes and salaries. nancy pelosi says the best way to fix it is to undo the tax cuts. what do you make of her what she said on the campaign trail saying -- which would effectively be an increase on the middle class. how does that effect this. >> i watched this a few times and tried to read almost every single media outlet to see their perspective. i know she agreed to the second part of the statement and maybe we can play that clip or not. she agreed to saying she would unroll the tax plan. right? so we can assume that that means either increasing taxes or changing the breakdown. because she, according to her statistics, 83% of the
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1% is benefiting from this tax cut. so she feels like it's unfairly given towards the wealthier. however, if we are talking about the actual tax cuts, she used the term crumbs. and that's inaccurate. i'm trying to use bipartisan research. abby: inaccurate and insulting. a big deal for them and this changed their lives. >> caveat. the inaccuracy is only up until 2025 when those individual filers that expires. let's say you make between 38,000 to $70,000 you will see federal tax rate go from 25 percent to 22%. so you are gaining. ed: christina thank you. pete: melt down on the house floor. this business about making bherk great again it is your president that's dividing this country. >> do you yield. >> i do not yield into the one second to you. not one second. pete: what led to the maxine
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waters blow up against a republican congressman. we will bring it to you. >> georgia's gun toting gubernatorial candidate is throwing political correctness out the window in its latest campaign ad. here he is. >> i got a big truck. just in case i need to round up criminal illegals and take them home myself. yep, i just said that your digestive system has billions of bacteria, but life can throw them off balance.
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>> i got a big truck, just in case i need to round up criminal illegals and take them home myself. yep, i just said that. ed: he just said that and he is joining us now, the candidate who calls himself a politically incorrect conservative georgia secretary of state brian kemp, good morning, sir. >> good morning, guys. great to be on with you. ed: we should note there are about six candidates in the primary and you are maybe about second in the polls, trying to climb a little bit higher. how are those adds working. >> they are working great. people are really resonating to it. it's driving the left crazy. and the good hard working people of georgia love them. they have taken to the ads. not only the humor in them
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but drawing attention to conservative message, 4 point plan. our strong support for the second amendment. to plans that we have to take okay public safety reform. tracking deport criminal aliens stopping and dismantling gangs. it's beening there how many people will come up to me and give me one of the lines in our last commercial or two. pete: brian, i love the political incorrectness and good humor. i get that an add like that is get to you stand out with a lot of candidates. you would acknowledge it's not upon a private citizen to round up illegal its and take them home yourself in your truck. that's tongue in cheek. that's not something a private personal should do? >> well, i'm sure that we shouldn't have any tongue in cheek in politics anymore. i will tell you, people just take a lot of this too seriously. we are trying to draw attention to a really detailed policy message we have with tracking and deporting criminal illegals, which i'm sure everyone supports and also stopping
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and dismantling gangs. we become a distribution hub for the mexican drug cartel here in this state. that's not me saying that. that's federal prosecutors. i worked on these plans with local prosecutors, local law enforcement, and it's drawing attention to my commitment to keeping our family safe. i have three teenage daughters, a great wife first ad was about protection and keeping my state safe so we can continue to have a great business climate here. abby: good to have you on this morning. more "fox & friends" after this. ♪ bright copper kettles and warm woolen mittens ♪ ♪ brown paper packages tied up with strings ♪ ♪ these are a few of my favorite things ♪ ♪ ♪
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abby: secretary of state mike pompeo says there will be economic benefits to north korea if they denuclearize. >> if north korea takes bold action, the united states is prepared to work with north korea to across parity. >> pulling out of the iran nuclear deal will make it harder to negotiate successfully with north korea or anyone else. >> the fbi may have had a spy in or interacting with the trump campaign during the 2016 election. >> that a human intelligence asset was spying on the trump people in addition to unmasking, in addition to foreign intelligence passing information to the united states on the trump team as well? this is crazy. >> we are trying to make sure that we're making america great. >> i resent the remark about
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making america great again. >> whoopi goldberg challenging president trump to waterboarding. >> what i'm saying is i would like to you try it. >> i'm attempted to completela -- i'm tempted tocomn second thought maybe she could show us how it's done. ♪ no place i would rather be ♪ no, no, no. ♪ no place i'd rather be ♪ no, no, no, no ♪ no place i'd rather be ♪ no, no, no, no, no ♪ no place i would rather be ♪ when i am with you. ed: what a morning. thanks to bass pro and cabella's. they have a spring setup out there. they have a pool. abby: our viewers are thinking right now are he had ed and pete going to get in those kayaks later in the show and compete. ed: can you bet we are. ed: hehad. pete: i think i competed
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with clayton. last year i was winning. this year i haven't been so yet. so far. big trophy at stake. abby: what do you think? friends@foxnews.com. who will be in the water first? ed or pete? pete: we have footage? i believe -- i was just told now that ed was practicing yesterday. ed: they told me they were not filming this. abby: have you got to be kidding. ed: are you kidding me? ed: i need to explain. >> typical journalist. >> competition on a saturday morning. ed: i understand it looks bad. pete: just a friendly? we happen to be. ed: couple different ways can i do this. like when we did basketball. have you ever shot a basketball before? before you did. right? we're talking about the game. anyway. i was walking out of the building yesterday and
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montana, one of our producers happened to be walking out at the same time. i said hey, guys what are you doing bass pro shops and cabella's apparently there is kayak competition. i stopped and said i'm not going to my hotel. i'm going to actually practice in montana starts filming it. i said you can't show pete. this. pete: i don't know about that until right now. when ed is not on the air, all he is doing is working out at the gym or practicing his skills for any sort of competition that might come up. ed: clearly now it's kayaking. abby: i hope you win today,. abby: a lot of news. this was a busy week this week. the united states will help boost north korea's economy under one condition. it gives up its nuclear weapons. ed: secretary of state mike pompeo has been right in the middle of this making the announcement as new details emerge about historic summit set for june 12th in
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singapore. pete: jillian is live in washington. >> brand new secretary of state mike pompeo has spoken. after his return from north korea, but for what turned out to be arguably the most consequential foreign policy trip of the trump administration to date. he is brimming with optimism about the forthcoming trump/kim summit to be held as june mentioned june 12th in singapore. >> work with north korea to achieve prosperity on the par with our south korean friends. >> a clear offer of a lifeline to pyongyang's economy. also claimed the u.s. and the north have a quote shared vision for the future of the korean peninsula and are in complete agreement about what they seek to achieve at the summit. after over a year of fiery rhetoric and jabs traded back and forth between trump amid officials and the regime in pyongyang this is remarkable turn around. some suggest the current
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mood is too good to be true. they question washington and pyongyang don't have the same understanding of the concept of denuclearization and doubt kim really does intend to give up his prized nuclear program. a program initiated by his very own grandfather decades ago. the president's initial claim was that kim would relinquish all nuclear weapons, fuel and ballistic missiles before the u.s. made any concessions. and with the hotly anticipated summit just a few weeks away now, the window for kim to comply is closing quickly. guys? abby: jillian, thank you so much. amazing where we were six to eight months ago. because we were going all out war with north korea. ed: that's what the president's critics were saying. overcharged with the rhetoric and overheated. abby: a number of those critics walking that back. this seems to be working and paying off. maybe that tough rhetoric that we had never used in diplomacy before because president trump it doing it his own way. doing it differently. it's working.
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pete: obama saying open hand. people take advantage of it and eat your lunch. do you know who is ahead of this curve dennis rodman. i just thought of that. he was talking about this years and years ago. what is he doing playing basketball in north korea? maybe he was on to something. just saying. ed: the winds may be continuing. early next week, we will see the opening of the new u.s. ambassador in jerusalem. that's going to happen on monday. and the president is touting that by tweeting big week next week when the american embassy in israel will be moved to jerusalem. congratulations to all. and, again, just like the north korea piece remember when the president said democratic and republican presidents have promised to move to to jerusalem. we all knew they just said that in the campaign. then they get elected and they don't actually do it because they say it's too complicated, it's going to cause tension in the middle east. when the president announced a few months ago i'm actually going to follow through, we heard all of this crazy rhetoric saying this is going to explode in
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to an even bigger conflict in the middle east. we haven't seen it. abby: big take away whether it's what's going on in jerusalem or north korea or tearing up the iran deal, what's different about president trump is you were saying, ed, he promised all of these things on the campaign trail, he said i'm going to be different than the politicians that get into d.c. i'm going to actually follow through on those. and we're seeing, especially this past week that he has doubled down on promises and delivered many of them. you can't deny that he has actually followed through on that. very different from what we have seen some times in washington. pete: so well said. the result has been gratitude from our best of friends. i have been getting photos and texts from friends of mine in israel. american flags on the street. this is a banner zionist group led by trump's veamp board saying make israel great again. it doesn't need to be great again. israel is great. i have gotten street signs
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u.s. embassy. american flags in jerusalem. there is so much appreciation and gratitude for the boldness and courageousness of this president. they will name the square near the embassy like u.s. square with a reference to trump, potentially. because without individual leadership, willing to buck the trends of the establishment of the norm, nothing ever changsz. in this case it is changing and changing rapidly. we could have spent billions of dollars and taken a bunch of years to get this embassy established. instead they said we have a consulate. make to the embassy and reinvestor bish it open it up and get going. monday is a very historic day. abby: i would love to know what mike pompeo is taking a day of o. he has had no days of rest. ed: even if the president brings peace to north korea for max screen waters.
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pete: what would it take to bring maxine around? abby: not denuclearizing north korea. that's not enough. he haded what he will she say about that. congressman mike kelly talked about making america great again on the house floor and that sent maxine waters into really a frenzy. watch. >> we are trying to make sure that we're making america great. every day in every way and the best way to do that is to stop talking about discrimination and start talking about the nation. we're coming together as a people in spite of what you say. >> mr. kelly, please do not leave. because i want you to know that i am more offended as an african-american woman than you will ever be. and this business about making america great again, it is your president that's dividing this country. i resent the remark about making america great again. he is down here making a speech for this dishonorable president of the united states of america. having said that i reserve the balance of my time and no, i do not yield, not one second to you. not one second. not one second to you.
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ed: you are not supposed to address each other on the house floor. supposed to address the chair. one of the reasons why the decorum fell apart. >> maxine waters has repeatedly basically from day one given these speeches saying waving the finger and say impeach 45. impeach 45. impeach for what? starting with the premise of impeachment before the president really got going the other premise is if you are wearing that make america great again hat you are wearing it because you are racist. that's what she is saying when mike kelly says make america great again. support you are your borders and support your cops and stand for the anthem. support your military. because you don't believe in american open borders doesn't make you racist. maybe the democratic party isn't representing your interest and hasn't for a long time. she starts with the premise you are racist if you are pro-trump. from there dessends all the
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lunancy. abby: mike kelly says quit pulling the racist card. for the life of me i will never understand how the democrats can question our president's sanity while continuing to put maxine waters in front of a camera. mike kelly will be on with our own neil cavuto at 10:00 a.m. this morning. he is going to ask about that particular exchange. who was right, who was right. going to be interesting interview. i can't wait for that other headlines we are following i want to bring you this morning. starting with this. four troopers injured in a shootout. ambushed while trying to high risk warrant. coming under fire as soon as they arrived at the home of a wanted drug suspect. building burst into flames. investigators say it appears the house was booby trapped and the suspect may have used surveillance cameras to see them coming. all troopers luckily are expected to make a full recovery. and president trump declaring a major disaster in hawaii following devastation on the state's big island. relief coming 24 hours after the governor's desperate plea for help during kilauea
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volcanic activity. governor david egay thanking the president tweeting in this opens the. vice president mike weapons is speaking to college graduates in michigan later today. he will be delivering the commencement address at hillsdale college just a few hours from now. it's not his first trip to the school. pence also spoke there back in 2010 when he was a member of congress serving neighboring indiana. and those are your headlines. it is the time of graduation speeches. pete: it is. no conservatives at many of our top schools, again. ed: i heard you talking about that on the five. pete: it's amazing. ed: hillary clinton's campaign and as we noted earlier grievance tour continues. taking criticism of president trump yes, overseas. >> pulling out of that agreement, makes america less safe and less trusted.
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ed: dr. sebastian gorka is here to respond. he is fired up live next. pete: they are the classic stories we all grew up with. >> good morning, stepmother. >> pick up the laundry and get on with your duties. >> yes, stepmother. pete: this story is insane. now some parents are changing the endings of fairy tales on their own because the stories aren't politically correct. abby: no. ed: come on. pete: stick around. you're going -- abby: speechless. they all got a story about what happened to 'em. man 2: it was raining, there was only one way out. i could feel the barb wire was just digging into the paint. man: two bulls were fighting, (thud) bam hit the truck. try explaining that to your insurance company. woman: another ding, another scratch. it'll just be another chapter in the story. every scar tells a story, and you can tell a lot more stories
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so we know how to cover almost we've anything.st everything even "close claws." [driver] so, we took your shortcut, which was a bad idea. [cougar growling] [passenger] what are you doing? [driver] i can't believe that worked. i dropped the keys. [burke] and we covered it. talk to farmers, we know a thing or two because we've seen a thing or two. ♪ we are farmers. bum-pa-dum, bum-bum-bum-bum ♪ >> pulling out of the iran nuclear deal will make it harder to negotiate
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successfully with north korea or anyone else. pulling out of that agreement makes america less safe and less trusted and iran more dangerous. it would be much harder a second time now that our credibility is shot. ed: former secretary of state hillary clinton on the attack again. this time slamming president trump's decision to withdraw from the iran deal. here to weigh in fox news national security analyst former assistant to president trumsebastian gorka. >> i thought the attacks on this president or any president were supposed to stop at the water's edge. >> yes, they do, usually. but, in the case of hillary, i guess not. and allow me to react to the video you just showed of maxine waters. that was frightening.
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congressman waters you need to get professional medical assistance. i think the same might be happening with hillary. they live in this paranoid alternate universe. her statements on the iran deal, hillary clinton was the worse secretary of state we have ever had from that plastic reset button that she took to russia after which they invaded their neighbors to the disasters in libya. this woman has not only the temerity to criticize a sitting president but also to do so after her abysmal track record? she said we are now more dangerous for canceling the iran deal? the iran deal gave a state sponsor, a country that is recognized by the state department as the largest state sponsor of terrorism, billions of dollars, that at the time, at the time the obama administration admitted well, yeah, i guess some of that money will be
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used for terrorism. ed, that's insanity. that's the definition of insanity. ed: dr. gorka get to the substance of what she is saying. i assume you will be critical of it i want to push back on the notion that she says pulling out of iran deal, whatever the merits is, now going to make it harder to get a deal with kim jong united auto workers union. president trump sits down with the north korean leader on june 129 and says, look, you denuclearize and we're going to do the following things, won't the north korean dictator say wait a second, how do i know you are really going to do that, mr. president, because the u.s. signed a deal with iran and then pulled out. >> we are a republic. we are a democracy in the form of a republic, which means you get to choose your president every four years. it does not mean that you have to do what the last president said. that would be a dictatorship. i mean, does she not know how this system works? the idea that obama said
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something, therefore, for the rest of eternity it must be so. no, this is not china. if a deal is bad, you can change it. and that's what the president did. so, look, north korea -- ed, you know as well as anybody, it's just stunning. ed: it's been a remarkable turn of events. >> three hostages for zero pallets of cash. that's incredible. ed: thanks for coming in. >> thanks, ed. ed: string of stabbings and violence. guess what the mayor is concerned about. junk food? classic stories we all grow up with. now, some parents are actually changing the endings of fairy tales. you are not going to believe this. because they are politically incorrect. is that really a good idea? >> good morning, stepmother. >> pick up the laundry and get on with your duties. >> yes, stepmother. hello mom.
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and it's "daditude". simple. easy. awesome. xfinity. the future of awesome. >> good morning again. some quick headlines, the city of london is dealing with a surge in deadly stabbings. but its mayor, concerned about junk food. taking steps to ban ads sugary foods on public education to curb childhood obesity. iran's supreme leader controlling thleadertrolling tht posting photo to instagram reading through the anti-trump book fire and fury. repeatedly spoken out against the president since announcing the u.s. is withdrawing from the iran nuclear deal. abby? abby: thank you, ed. who could forget this romantic fairy tale moment?
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♪ abby: it's a movie we all grew up on. turns out hundreds of parents now have a problem with fairy tales because of scenes like that from sleeping beauty. pete: that's right. recent survey found one in four parents, 25% take creative liberties while sharing fairy tales with their kids and 16% ban them all together. have the pc police finally gone too far? abby: here to weigh in is the founder of the free range kids movement lenore and psychotherapist and author of disconnected how to reconnect our digitally distracted kids. a great book and so needed today. lenore, for those parents that are complaining, saying that it's too politically incorrect, what would be the perfect fairy tale for them? >> i think the perfect fairy tale would be two kids going together into the woods, dropping some bread crumbs. they see a ginger bread house and go oh my god,
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that's bad for your teeth, that could cause diabetes. we don't know that lady. let's turn around. crumbs are still here we didn't do anything yet. let's go home and eat some kale. >> and quinoa. >> i brought my fairy tale with me. i love this book. i was just rereading. i know one of the problems is with little red riding hood that she gets eaten at the end. yeah, she does. she doesn't even get saved by the woodsman in my version here which is the original version. fairy tales are supposed to scare you. supposed to teach you a lesson. don't go off with the wolf. okay? pete: life is a scary place. >> somebody is wearing your grandmother's clothes but has a snout, you know, avoid them. pete: put examples up people are so-called concerned about. >> yeah. pete: 36 are concerned by the pied piper tricking
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children into follow them. children can be knive. one in four disagree with cinderella cleaning. quarter think the ugly duckling encourages body shaming. hansel and gretel left alone in the forest. 27% worry that pinocchio encourages kids to lie. sleeping beauty the prince didn't ask for consent. >> this was over the top compared to a couple years ago i was out here about doing banning booing and banning tag. we have hit all-time high. it's our society. it's just -- you know, these messages being portrayed to our kids. s a therapist and school counselor, there is anxiety epidemic among our kids nowadays. i wonder if a lot of this has to do with it because we are creating this mind set of fear and anxiety. >> end up hurting young kids. >> what you are doing in this case and i think tom is completely right. are assuming kids are so psychologically fragile if they hear about the big bad
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wolf or somebody in a witch, somehow they can't handle it but, of course, these stories have been around. i'm just reading about the little red riding hood story it's 1,000 years old. somehow 1,000 years of generations of children have been able to handle. this what about the bible. the bible is filled with stories. people turn into pillars of salt. >> assume psychological fragility on our kids. it's not a powerful message to be sending our kids. pete: we all grow up and fragile at some level. you learn to be fortified through life experience and relates. if you don't do that then you are anxious your entire life. >> right. >> we protect them from everything, what happens when they go out into the real world one day? how are they going to handle a boss being mean to them. abby: cinderella you can't watch clean. >> don't we want kids to clean? abby: we don't want our fairy tales to change. we want our kids to live like we did. >> read grimes. they are out there.
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it's easy to find. and if you hate the ending, okay, change the ending, eventually your kids are going to read the real one anyway. meantime they are quite available. pete: be aware what's happening in your schools. while this is about parents in your home changing the end. they will could be changing the end in school. he hear it all the time. keep kids in a cacoon watch out what's being taught in your classroom. >> children need to be dosed with fear. and that's why you see them climbing trees a little higher each time because they are scared and then they are triumphant and then they go a little higher and triumph fants to. say they can't handle anything is to act as if they are somehow a lesser generation than any generation before now. >> the natural habitat of a kid. >> trees. >> supposed to be playing and scraping their niece. >> and reading fairy tales. >> rub dirt on it real thing. abby: kids have fun. unbelievable. fluid a pumpkin. abby: thank you so much for being here.
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whoopi goldberg tog talked about waterboarding. >> remember how the guy in the white house talked about torture on the campaign trail. what i would like t to say i would like you to try it. abby: what does the man who enhanced intear station think about it is he coming up. pete: hottest deals on outdoor gear is coming up. abby: is that politically correct? can you say camping? ♪ bad day of fish something a good day of my mom's pain from
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>> remember how the gentleman in the white house talked about torture on the campaign trail? what i would like to say is i would like you to try it i think people who have actually been tortured, who are saying this is not a good thing, you should listen to them because you have never been tortured. and neither has dick cheney. pete: that was whoopi goldberg saying i think you should try waterboarding to the president. ed: as if you can't understand any policy in america unless have you actually done it. that only the people who have experienced something, it's kind of ridiculous. >> we had the author of enhanced interrogation. he helped develop the enhanced interrogation program and personally interrogated khalid sheikh
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mohammed and here is what he had to say about that. >> who cares what whoopi goldberg thinks. next time there is credible intelligence of another catastrophic attack, with the potential to kill thousands of people in the united states, maybe she can go to some unsafe place in the world and interrogate the terrorist and i will stay back home. a strong willed man like donald trump, if he is exposed to the waterboarding, is he not going to think like whoopi goldberg thinks. he may see his harshness and think that's exactly what we need. pete: could there be a world again where waterboarding isn't off the table? have we forgotten what done to us. >> if the bad guys ever get a nuclear weapon, can you bet your ass would be on the table again. pete: talk about a guy that would know. abby: the question with waterboarding, pete, you know this much better than we do, does it ultimately lead to getting useful information? pete: ultimately. you need to be able to verify the information that you get. you ultimately have to get to the point where they give it to you. you are dealing with the
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harshest tears in the world who have a religious dedication to what they are doing. they are not going to say oh you put me in handcuffs now i'm going to give you the goods. find a way to do it in keeping with your values. he has waterboarded attorney generals and cia agents. they wanted to know what it feels like so they can advocate for it or not. when he does it, they say hey, this is tough. it's not fun, but it's not torture. we could live in a world again where we need something like that because of time sensitive and imminent. not unreasonable to make an argument like something like this could be needed again. just saying. abby: very divisive issue as you can see. a lot of other headlines i want to bring you this morning. the slain national guardsman killed in a fit of road rage has been laid to rest. the community mourning 23-year-old tony harter seen right there at his missouri funeral. he served two tours of duty in iraq. nicholas webb was arrested on murder charges. is he now accused of stabbing harter last weekend after the two argued about a lane change. webb spent 30 years in prison for killing 15-year-old girl.
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pete: i'm sorry. abby: former new york assembly guilty of corruption again. sheldon silver accused of collecting $4 million from a cancer researcher and real estate developers who benefited from its clout and n. state government. he now faces 130 years in prison. the verdict comes a year after his 2015 conviction on the same charges but were thrown out. four u.s. navy sailors now being hailed as heroes for saving two teens from drowning. ina how dithe four were in florr the armed forces volleyball championship when they heard cries for help. the sailors swimming 75 yards offshore to reach two girls in the rough surf. one of them unsupportive. two of the sailors gave cpr until first responders were able to arrive. because of their help, both girls are now okay. that sun real. and our nation's oldest military vet turns 112 years
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old. that is richard overton. secret to the long life is god, cigars and, yes, some good whiskey. >> smoked cigars since i was 18 years old. it don't hurt you. don't get drunk. abby: texas native born in 1906 served in world war ii. believed to be the oldest living american man and hopes to live another five years. ed: let's hope another 10, 20. abby: rick, out to you on the plaza. what's going on? >> it's chilly outside. that's the case across parts of the northern tier of the country. go to the south, where it is hot. take a look at that 54 in chicago. 86 in kansas city. 58 in new york city. 92 in d.c. we will be breaking all kinds of record temperatures. high temperatures across much of the south. 98 degrees today in amarillo. we will see all kinds of
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records just following. tomorrow, kind of the same story. maybe a little bit of a break in d.c. that's because we have got this precipitation. this front stationary. slowly drift towards the south. parts of the mid-atlantic. that's why you will see temperatures drop tomorrow. here is what today looks like. 91 in blacksberg and down across parts of the southeast. get ready, you are going to be baking. all right. well, bass pro shops and cabella's is kicking off the go outdoors event with everything you need to know to enjoy a night outside under the stars. here with more is allen treadwell from bass pro shops and cabella's. welcome back. we love it when you are here. >> we brought the camping to new york city this morning. and at bass pro shops and cabella's we are so excited about the go outdoors event. what it's about is getting everybody in the outdoors so they can figure out how much fun it is. rick: getting more comfortable than it used to be. >> getting way more comfortable. you are sitting in one of our little chairs right now. so light. weighs less than two pounds.
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rick: this is the chair. >> this is the chair you are sitting in right now. this is your backpack. no matter where you go you have a comfortable spot to sit down. gets chilly the pillows and blankets get down so small now. here you go. what do you think of the blanket? can you cover up. cool thing about blanket not just for camping anymore. can you use it for cold friday night football games, hay rides, whatever you are going to do. rick: still use it in the city or at home. >> this is probably the worst part about camping. the mosquitoes and bugs. the terminal cells has you covered. 15-foot barrier around you that keeps those mosquitoes away from you. light as well. what it does is using the flour that keeps thflower that'o far. so much more comfortable. what do you think about that. pete: fantastic and roomy, too. >> it's nice.
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we have some sleeping bags to choose from the rectangular style you are in to the mummy bag over here. cool thing about rectangular style zip a couple together. pete: make it a two for. >> exactly. >> matt. >> no matter how good of a sleeping bag you have. the hard ground is hard. want to get off the ground and get those pinch points away that's where the normal rest comes. in self-inflating and lay it down. actually about as comfortable as your bed at home. pete: like glamping. >> bass pro shops is in to glamping. >> so far with technology so much more comfortable now. rick: allen treadwell, thank you so much. more coming up later in the show. abby, back to you inside. abby: pete is not going to come back. is he resting his muscles for the kayak race. ed: president trump not afraid to strengthen our military. what do war fighters think about his approach? next guest was known as one of america's deadliest snipers.
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sergeant nic irving says the strategy is working. abby: growing calls for president trump to get the nobel peace prize for the progress he has made with north korea. what do you think college students think about that? you don't want to miss it. it's up next. >> do you think he deserves the award. >> hell no. that's a joke. what has he done for peace? >> no. no. i feel like he just thinks that he deserves many awards.
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stance a sharp contrast to that of president obama's but he is also not afraid to strengthen our military. so what do our booths boots on the ground think about the job their commander-in-chief is doing. sergeant rick irving was known as one of the deadliest snipers taking out the taliban and al qaeda. he joins us now to react. nic irving joins us this morning. >> thank you. pete: a guy from 2005 to 2010 did six tours three in iraq and three in afghanistan. last in province. 33 kills as a sniper. as someone who has been right there on the front line. how has president trump's approach differed from president obama's? >> it's tougher. not a little bit. striker fear into the enemy. having that fear in the enemy is one of the, i guess, one of the first things that the enemy wants to back down from a fight from or wants to back out of a fight having that fear inside of him. we didn't really get that from prior presidents. you know the last president that we had. we didn't have that ability
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to actually strike fear into our enemy and have that element of surprise going into helmand province. the marines in 2009, they knew that their, i guess their movement or their target was going to be -- it was tell graphed by our former president. that was a detriment. pete: we forget about that. the surge in afghanistan. we surged but told the enemy when we were going to leave at the exact same time. >> did i not understand that that was one of the first times i have ever seen that being special operations our job was to have the element of surprise and take out the enemy. not having that element of surprise is kind of like fighting with handcuffs behind your back. pete: i have heard that from a lot of people. talking about striking fear. military can strike fear, you are saying a commander-in-chief also brings that aspect to a battlefield. puts a little swag near your step as well. >> oh, yeah. big time. it gives us that backing hey, when we go out here we have somebody who is going to back us up. if anything does happen and we need to get out, we may have to drop another moob,
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something like that. >> we have. partnered with general at a time that whtatawho is a friendw as well. it may be loosely based on you. >> loosely based off of my life and my prior life if you want to call it that. it's something that i wanted to not necessarily leave behind, you know, every book or every life has a different chapter. i can't hold on to chapter 5 and make it to the end of, you know, the book if i'm just stuck on one chapter. so i kind of wanted to leave that and move on to something that i really looked up to as a kid. tom cleanclancey and guys like . goose bumps. i want to the live out that childhood dream to continue to write. pete: you are saying may be the first of many. >> oh, yeah. pete: sniper and army ranger did you six tours. what's something people don't understand or realize about what that kind of service means? >> it's a job.
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first of all. you know, it's a job. but, i guess the task to, you know, strike fear or get revenge on americans' behalf it's an honor. after 9/11 and watching that when i was in high school on the television screens in my class, i knew where i was going with that moment. i wanted to get out of high school and wanted to go out and fight. i couldn't come out here to help. so that was the pay back. pete: absolutely. you speak for a lot of people. you speak for a generation. i do a lot of interviews. every once in a while you are with someone in absolute honor and awe of. thank you for what you have done. have you know other guys like. this i'm just robin hood amongst batman. pete: that's how i feel right now. thank you for your service. get the book, reaper, ghost target. you know you want. to say the guy is the real deal. all right, college students, don't think president trump should get the nobel prize. but do they even know why obama won his just nine months into his presidency? >> what did he do to deserve
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it? >> was it for his education -- push on education? >> i'm not sure what he did to get the award. pete: you will not want to miss the rest of that video coming up next. plus, we have sara carter, reince priebus, geraldo rivera, and me beating ed henry for the first time in months. awful coming up on the program live ♪ i'm walking everywhere, man. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ raindrops on roses and whiskers on kittens ♪
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>> after the successful release of american hostages from north korea and what a moment that was. the upcoming summit with kim jong un and the potential denuclearization of the korean peninsula, that's a mouthful. some of president trump's supporters say he should get the nobel peace prize. what do college students think? abby: cabot phillips is the
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media director for campus reform.org he went to uc santa cruz to find out how they feel. >> they have been indoctrinated to hate anything donald trump. ed: they have. revisionist history has been taught to them. when president obama was in office it had to be all sunshine and rainbows around the world. i think people are going to be sadly not surprised by what they found but people will definitely. ed: what did they say about president trump first? >> do you think he deserves the award? >> hell, no. that's a joke. what has he done for peace? >> okay. >> yeah, nothing. >> no. no. i feel like he just thinks that he deserves many awards and that's just stupid. >> i don't really think so. >> i don't know. it's just too good of a prize for him to have credit for. abby: too good of a prize. >> we have covered students being taught by professor going on media seeing how president trump does it has to be evil. it has to be the wrong way of doing things.
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leading up to the new peace deal in north korea. this is the wrong way of going become b. it this is not going to go well it does go well. well, he doesn't deserve an award. he had nothing to boo with this. ed: the deal ♪ done yet. it could all fall apart. on the other hand, he could denuclearize the korean peninsula. is that not enough for his critics? >> i think if president obama had done that they would have already renamed the prize the obama peace award. abby: you asked about former president obama why did he get the nobel peace prize and here is what they told you. >> do you feel like president obama deserved the award when he got it in 2009? >> yes. >> and what did he do to deserve it? >> >> was it for his education, push on education or was it for the obamacare? >> obama? >> i don't know. i'm not sure what he did to get the award. >> if obama won it why wouldn't he win it? i don't know why obama won it. i like obama. but i don't think there is any real legitimate reason why he should have won it.
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ed: that's an honest response. >> we got one honest response. it's not that these students were forgetting a bunch of obvious reasons. there wasn't thatch to go on in the first place. >> he won it nine months in office. where can you point and say that was a more peaceful place when obama first went in office. broken red line in syria. have you isis spreading. nuclearization of north korea. iran. i think these students just didn't have much to go on. abby: are they a good example of most of the students you talk to or are those some of the entertaining one. >> absolutely indicative. students are conditioned they know the answer they have to give and opinion they are supposed to have about people on the left and right. ed: abbot phillips. abby: good to have you here. hillary clinton taking her tour down under. this time about women seeking power. really? ed: now that more states are making marijuana legal. more companies are not testing for it. is this a good idea?
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we will debate it. fair and balanced ♪ ♪ remfresh-your nightly sleep companion. available in the natural sleep section at walmart. why is dark magic so spell-bindingly good? it's a bold blend of coffee with rich flavors of uganda, sumatra, colombia and other parts of south america. like these mountains, each amazing on their own. but together? magical. all, for a smoother tasting cup of coffee. green mountain coffee roasters.
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nausea, heartburn, indigestion, upset stomach, diarrhea! here's pepto bismol! ah. nausea, heartburn, indigestion, upset stomach, diarrhea. ♪ abby: secretary of state mike pompeo says there will be economic benefits to north korea if they denuclearize. >> if north korea takes bold action, the united states is prepared to work with north korea to achieve prosperity. >> pulling out of the iran nuclear deal with l. make it harder to negotiate successfully with north korea. or anyone else. >> this woman has the -- not only the temerity to criticize a serving president but also to do so after her abysmal track record? >> the fbi may have had a spy in or interacting with the trump campaign during the 2016 election. >> human intelligence asset was spying on the trump team in addition to unmasking, in addition to foreign
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intelligence passing information to the united states on the trump team as well? this is crazy. >> the problem is everybody is meeting hysteria with more hysteria. and then we just are all becoming hysterical. and it's getting worse. this is your time to rise. > are ed and pete going to get in kayaks later in the show and are they going to compete? pete: ed was practicing yesterday. ainsley: when ed is not on air is he in the gym and practicing for any competition that might come up to beat you. ♪ ♪ ♪ ready to run. abby: this is pete and my favorite song. i love they keep playing it switch foot. pete: you don't know this song dare you to move. go and download it. ed: i can't believe they had surveillance video. abby: of you kayaking. he. ed: minding my business
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checking out bass pro shops and cabella's. pete: it's a rigged system, america. ed henry is a part of it. how much time have you spent in a kayak? ed: this is the first time. that's why i practiced. you are from minnesota. this guy has been trained in the army. i mean, i need a little bit of practice. give me something. abby: after watching you in that kayak my money is on. pete: pete your money has been too many times. ed: i think the money son you. abby: i think the country is on your side, too. ed: for for 2018. abby: huge news week. big week for foreign policy. secretary of state mike pompeo is saying there will be economic benefits to north korea if they denuclearize. here he is. >> if chairman kim chooses the right bath there is a future for prosperity for north korea and the north korean people. if north korea takes bold action to quickly
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denuclearize, the united states is prepared to work with north korea to achieve prosperity on the par with our south korean friends. if is he prepared to fully denuclearize, it would be an activity that undertook to ensure that we didn't end up in the same place that we had ended up before. it will require robust verification program and one that we will undertake with partners around the world which we will achieve in frankly an agreement never before it has set forth. pete: i love that remember, he was little rocket man now is he chairman kim. if you are not going to behave. going to treat you like a kid. okay. smack you and let you know fire and fury. if you play by our rules, maybe get rid of your nukes. you can be chairman. ed: what if the obama administration called him chairman kim. would you be happy with that. pete: if they weren't winning. we have the you were hand and putting the throttle down. we have the virtue of being on the weekend reflecting on
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the whole week. tearing up the iran deal u bringing back of hostages. the prospect for a real denuclearization. we know the meeting is going to happen june 12th singapore chairman kim and president trump and then on monday of next week, we have the opening of the embassy in jerusalem this is fast forward. this is almost like a business pace wait, we have a businessman in the white house. could that be part of it? he is not going to play by the swamp rules and swamp time line. is he doing his thing and getting it done. abby: ed, what so many people are happy about that voted for president trump he promised throughout the entire campaign trail. i'm going to do this differently and be tough when it comes to foreign policy and everything you look to this past week has come through. we don't know how we will ultimately end with north korea and important to be skeptical. working on the strategy he has used ofenning tougher has paid off. ed: couple months ago had the critics saying oh my gosh. calling him little rocket man, fire and fury. that's going to blow up into a nuclear war. this is a disaster.
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actually, we are on the brink of peace. and if you think about it, you had people like ben rhodes, architect of the iran nuclear deal, which even democrats admit was flawed. now, a few months ago was out there on twitter saying oh my gosh, the president is leading us to the brink of nuclear war and, yet, things are calming down. things are coming together. and, yet, they are still naysayers. like hillary clinton another architect of the iran deal taking the what happened tour i suppose that was on the domestic front, now taking it overseas. pete: where all her voters are. right? ed: she is not doing the tour in wisconsin. abby: she was in melbourne, australia. here is what she had to say about pulling out of that iran deal and her thoughts on president trump. >> pulling out of the iran nuclear deal will make it harder to negotiate successfully with north korea or anyone else. pulling out of that agreement makes america less safe and less trusted and
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iran nor dangerous. as secretary of state, i helped negotiate the crippling international sanctions that brought iran to the table. it would be much harder a second time now that our credibility is shot. abby: you could argue the exact opposite, actually. what president trump is doing with diplomacy is outside of the box that we normally stay in as diplomats of the united states. she was secretary of state. he has done it completely differently. and we are seeing so far that it's paying off with north korea. who knows with iraq. because no one thought we would get this far with north korea ripped up the iran deal. maybe get to a place we can work with european allies get a better deal. why not try? pete: maybe is he reestablishing our credibility. guess what in the u.s. didn't make a deal with iran. because it was never ratified by the senate. barack obama made an executive deal with the iranians. president trump got elected based on getting rid of it. and he is saying to north korea, we don't do bad deals. we only do good deals. you are not going to get
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money upfront. you can't test anymore. give us our hostages back. verify any time. we can't go to military site. there is no time line on it doesn't expire after 10 years. abby: how are they spending the money. pete: what a good deal looks like. and got $1.7 billion. abby: not going to american the people to make their lives better. ed: global grievance tour there used to be a practice in this country that attacking the commander-in-chief stopped at the water's edge when you are overseas you don't attack the president, whether it's democrat or republican. we had dr. sebastian gorka. he's not afraid to attack to be fair and to be clear. and once we play you had that clip on hillary clinton, here's what he said. >> hillary clinton was the worst secretary of state we have ever had. this woman has the -- not only the temerity to criticize a serving president, but also to do so after her abysmal track record. the iran deal gave a state
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sponsor, a country that is recognized by the state department as the largest state sponsor of terrorism billions of dollars that at the time, at the time the obama administration admitted well, yeah, i guess some of that money will be used for terrorism. that's the definition of insanity. abby: that's going on with hillary clinton, speaking overseas, criticizing what the president is doing. also, john kerry meeting with iranian officials. all of this is happening abroad. should stop at the water's edge. what a reminder how far we have come from that. brian: you might wonder how team trump has built the architecture. might go sideways. look at the iran deal in the obama playbook. we will do the exact opposite. whatever they did we are not going to do. it's the inverse in the way we have approached. this instead, we have the precipice of an actual denuclearization. whereas the whole iran deal was based on a lie. no one ever thought the iranians would give it up. nor did we put in strin jent
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controls so that they would. john kerry thing is so right. how dare they go behind the back of this president and undermine what he a duly elected president is doing. that is what. ed: if we get a nuclear deal with north korea, wouldn't that rally the entire world against iran and say wait a second. you are the last rogue actor here. even north korea has come to the table and denuclearized. regardless of what the president has done or not done, this president or the last president, seems to be that a north korea nuclear deal would provide some momentum and some new pressure on iran. abby: that's a great point. i think what president trump has done is reminded us all that the u.s.a. is still the most powerful country in the world. and if we don't step up and lead and do things our own way. nothing is ever going to change. so, it's a great point that we should hope that our allies will follow us to help make change. hope for a better tomorrow. we should all hope that relations with places like north korea can ultimately change. pete: okay to throw our weight around and do it.
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i don't want to hurt anybody. america is equal like everybody else. no if you want freedom in the world you better lead. be bold and brash. you saw the sniper we had on earlier? abby: i'm not messing with him. pete: that was cadz everywhere. throughout our government. historic opportunity coming up on north korea. it's going to be fascinated to watch. abby: should we see if he wants to canoe with you later? ed: that's somebody i might actually lose to. abby: it's a busy week and morning. i have other headlines i want to bring you starting with this one four troopers ambushed while trying to execute a high wisconsin warrant. oklahoma authorities coming under fire sption they arrived at the home of a wanted drug suspect. police firing back, killing the suspect before the building burst into flames. investigators say it appears the house was booby trapped and the suspect may have used surveillance cameras to see them coming. all troopers are expected, luckily, to make a full
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recovery. and president trump declaring a major disaster in hawaii following devastation on the state's big island. relief coming 24 hours after the governor's desperate plea for help during kilauea's volcanic activity. david ige tweeting this in part this opens the door to federal assistance and demonstrates a solid partnership with the federal government as we work to keep hawaii residents safe. costs to protect residents could exceed $2.9 million over the next month. also this. president trump unveiling his plan to lower prescription drug prices, vowing to take on the pharmaceutical industry while calling for an end to global free loading. take a listen. >> medicine that cost as few dollars in a foreign country, costs hundreds of dollars in america. for the same pill america will not be cheated any longer. abby: plan calls for increasing competition, drug makers to lower prices and slashing federal rules that
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make it harder for private insurer to negotiate prices. and your family pup may have some smart competition on the way. boston dynamics robotic dog will be available to the public next year. look at this thing. the spot mini can climb stairs, open doors, and even load the dishwasher. that sounds amazing. the company is also working to human mioid robot that can jog and jump over obstacles. abby: get to a point we will do nothing. pete: a future of robots scares me scares the bejeebers. robotic dog? abby: i will keep my dog for now. pete: king george. new emails revealing coordination between fired fbi director james comey and special counselor mueller before his testimony.
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sara carter has been following the story and she is here to react on the latest developments. ed: georgia's gubernatorial candidate throwing pc out the window in new ad. >> i got a big truck just in case i need to round up criminal illegals and take them home myself. yep, i just said that i'm brian kemp. prevagen has been shown to improve short-term memory. prevagen. the name to remember.
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i had a very minor fender bender tonight! in an unreasonably narrow fast food drive thru lane. but what a powerful life lesson. and don't worry i have everything handled. i already spoke to our allstate agent, and i know that we have accident forgiveness. which is so smart on your guy's part. like fact that they'll just... forgive you... four weeks without the car. okay, yup. good night. with accident forgiveness your rates won't go up just because of an accident. switching to allstate is worth it.
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bureau but before his testimony to the senate intelligence committee on russia investigation fox news contributor sara carter is here with the latest developments on that. it just seems fishy, this idea that james comey just before he goes to testify consults with the head of the special counsel that he tried to create by releasing his memos, feels like inside job. >> it's really concerning, they had a long time relationship, pete. mueller and comey wasn't like they were strangers, they had known each other throughout their careers. they were very close, makes it very difficult to understand how mueller could be completely objective in this investigation we know that right after they called for the special counsel, so rod rosenstein announces the special counsel. there were emails exchanged between chief of staff james rybicki, cced on there was andrew mccabe and others as well as james comey stating a list of things that needed to be done. one was to consult with mueller before his
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june testimony. before the senate intelligence committee. it was really incredible. remember, that was the very first time that mueller admitted, i mean that comey admitted that he had been leaking. and he also admitted that he had given those to his friend daniel richmond, all of his memos that actually belonged to the fbi, and this is the reason why he wanted a special counsel. he leaked to to richman and richman leaked it to the "new york times" and then the special counsel. pete: you mean the diary entries. >> that actually have classified information this them. pete: absolutely, of course what was a russia collusion has now turned into investigating the investigators. you got a development from the senate judiciary committee yesterday chuck grassley sent a letter asking for specific information. what have you got for us? >> absolutely. so senator chuck grassley wants everything now. he not only named the second agent who interviewed michael flynn, which remember, comey had gone back and forth on that as well. once saying yes they didn't lie that these agents said flynn did not lie. then came out to bret baier
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and saying i don't recall saying that of course the russia report says he did say that to the committee. so now grassley wants everything. he wants all the 302 interviews that means the interviews with flynn and the agents. he also wants the transcripts of flynn's phone conversation with russian ambassador. former russian ambassador sara gay kiss lesergei kiss lee. that's important. speak with the second agent who he named as joe, after these documents are delivered to the committee. and i think that's going to be very telling and very important. pete: sara, he has requested -- we have seen slow walking and stonewalling, will the requests go unanswered. >> i think they will go unappeared. the committees and the reason why they throw these contempt threats of contempt out is because they know even if they slow walk them, they are going to get them in the end. these are very important. there is no reason why they should not get those
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transcripts. that's what i have been told. once the committee asking for these transcripts. particularly the ones between flynn and kislyak that they should not receive them. they will be getting those documents and another thing that i think is very important, they're expecting that all the exculpatory evidence that judge requested in the flynn case, they told rod rosenstein we examine all of that has been turned over to judge sullivan. something they are looking at as well. pete: interesting. still as the inspector general's report hasn't come out which could reveal even more. that will be interesting when that comes out. sara carter, thanks for the great work. keep on it? >> thank you. pete: this thief may have fooled his victims but he couldn't get past his own mom. it's mother's day tomorrow. did you remember that? and now that more states are making pot legal, more companies are not testing for it. is this a good idea? we debate it coming up next. ♪ burn, burn ♪ we're going to let it burn, burn, burn ♪ going to let it burn, burn
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so we know how to cover almost we've anything.st everything even "close claws." [driver] so, we took your shortcut, which was a bad idea. [cougar growling] [passenger] what are you doing? [driver] i can't believe that worked. i dropped the keys. [burke] and we covered it. talk to farmers, we know a thing or two because we've seen a thing or two. ♪ we are farmers. bum-pa-dum, bum-bum-bum-bum ♪
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that's a good one. [ chuckles ] download the xfinity my account app and set a password you can easily remember. one more way comcast is working to fit into your life, not the other way around. ed: president trump sending simple message to automakers. >> we want them to build more cars in the united states. and and ship them overseas. ed: made in america. meeting with auto execs. the trump making major changes to obama era. cars getting 50 miles per hour by 2025. the companies say that's going to be tough. it could soon be illegal for u.s. companies to hire foreign workers over americans. the justice department and home land security department, they are teaming up to put americans first. the goal is to identify employers who discriminate
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against american workers. discriminate against americans by hiring foreign visa workers that will work, yes, for lower wages. abby? abby: thank you, ed. more and more states are legalizing pot. nine now legalizing for recreational use including colorado. this as a recent survey found a number of companies in colorado testing for marijuana is on the decline so is this a good idea? hire to debate former senior advisor for the white house national drug control policy under president barack obama and author of the book reefer sanity. seven great myth also marijuana. good morning to both of you. thank you for being with us. >> good morning. >> goo good morning. abby: this is not to debate whether you are pro-or legal riding marijuana. survey showing that more companies are just opting out of testing their employers for the use of marijuana. is that something people should be concerned about? >> well, it is. first of all, in colorado, the construction business has had to hire out of state because they can't find people to pass a drug test. we need people to pass drug
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tests who are especially in safety sensitive conditions. i don't want my pilot and doctor and kid's bus driver to be testing positive for marijuana. i think this is very bad news. today's pot is so much more harmful than it used to be. thc content potency is 10 to 30 times greater. all these edibles, candies and cookies and oils. we don't need another tobacco industry. we are reeling off of big pharma opiate crisis by do we want big marijuana? it's a bad idea and terrible for american jobs and for the workforce. abby: caroline, critics to this day say legalizing marijuana can ultimately lead to more crimes, maybe more use of illegal drugs. i talk to my friends about this all the time. somehow that any different than people being able to drink alcohol? , unlimited amounts of alcohol. you compare the two and wondering why one is totally illegais totally legal and one s not. >> absolutely true. talk about big alcohol. there have been major mistakes made in big alcohol and big tobacco that the can
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business industry has the opportunity to learn from. people in the can business industry are ready to work with state regulators, to ensure that the systems are put in place so adults can consume can business when and where they should. abby: look at recent polling on, this because it's changed pretty quickly over the past 10 years. recent cbs poll shows 6 in 10 now, majority of americans support legalizing marijuana. you look at their poll just 6 or 7 years ago. it was the complete opposite. what do you think is going on. >> actually when you word the polling differently you get a totally different answer. when you give people the choice of decriminalization which is about not putting people in prison which i agree with for marijuana versus selling it and making an industry out of it. the decriminalization part is more popular than legalization. so, actually, when you ask the yes, no. you might get that answer. reality is alcohol is in and out of your system within 24 hours. thc is fat soluble, intoxicated often after you might feel intoxicated while it's still in your system. and let me tell you something, the marijuana industry right now, they are
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doing this for one thing and one thing only. that's to make money. this is about money. this is about money for a small number of people. and i don't think it ends well. i don't understand how we are shutting the door on big tobacco. you can't smoke anywhere. we are shutting the door on big opiates and opening the door to big marijuana. not good for our country and certainly not good for our kids. abby: how would you respond to that. >> i would counter that by legal riding can business at the federal level it will allow people to work hand in hand together tone sure that doctors, patients and employers understand dosing and have a better understanding of impairment. >> we have never got continue right before. we had doctors with the opiate crisis. we had doctors being paid from big tobacco. we had the alcohol industry as well. the idea that we're going to finally regulate. >> we also have those lessons to reflect on now. >> i wish you would the problem is the marijuana industry is not interested in the lessons. >> the can busines can any busis interested in equity and building a new industry that's diverse and give back to patients, business owners
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and community. >> they're not giving back. people are stoned coming into their factories stoned. >> flawed industry. abby: it's an interesting debate and see where it lead to. thank you for joining us this morning. >> thank you so much. abby: important one. democrats trying to figure out how to run against a booming economy. what will their message be heading into the mid terms. former chief of staff reince priebus is here to weigh in next. new jersey now the latest state to offer college financial aid to illegals. is this fair to american students who are struggling to pay for college themselves? we're going to discuss all of that and much more on a "fox & friends" saturday. stay with us. ♪ hey julie, i know today's critical, but i really need...
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>> what do you think about. >> we are on a winning streak. >> what's your message to pete? >> pete, you need to get your a game tomorrow. this guy is on a winning streak. pete: where did you get this that guy. ed: viewers from california. a couple. happened to be walking by as i was standing outside the bass pro shop cabella's pool. pete: while you were practicing? ed: i tried it out. abby: there he is. look how good he is. ed: you have to win. pete, you know, you have been on such a winning streak. it seems like you watch every weekend. that guy ran through it he said you won basketball.
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wasn't he on the princeton basketball team? i'm like oh, man, this guy is -- abby: i was the new york streets this past week i had more people come up and talk about this competition. they have their skin in the game. pete, they are feeling for you. when can he actually win? today might be your day. feeling good about it. >> basketball, horse racing, golf. will kayaking be the turning? pete: a lot of canoeing from minnesota. some kayaking. ed never practiced because he has never been in a kayak before. man of the people. abby: later on in the show we will see what happens. a lot happening this week. president trump with a dire warning about democrats ahead of this year's midterm. >> democrats fight against the borders. they fight to raise your taxes. they want to raise your taxes. they fight for all of the things that we don't stand for and brother goin we're goine a great victory in 18.
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you watch. we're going to have a great victory. ed: so can the president rally republicans towards that victory? the mid terms. here to weigh in, former chief of staff to president trump and former chairman of the republican national committee reince priebus. good morning, ryan. abby: hey, ryan. >> hey, good morning, everyone. great to be here. ed: we saw the president in the heartland again this week at that rally. and some his candidates seem to do pretty well. he got involved in some of the primaries as you know which can always be tricky business. where do things stand now? we have seen on the generic ballot that republicans have picked up some ground. >> yeah, they are picking up some ground. i think what happened on tuesday night did quite a number on any chance that the democrats have of keeping the senate. we have got to look at what's happening. there are 26 seats in play. and what people need to understanding is that where the democrats are on defense are in places that the president won by at least 18 points. so places like west virginia, nort north dakota. montana missouri, indiana, those are all very difficult
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seats ofor the democrats to defend so the republicans could pick up one or two or three of those seats. but then where the republicans are on defense are in places like mississippi, nebraska, utah. they are not places that the democrats can win. the other piece of this is what ed -- yeah, go ahead. abby: i was going to say is it too early to say that we are seeing a trend play out here in the states that you mentioned, the republicans that won. they won -- most of them want to tie themself closely with president trump. come to that state and campaign for them. should establishment republicans be concerned about these mid terms? is this too early to say that? >> well, i think it's definitely too early to say. there are three great things going in the favor of the republicans. number one, djt, the president, same formula as 2016. number two, the rnc, which people don't really talk a lot about. but if you look at what the work that ron has been doing at the rnc, the fact that there are five times the
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money of the dnc, it really matters on the ground game, the voter turnout. all the boring things that people don't talk about. these are all marginal seats in the house. and then the last thing is paul ryan and kevin mccarthy. they are raking in tons of money. i talked to majority leader mccarthy yesterday. i'm just telling you in private, there is no reason in a private conversation for any sugar coating. they feel confident that they can keep the house and they cite to the fact that the president of the united states in spite of all the noise, is doing great things for the country. north korea comes through, you know, look. it's still a long way away. if north korea comes through you've got the economy, foreign policy, isis. i think people have to stop denying the fact that the president's actions are actually not just doing a great job for the country, but they're going to reflect well on the republican party. pete: speaking of the international scene, the candidate that president trump ran against, hillary clinton was in australia
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recently. and she a lot invested in the iran deal as do obama team and other folks. she was criticizing it. listen to what she had to say. >> pulling out of the iran nuclear deal will make it harder to negotiate successfully with north korea or anyone else. pulling out of that agreement makes america less safe and less trusted and iran more dangerous. as secretary of state, i helped negotiate the crippling international sanctions that brought iran to the table. it would be much harder a second time now that our credibility is shot. pete: you just rattled off things the president has plishedz. she said our credibility is shot. >> yeah. mine, it'yeah, it's pretty remae that john kerry and others would travel overseas and credited size not just the president but undercut foreign policy.
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i don't see things slowing down in north korea. i don't see a credibility problem with the president's actions. and, look, i have a lot more faith than the president, general mattis and mike pompeo than i do hillary clinton. and so, i think it's pretty shameful. especially these are the same people that like to criticize the president and everyone around him every chance they get. this is pretty hypocritical of hillary clinton and it's unpatriotic. i think people ought to basically -- if you have got nothing good to say, don't say anything at all or focus on the good things. focus on the few things that you do agree with and brag about america. that's what we should all be doing overseas. >> is unpatriotic to i don't overseas and undermine accomplishments. >> there is enough good going on for even secretary clinton to rattle off a couple good things that are happening that she agrees
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with as opposed to a few paragraphs to get on television and cut up this president. abby: that doesn't help her cause. we know that reince. good to have with us this morning. >> appreciate you, sir. thank you very much. abby: we are following, iraqis now at the polls for the first parliamentary election since defeating isis. nearly 7,000 candidates vying for 329 seats in that parliament. a quarter of which must go to women. for the first time the vote is done electronically to reduce fraud in a country plagued by conflicts, economic hardship and corruption. and a mother turns her own son into police. sandra green says she recognized him in this surveillance footage on social media allegedly robbing a florida home. >> i told him come home, take your shower, get something to eat. i'm about to take you over here and turn new. i was heart broken. because i know that i didn't raise him like that.
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abby: talk about discipline. green says she will bail her 18-year-old out of jail in two weeks. >> as to rick, there is a wildfire situation not far from where you are. rick: take a look at some of this video coming. in this is just to the south of chino vail, arizona. that's 15 miles to the north of press cot where i grew up. take a look at this video. there were homes that were destroyed. about 5,000 acres have burned so far. getting a little bit of containment going on. but this is kind of brush area where there is a lot of dried grass and really dry winter season, which is one of the rainy seasons out across parts of the southwest and, unfortunately, not much moisture. and now conditions are very, very dry. take a look at that some people's homes completely destroyed with that the fire is still going on. and take a look at the weather map. show you what's going on as well. we will continue to see the elevated fire danger across parts of the southwest, throughout the day today, very windy conditions. and obviously the dry
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conditions as well will continue to kind of exacerbate the problem. just to the east of that it's really warm. we're going to be breaking all kinds of temperatures today across much of the south. texas, those temperatures pushing record breaking temperatures. same goes across much of the southeast. little bit of a break say towards the d.c. area. today into the lower 90's. it is very hot. and it's also humid. we will see a break coming by tomorrow. at least towards d.c. down to florida, get ready. some big rain showers coming in and going to be with you for probably the next five to six days. localized flooding and in across parts of the ohio valley towards the northeast those showers continuous as well all weekend long. a bit of a rainout for almost everybody across parts of the northeast. guys? >> i head to florida tomorrow for two days. i should cancel that trip. >> new jersey, now the latest state to offer college financial aid to illegal immigrants. and our next guest is a student who says they're receiving this aid at his expense. >> bass pro and cabella's
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ed: this week new jersey became the ninth state to allow illegal immigrants to apply for and receive financial aid at state colleges beginning this fall. but is this fair to american students who themselves are struggling to pay for college? we read about this and hear about this all the time. our next guest says yes. nic knight is a campus reform.com correspondent. student at rutgers university in new jersey. good morning, rick. >> good morning. ed: good to see you. >> you too. ed: give me the details about how much are you struggling it and see how
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new jersey immigrants can get aid what does that do to you? >> sure. it's just absurd that we are giving illegal immigrants more and more inincentives to break the law. as a rutgers student taking out loans i will be paying for that debt after college. it doesn't make sense to me that we give the same benefits to people come over here h illegally and to the same people come over here ed: explain the policy by saying this we know new jersians support the ability of our dreamers to not only remain in our state but to become a strong and contributing member of our society and our economy. by allowing them to not only go to college but to qualify for financial assistance, we are living up to that ideal. you see that from governor phil murphy. are they kind of just taking this idea of dreamers, the term dreamers, which sounds very positive and saying it's okay for illegals to have aid? >> yeah, that's what it seems like. the leadership institute campus reform has been
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covering this a lot lately. and i think they are taking the word dreamers and trying to put it in a positive light. but, in reality, it's not fair for everybody else, for people who go through the process. for people who pay taxes and for people who come over here illegally through the border to give incentives for more people to come over here illegally and get the same treatment as everybody else. ed: give us a sense. i have a son who is going to be going to college soon. i see some schools, 20, 30, $40,000 a year. how much debt are you taking on? >> so i'm probably going to be taking upwards over $10,000 in debt. ed: total or per year. >> per year, at least. in financial aid. and it's just hard enough already for college students to get financial aid. and as i said before, i think it would be very detrimental to people who come over here legally and for people who are here and are legal. ed: you are saying you are not taking aid. you are taking loans you will have to pay back.
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>> yes, exactly. yes u. ed: what do you think is the solution here? there is a great debate in the country with what we are going to do with illegal immigration. congress seems hopelessly stalled. you are taking on debt and others coming in and taking on free money. >> yeah, exactly. as i said and i'm going to repeat it it's unfair for the taxpayers because i mean the money has got to come from somewhere and that's where your money is going to. ed: all right, nic. appreciate your time. good luck to you. >> thank you. ed: trump team gearing up for monday's historic opening for u.s. embassy in jerusalem. pastor robert jeffress will give a special prayer to mark that historic occasion. but, first, he's live on "fox & friends" with us next hour. and bass pro and cabella's, they are setting up camp right here on "fox & friends." we are seeing who can build a tent the quickest. and then we are going to see who can get around in a canoe the quickest. hint. me. ♪ all right ♪
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♪ ♪ abby: welcome back. the summer is almost here. and bass pro shops and cabella's are kicking off a summer of fun with big event go outdoors. pete: back with us is bass pro shops and cabella's and he brought tent inside. >> bass pro shops and cabella's so excited with the go outdoors event. get people outdoors and teach them how much fun it can be. cool stuff in the chore family workshops games and crafts for the kids and barbecue.
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all free. putting up tents used to take forever. the days of taking an hour to put them up is long gone. today we have a competition. abby: we hate competition on this show. ed: i love that this time pete and i will be on the same team. we will take you on. abby: i got rick. >> i got the stop watch ready you guys. you want to do this one and you guys do that one. pete: it used to take an hour. >> on your mark, get set, go. taking off the heels. >> they are working on the two person tent. and over here this is our clip tent that sleeps four, actually. this one goes together really fast with the speed frame. now, there is a spew things to look at when you are wanting to buy a tent. how many people are you actually going to have when you are out camping. you are going to have two or four people. a lot of times you want a little bit bigger tent because you want to put your gear inside. getting professional help. >> go over here. >> he just showed up. >> you want something with a
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lot of windows so you can have a lot of ventilation. pete: i like our pace here. >> you are doing good. >> right in the hole, h ed. [laughter] abby: who is doing better, alan. >> a pretty good race. >> i think we are going to get it look at this. look at this. >> coming together fast over here. see, pete, bingo. >> i can't really call. this. >> pete, if you want to win have you got to be on my team. >> i can't really call, this guys. this looks like a little bit -- reveal. >> under review. abby: i'm sorry, about this is sad. you can still sleep in it though. >> it as bass pro and cabella's the associates can help you put these tents together. tell you how to do too. abby: how much better does ours look. >> this is perfect. >> they got professional help. abby: and they had a woman. >> abby and rick is the winner. it this one was put together
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wrong. >> first time i have ever seen -- pete: first time ever seen it put together wrong. first ever live on national television. rick: the curse? >> who is the weak link? >> cool stuff going on at the outdoors event. urge everybody to go out and try to learn about the outdoors and enjoy it this is fun now. it's comfortable and fun. abby: i'm not going with these guys. >> i don't blame you. abby: alan, thank you so much. head to the website for all out information. all right. still ahead, it was a meltdown on the house floor, watch this. >> this business about making america great again, it is your president that's dividing this country. no, i do not yield, not one second to you. not one second. pete: doing the rest of the show from inside the tent. abby: what led to maxine waters to blow up against a fellow congressman. >> geraldo rivera joins us live coming up.
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the secretary of state said there will be issues north korea. pulling out of the deal will make it harder to successfully deal with with north korea. >> he consulted bob muller after his ouster from the bureau but before his testimony. >> that makes it difficult to understand how muller could be objective in the investigation. >> we are trying to make sure we make america great. >> i recent to make the remark
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about make america great again. >> also ed and pete will get in the kayaks and have a competition. ♪ [ music ] >> this is one of pete's favorite boy bands. >> this is the site of the next face-off. >> bass pro and cabela's this is the season to start camping outdoors. we have a kayak in a pool on our property. >> could it be a competition if you never won. >> i don't know. >> at one point you say it's not over.
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>> tell the red sox's to spank you when it's 3-0. >> this is how many times pete has lost to ed henry. it's like you never won anything before you came on the show, ed. >> thank you, abbey. >> my favorite point last time is the video caught him celebrating early and he mixed up the numbers of our horses. then he was like oh. >> how many boxes can the screen make. >> ed is always rigging is system like a good journalist. >> he walked to fox. we caught him doing this he was practicing how to chi kayak. >> i didn't know what i was
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doing. >> have you seen video of you trying to sweep? >> he had a broom in our hand. >> it's as good as that. >> we had a lot of news this week. >> if you won hillary clinton has been she's gone abroad. she's talking about politics and feelings about president trump. she had pretty strong opinions about the iran deal and president trump pulling ou out f that deal. here she is. >> pulling out of the iran nuclear deal will make it harder to successfully negotiate with north korea. pulling out of that agree. makes america less safe and trusted and iran more dangerous.
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as secretary of state i negotiated the sanctions that brought iran to the table. it will be harder the second time now that our credible athe shot. >> our credibility is shot? it's okay to give you're opinion. a lot of norms have been knocked down. he goes on the attack very often but there used to be a practice of -- >> partisanship ends at the waters edge. >> exactly. >> the election was two years a go. you shouldn't go over seas and bash the president.
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everything we learned about doing the north korea deal right we learned from the obama add administration. it was a terrible deal. >> we with had three americans released this week and there was ncash involved. >> what a powerful moment that was. you can be a democrat, republican, literran. we are all in the fight together. ryan said there are so many good things to talk about. >> there is enough good going on for secretary clinton to raddle off a few things she agreed with rather than get on tv and cut up
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the president. >> the criticism would have more pow irif you said in north korea things are falling into place. >> meanwhile mark meadows is pushing to dig into the financials of special council robert muller. we were talking about the scope memo and people haven't seen that. what is the scope of the special council probe. mark said this investigation has gone on for a year with no evidence of collusion. they don't know how or where they are using the tax dollars and how much of the investigation is about collusion. >> that may be the first of many
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jumping onboard wanting to know how much money has been spent. we can talk about how much energy and air time has been spent. >> mark meadows laids the freedom caucus in the house. some say he may run for speaker. he's making the call for an audit. let's audit the scope. >> it's been a year now. >> what are you doing? what are you looking at? if you can't find it why aren't you refocusing your network. if you watch another network it's russia, russia, stormy daniels. >> it's the one choir anniversary and that's why he's doing that. >> so if you are not watching c-span yesterday you might have missed this heated --
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>> you watch that? >> you can find stuff you can't find anything else. >> sparks were flying between mike kelly and maxcine waters. >> the best way to do that is stop talking about discrimination and the nation. we are coming together as a people. >> mr. kelly do not leave. i want you to know i'm more offended as an african-american woman then you will every be. this business about making america great again it's your president dividing the country. i recent the remark about make america great again. he's making a disgrace of this president trump of the united states. i reserve the balance of my time. i do not yield not one second to you. not one second to you. >> been saying impeach 45.
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how can you say someone else is dividing the country when you try to impeach the president. >> mike kelly said can we stop talking about dividing the country. how to move forward and make progress. >> my underline primmist if you support mark america great again you are racist. >> we turn everything in identity politics. if you want to guard the borders that doesn't make you racist. you are someone that looks after issues differently. like the president said the flag and anthem should unite it. in god we trust should reunite u.s. >> when you appeal to patriotism there is a an an alternative mo.
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>> mike will be with neal and ask about what happened on that floor. some other headlines i want to bring you. sick tar reof state mike pompomo said we will help. he made that with a joint council of north korea. >> if north korea takes action to denuclearize. we will help them achieve process parity with our south korean friends. >> pompeo said hi and kim jong-un had a good conversation during his visit. the secretary of state returned with three american prisoners. what a powerful moment that was. also there president trump declared a major disaster in hawaii.
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relief coming 24 hours after the governors may for help during the volcano activity. he thanked the president saying this opened the door to public assistance as we work to keep hawaii's residence safe. don't expect to hear if president trump will speak to muller's team until after his meeting with north korea. several things delayed us with the pr primary. i wouldn't want to take his concentration off that. vice president mike pence is speaking to graduates in michigan today. he will deliver the commencement address at hillsdale college. he spoke there in 2010 when he
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was in congress severing in indiana. >> thank you, abby. >> president trump is about to do something he never did before. >> next week we'll open the american embassy in jerusalem. >> jeffers will give a special prayer. he's here with us right now. >> some parents are changing fairy tail scenes because they are politically incorrect. cold... warmer... warmer...
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>> after the promises of many administrations and presidents they never did it. they campaigned and promised and never did it. next week we'll finally open the american embassy in jerusalem. >> president trump is opening the u.s. embassy in engineer je. >> hear what that means from pastor robert jeffers. good morning, sir. >> good morning. >> tell us how you thought through this as you put the prayer together. this one has special meaning. they all have special meaning but this is remarkable. >> this is a historic moment because it represents the united states recognizing jerusalem as the american embassy.
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something the bible has told us for years. if indeed jerusalem has been the capital that blows apart that the jews stole the land from the palestinians several years ago. that's why this is significant. genesis 12 says god will bless those nations that bless israel and curse those nations that curse israels. there are many devote jews and christians that are willing to stand on the right side of history and god on the issue. >> this comes as a sunsetling time. think about what's going on with iran. when you think about preparing your remarks and prayer and peace and instilling peace in that part of the world what do
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you expect to do on monday? >> in the prayer i'll quote those who say pray for peace in israel. israel has the promise of god's protection. iran is a enemy but it's no match for israel, it's no match for the united states. iran is no match for god. god will be victorious. >> why did this president trump do it when others said they would and didn't? >> president trump has courage no other u.s. president has. in 1995 the congress said they would move the embassy. clinton, obama, and bush said they would but backed away at the last moment. president trump studied this issue. i remember talking to him before
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and afterwards. here got all kinds of input. he decided he wanted to be on the right side of history and god. this is another example of promise made and promise kept. >> who as -- is going on the trip with you? >> a delegation with steve. jared, there will be eight hundred guests there. it will start at 4:00 p.m. jerusalem time. this will be the moment 70 years ago when the modern state was reborn. >> without the united states that rebirth never happened. >> that's right. that's why many of us who are devote cres christians and jews. we decided to bless israel.
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>> pastor, be safe on your journey. >> this will be a memorable moment. >> thank you for coming in. >> president trump officially said to be the first u.s. president to sit-down with a north korean leader. is he making the right moves towards peace. we'll ask a democratic congressman next. one woman making a new question to parents. more on that coming up. ♪ we know what you bring home isn't always as important as who you bring with you. we know the great outdoors. we love the great outdoors. bass pro shops and cabela's. where great gear, good people, fair prices and an experience like no other all come together. and during our go outdoors event and sale - get bass pro or cabela's flag t-shirts
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mr. elliot, what's your wiwifi?ssword? wifi's ordinary. basic. do i look basic? nope! which is why i have xfinity xfi. it's super fast and you can control every device in the house. [ child offscreen ] hey! let's basement. and thanks to these xfi pods, the signal reaches down here, too. so sophie, i have an xfi password, and it's "daditude". simple. easy. awesome. xfinity. the future of awesome. we are back with headlines.
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u.p.s. will release driverless trucks. some say they lookout of a movie. >> i don't need a map. i have a gps. >> this gives them a wider view to see other vehicles. tesla trucks will be tested in europe later this year. one name is rising according to newborns. malania came in fifth for the fastst growing names in girls. emma was the top name and liem for boys. president trump will meet will kim jong-un one month from today. >> on june 12 in singapore i'll meet with kim jong-un to secure
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a future of peac peace and secuy for the world. >> the president trump making the right move. democratic congressman john is here. thank you for being here this morning. you have seen these developments. you are on the committee. are democrats willing to concede the approach of this administration brought us to a moment where we could see a denuclearization of that. >> let's be hopeful. this will be wonderful for the united states and the world. let's be supportive of this effort. at the same time, let's no get too starry eyed here. this is a difficult situation. the president set a high bar by
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moving away from the iran nuclear deal. he will need to get that much from north korea for a significant period of time. i'll be hopeful and encouraged by the move. >> i think that's fair. hopeful is a fair approach to look at something like this. some fellow democrats looked at it differently. john kerry has been trying to stop the president from stopping the iran deal. also hillary clinton said this is eroding our credibility. we have one commander and chief at the time. the previous leaders let the president advance the foreign polecpolicy he believes in the country. >> you can count on controversy and debate in this country.
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this was a controversial issue. i think it was a good program and prevented iran from having a weapon for sometime. it was very intrusive. >> i'm all for debate. but when john kerry is meeting with foreign government trying to undermined the president that's not debate or backstabbing. >> i'm not sure if that's the case. think about the timing of the policy. the jcpoa was the american policy. >> it was never a ratified treaty. that gave this administration the pathway to pursue their own
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policy. >> absolutely correct. that's what happened. was this the right decision? that will play out in a short period of time. the alleys that put this together, united kingdom, germany, and france and two others china and russia are now on the other side of the united states with regard to the nuclear deal. how does that play out? how do the sanctions imposed mean to those countries. germany and france are concerned that the reemposition will have a impact on their economy. i'm sure, right now, iran is trying to figure out how best it will proceed. the united states has to figure out how to proceed.
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>> our key interest is not the german or french economy. it's security. he said the iran deal was based on a lying giving money up-front. not being able to inspect military sites isn't effective. they can still test b ballistic missiles. he learned from those and said we won't give them anything up-front. they gave us hostages without having to pay for them. a hard nosed approach brought us to the table and made us more safe? >> well, you can draw a line between the two i think it's best to consider were we were with iran was an agreement where they bulled concrete in the
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nuclear reactive. they destroyed many of the central fusers. >> not all. you didn't get to look at the site. >> there are a lot of things we can't see and didn't stop. the deal ends after 10 years. >> well, you are not quiet correct with the deal ending after 10 years. it goes on in perpetuity. >> they have been lying for a long time. >> also keep in mind that the secretary of state, former cia director said iran was abiding by the agreement in full. with regard to military sites the inspectors did have access
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to those after 21 days or else the sanctions would automatically snap back. >> true. >> all of that is off the table now. where do we go forward from here. i'll be hopeful with what takes place in the korean negotiations. it's a dangerous place that has been at work for 60 years. the south korean government, the new president has made a move to recognize the realty on the ground there are two countries. we'll see what happens and i wish the president good success. >> as i said hopeful is fair. i hope you talk to more of your colleagues. i appreciate your time. >> whoopi goldberg said she would like the president water boarded. >> i would like you to try. >> what does the man who came up
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i'm not really a, i thought wall street guy.ns. what's the hesitation? eh, it just feels too complicated, you know? well sure, at first, but jj can help you with that. jj, will you break it down for this gentleman? hey, ian. you know, at td ameritrade, we can walk you through your options trades step by step until you're comfortable. i could be up for that. that's taking options trading from wall st. to main st.
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to successfully make a deal with anyone else. this will make us less trusted and iran more dangerous. i helped negotiation the sanctions that brought iran to the table. it will be much harder the second time. in wondering around the stage it was clear trump was stocking me. he was sending a message to people watching, look, i'm the big person on the stage. this is what a president looks like. >> so, we'll get to all of that with hillary clinton. we have geraldo rivera coming in. just crossing on the a.p. wire is north korean state media said kim jong-un is ordering they takedown the nuclear test site.
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>> they will do this on the 25th of may. this is coming before the big sit-down in singapore on june 12th. you are shocked just off the top here on that. >> you know, abby i think this is another positive sign. usually when you are in negotiations you withhold your gives. you withhold your concessions until you get something from the other side. this is the leader giving up something profoundly important to it's hole philosophy and the way he's governed. the way his dad and granddad governed before him. this is a promising sign. it's clear now whatever secretary pompeo said to kim during their meeting must have resonated in a positive way. here is north korea agreeing to
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distantial the weapons systems that panicked the entire western world. in anticipation of the meeting in june. this is a very positive development. >> it was north korean state television that reported you have to mistrust and verify. we'll wait to see if that occurs. hillary clinton as you heard in the sound bite said us pulling out of the nuclear deal makes it harder to negotiate with north korea. others see it the other way around. what do you think? >> it's difficult to say. proof tends to be in the pudding there, pete. it appears as if north korea i can't is optimistic about the talks. they are going forward in a positive way. whether or not if the iran situation reverberates i don't know. it doesn't appear, at least yet,
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to have been an obstacle to what seems the trajectory. pulling out of the iran deal i didn't like that. i think what i would prefer is president trump, a great negotiator, tipped it in place and added a ballistic missile provision and more rigorous inspections of the sites. who knows. trump got us this far in the north korean situation. who knows. his style, you know, the fire and furry stuff, mobilizing the seven flights, and sending aircraft carriers to the pa peninsula. all i see is very positive to me. i believe the clock ticked back
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a few minutes. >> just a second. what happened to partisan ship. you have hillary clinton talking about the iran deal. you have john kerry doing the same thing meeting with iranian officials. what does this say about the nation that you travel abroad and not americans first and foremost. >> what secretary kerry did was an ego trip. he wasn't, as history will recount, our most effective secretary of state. for him now, he was always hanging around with, you know, whoever the top foreign emissary was. i don't like what he did. he promoted a secretary agenda. he tried to save a deal that his
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ego was attached to. again, even though i'm in favor of keeping the deal i didn't like to have a shadow secretary of state. european government did that. he would be secretary of state if that party was i in power. i don't like that. i -- i like the division. standing up at home. >> well said. >> we want to point out a new polpoll that reports half of americans live-in an area that supports a form of a sanctuary city policy. this is a trend that has developed. it's 564 cities in 2018. is this a trend. it was 11 in 2000.
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564 sanctuary cities. what does this try and say to you. are lawmakers willing to flaunt the law. >> it says sanctuary cities specifically, the immigration issue generally is the fault line in america politics. this will be the biggest issue in november just like it is in european elections. it's what everybody has on their mind. the fact that sanctuary cities in california and new york being sanctuary states are that feel and half in the country is an accurate reflection. this is it. democrats are in favor of lose end immigration regulation.
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president trump preserves that. this is the gap, the way partisanship will run through. >> thank you for coming. check out his new book. stormy daniels lawyer has been given air time to bash the president. many would like to know where is he getting his money. we have a kayak pool out on the plaza. they will be raising each other. that's just moments ahead. termites, feasting on homes 24/7.
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goldberg challenged president trump to be water boarded. >> remember how the gentleman in the white house talked about torture on the campaign trail. i would like you to try it. >> the mastermind behind 911 joined us to react. >> who cares what she thinks. maybe she should go to some unsafe place and interrogate the terrorist. could the bad guys get a nuclear weapon. it will be on the table again. >> he would know. >> she made the comments of discussing the nominations of gina. hundreds of parents have a problem with fairy tails because of scenes like this one. ♪ [ music ]
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>> in the ferry tail she didn't consent. 16% ban them together. abby down to you. >> over the past few months stormy daniel'storian has been on the media 108 times. they would like to know who is paying him. mark, always good to see you, thank you for being with us. >> good morning. >> you are asking questions that you believe the immediate yo --d have been asking. to have all of these lawsuits is not a cheap thing. could you find the answers. >> i think he said now he put together crowd source funding. he only did that after he was
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asked questions and he has $500,000 and hasn't accounted for it. he has someone bank records. how did he get those? it's not legal to have somebody's bank records. he told stormy daniels to ignore the agreement. he adeemfied that. there are more questions. the media didn't ask them on the first 100 interviews. >> i didn't see it. >> make, this is where he said hi's getting his money. all fees have been funded by our client mrs. stephane clifford or donations on our page. no political party or pact is funding this effort. no big fat cat political donors.
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do you buy it? >> he said no fat cats are leading the charge. you have to look at every word. this guy is yelling cone russia when we know the independent council pushed this investigation out indicating he didn't find a russia connection. he started representing her before he did this page. he had funding before he set out to do this page. he did the classic technique. leading all of the other questions like where he got the bank records. >> do you think the media will follow suit? >> they are, i thought almost no one would read this peac piece. >> mark, it's always good to have you with us. bass pro is here with us. ed is already warming up.
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it's ed verses pete. you don't want to miss this. it's coming up next. >> thank you. [whistling] hello. give me an hour in tanning room 3. cheers! that's confident. but it's not kayak confident. kayak searches hundreds of travel sites to help me plan the best trip. so i'm more than confident. forgot me goggles. kayak. search one and done.
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not the conservative guy, travis allen. what about this john cox? talks a big game... but what's he done? a chicago lawyer? huh? thirteen losing campaigns - seven in illinois? cox lost campaigns as a republican... and as a democrat. gave money to liberals. supported big tax increases. no wonder republicans say cox is unelectable in november.
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but we need to do more. i believe in universal health care. in a public health option to compete with private insurance companies. and expanding medicare to everyone over 55. and i believe medicare must be empowered to negotiate the price of drugs. california values senator dianne feinstein we have seen pete and ed compete in everything. today pete will finally win. allen with join us again. >> this is the number one maker
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there are kids crafts and it's all free. >> we'll have all of that on our website. >> it's $550 or less. >> i don't think they know who they are doing. >> we have pete on the left and ed on the right. >> who is it? >> a lot of petes. >> 1, 2, 3 go. ♪ [ music ] >> looks like pete has the lead. >> it looks like ed should be getting more. >> he looks like he might flip over.
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>> oh. ed is down. [ laughter ] >> let me tell you it's 58 degrees outside. >> it's freezing. >> the water is a little bit chilly. >> this is the best race. >> he will still win. >> all right, come on. let's go. >> they are advancing on their kayaks. pete finally wins. you have finally done it. >> how do you feel, you lost? >> i'm speechless. >> you won finally. >> petero you won. but what a powerful life lesson.
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and don't worry i have everything handled. i already spoke to our allstate agent, and i know that we have accident forgiveness. which is so smart on your guy's part. like fact that they'll just... forgive you... four weeks without the car. okay, yup. good night. with accident forgiveness your rates won't go up just because of an accident. switching to allstate is worth it.
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>> pete, how does it feel to be a winner? >> where is my trophy. >> have a good saturday everybody. >> we are trying to make sure we are making america great everyday in every way. the best way to do that is stop talking about discrimination and come together as a nation. >> i'm more offended as an african-american woman then you will every be. this business about making america great again. it's your president that's dividing the country. it's the fight that's going viral. democratic congresswoman maxine waters. congressman kelly is here. so is this guy
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