tv FOX Friends FOX News August 10, 2018 3:00am-6:00am PDT
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jillian: you are not alone. after four or five drinks, nearly everyone ate something before going to bed. researchers dubbing the trending the drunchies. rob: i don't do that. >> unbelievable serg surge in gn violence. >> 63 shootings. cities like chicago have been an absolute and total disaster. >> defending the violent and deadly gang ms-13 that's what news outlets vox and propublica are doing in a new video. >> ms-13 members that i have been following are working after school jobs. they are living with their parents. >> it's only preseason. nfl players are already protesting the national anthem. >> just continuing the regular season. >> do you think he is a good president? >> everyone around me tried
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to pick my candidate for me. liberals can't bully me. >> time has come to establish the united states space force. ♪ ♪ steve: well,that's the all-american concert series that's going to feature cody johnson who is going to be right there on that stage. he will start singing at 8:00. looks like they are doing a little sound check in front our world headquarters and famous davis is here. i wonder how many times people wake up on a friday morning i'm either going to eat at famous dave's or going to have barbecue tonight. ainsley: kicks off the weekend. you are going to have barbecue with us or some point this weekend,
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hopefully. brian: i will not be surprised if kellogg come out with a rib cereal because that's how popular. why not for breakfast. simply because of famous dave's that we barbecue in the morning. what about ribbed flavored cereal. [buzzer] you are don't think gamble is working on that? steve: proctor and gamble. the mcrib very popular. ainsley: very messy but good. brian: they doubted cocoa pebbles. steve: it's cocoa pebbles not barbecue pebbles. brian: they laughed at edison. steve: across the river in what is now edison, new jersey. we have a couple stories this morning that you are just not going to believe. first of all, we will introduce you to a fellow from cambridge, massachusetts. his name is brandon sigh zyborowski on social media that guy right there on his twitter offered $500 to anybody who would kill an
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ice agent. he wrote i am broke but will scrounge and literally give 500 bucks to nibble who kills an ice agent. he is now facing five years in prison. jillian: he was in new york visiting a friend and he got arrested. can you believe this? he wants to pay people $500 to go and shoot other americans that are protecting you. brian: he also wants to strangle john mccain. so, obviously, he is de ranged. why you can threaten a sitting senator by slitting his throat and still be out on the streets walking there is unbelievable. steve: he also said guns should, quote: only be legal for shooting the police like the second amendment intended and he responded to a tweet by saying thank you, ice, for putting your lives on the line and hopefully dying, i guess, so there is less of you. the reason law enforcement is cracking down on him is they hope to send a message that they will not tolerate threats against the men and women of ice who are simply
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following the law. that's the guy. brian: twisted mind set is part of the mind set on a bigger picture is the lack of respect towards cops in general which sadly is why we see so many shootings there has got to be the fear. you talk to officers. they have to know if you shoot an officer any level, any branch death penalty. there has got to be some hell to pay for what they're doing. without them, we do not have a civil society. so, oftentimes people talk about fake news, inaccurate news. misappropriated news. how do you take this news that ms-13 misunderstood like to work. like to bike ride? ainsley: not all that violence. have you vox and propublica who are now taking aim at the president because he is so concerned about how violent ms-13 is they are saying, listen, they are really not that violent. we went out. we were amongst them. they really just live at home with their parents and ride bicycles around and they are pretty young and smoke some pot. listen to this.
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>> when you think of the street gang ms-13, what do you see? maybe something like this. or this. but what if i told you that typical ms-13 gang member in the u.s. actually looks like one of these young men on facebook? the trump administration has made ms-13 the most visible symbol of why the u.s. needs tougher immigration policies. especially as the reason to point a finger at central american immigrants. but here's the thing. ms-13 was born right here in the united states. >> this is 100 percent an american born gang. >> they are neither a new phenomenon nor growing in numbers but they have committed acts of horrific violence, mostly against other immigrants in specific communities. and that is still an american problem. steve: okay. so it was born in southern california. they are right about that. but they defend ms-13 against the president's charge that it is a drug
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smuggling cartel. they say that's not the case. they don't have global ambitions. it's not really involved in international drug trade and then it does, as you said, ainsley describes these as pot-smoking kids who ride their bikes and live at home and go to school and things like that. but they ignore the reality of what is happening on the ground. this is a vicious gang of people who have killed a lot of people out in your neck of the woods in suffolk county, long island. here is the d.a. out there. listen to this. this is ms-13. >> here are the facts. in 2016 and part of 2017, we saw 17 homicides that ms-13 committed. 17 homicides in just 16 months. two of those homicides with lisa mic kens and kayla, 15 and 16-year-old girls from brent wood high school. another homicide groom whom quae
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chopped. this is dangerous gang i would submit probably one of the most dangerous street gangs we have in the united states. steve: that's a sound bite that was not in their report. ainsley: my question is why? why are they defending them? when you talk to these moms. we have interviewed them and you know what their little girls went through out in long island. have you all geraldo us talk about them. their bodies were not even recognizable they were so brutally hachingted with knives. so, i don't understand why these groups, why would they even defend this gang. brian: they came here in 1979 because they were upset about the u.s. role in that civil war they were having. they come over here angry, start wreaking havoc in southern california and new york and around the country. they take some of the money they earn from illegal drug trafficking and send it back home and they demand it they hold family members hostage to make sure that they provide money for them and they continue to actually apply violence to oftentimes not immigrant communities, working class communities.
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many of which are hispanic. it doesn't mean they are immigrant communities. it means they are hispanic americans that's why finally by the president bringing up ms-13 they are giving working class people a voice in this law enforcement. steve: i think the president is simply trying to points out there are a lot of people in this country illegally who, you know, some of them are criminals. we're going to be talking to the former ice director tom homan. we will show him some of that clip coming up. meanwhile, let's take you back yesterday a full slate of exhibition nfl games. so, were there protests? yes, there were. there were people kneeling and there were people putting their fists up in the air. ainsley: there were two games yesterday. miami dolphins when they were playing tampa bay there were two players who took a knee. they were sitting on the bench when the song began. they took a knee. and robert quinn raised his fist, which he did last
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year, too. brian: they did it as -- they are upset because collin kaepernick is thought in the league. collin kaepernick tweeted out in a vow of solidarity. my brother carries out his protest by taking a to me. albert wilson joined him in the protest. stay strong. let's talk about the nfl. the nfl has come back with a statement brian mccarthy nfl is engaged in constructive talks. basically, i will pair phrase it the union and the league are talking. because the league came out with a mandate. if you are going to take a knee and upset about the national anthem, stay in the locker room. the players are upset about that. we are not going to go along with that both the union and league started talking. while they are talking, that moment right there is alienating. alienating the people that matter most and sadly they are being ignored and that's the fans. it's not your cause isn't just, we want to hear about it just we can't hear it when the national anthem is playing. steve: one of those two men is kenny stills, the wide
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receiver. here's why he did it. >> being a part of this protest hasn't been easy. you know, i thought i was going to be by myself out there and today i had an angel with me. >> will this continue into the regular season. >> i don't see why not. brian: really? the giants often looked at as one of the classiest organizations 10 giants were seen kneeling in unison. we don't have the video u jaguars were not on the field for the playing of the national anthem against the new orleans saints players who did not go out jaylen ramsey, tailen smith and arnett and t.j. yelledden. here we go across the league. how many nfl -- i have never seen such prevailing outrage from the nfl fans. ainsley: this is preseason. let us know. friends@foxnews.com we will read you those throughout the show. steve: here is one of our friends. she joins us for the news about twice an hour. ainsley: happy friday. jillian: has been friday.
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good morning. update on story we have been following. a former ohio state wrestling is backing off the claim that congressman jim jordan knew of sex abuse at the school. mark homan a former usc about the then assistant coach are not accurate. maybe i spoke without thinking and i was angry and said words that i shouldn't have said. other former athletes say dr. richard strouse assaulted them before killing himself. three others accuse jordan of knowing about it, which he denies. president trump unleashing on chicago mayor rahm emanuel and local leaders for an unbelievable surge in gun violence. >> strength in community bonds with law enforcement including cities like chicago that have been an absolute and total disaster. bad stuff happening and probably i guess you have to take from the leadership. there is no reason in a million years that something like that should be happening in chicago. jillian: the president's remarks coming after 74 people were shot in chicago just last weekend.
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12 of those victims died. city police say they are cracking down on large outdoor gatherings and adding hundreds of officers to patrol the streets. kansas secretary of state kris kobach will recuse himself from any recounts as his primary race gets even tighter. his office overseas election results. the latest count shows kobach just 121 votes ahead of incumbent governor jeff colyer. he asked kobach to step aside to avoid any conflicts of interest. he kobach says counties are in charge of tallies votes not his office. you remember movies like pretty woman. >> something's missing. >> well, nothing else is going to fit into this dress, i will tell that you. >> maybe something in this box. i don't want you to get too excited it's only on loan. >> all right. so, could richard gear be gearing up for a new role?
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congressman? gere is being floated by democrats in west chester new york as a replacement for sean patrick maloney. he is running for state attorney general. so far no comment from the 68-year-old activist. so, stay tuned to find out about that. ainsley: i didn't know he lived in this area. not hollywood? jillian: apparently not. steve: i think he is a new yorker. yes. ainsley: yes, he said west chester. steve: the president has announced a space force is coming pronto. >> not enough to have american presence in space. we must have american dominance in space and so we will. steve: so we will. our next guest is the guy in charge of nsa. why hnasa why we need it now more than ever. life depends on it. brian: he gives alexandria ocasio-cortez $10,000 if she debated him. you won't believe her response ♪ you just keep me hanging on ♪
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whoamike and jen doyle?than i thought. yeah. time for medicare, huh. i have no idea how we're going to get through this. follow me. choosing a plan can be super-complicated. but it doesn't have to be. unitedhealthcare can guide you through the confusion, with helpful people, tools and plans. including the only plans with the aarp name. well that wasn't so bad at all. that's how we like it. aarp medicare plans, from unitedhealthcare. >> president trump's stated clearly and forcefully that space is, in his words a war-fighting domain just like land and air and sea. the time has come to establish the united states' space force. steve: all right. there you go. vice president mike pence detailing new plans to
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establish a sixth branch of the u.s. military the space force which will oversea war fighting in the final frontier. space. expected to be rolled out within two years. shortly after the speech, president trump tweeting, quote: space force all the way exclamation mark. here with detail details is a gy who would be really involved with it, the guy who runs nasa. >> good morning. good to be with you. steve: why do we need a space force isn't that something the nasa has been handling why do we need a sixth branch of the military. >> it doesn't involve nasa. nasa has blazed a trail resulted in the commercialization of space. think about the way we navigate and communicate people watching at home are probably watching it on direct tv or dish network. steve: sure. >> the way we produce food and energy and the way we do national security country disaster relief.
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predict weather. the way we understand climate and of course a lot of people don't realize every banking transaction in the united states of america requires a timing signal from g.p.s., which means if we lose g.p.s. in this country, we have no milk in the grocery store within a matter of three days. it's an existential threat to the united states. now, as nasa administrator, and nasa, we don't get involved in space security. that's not what we do. we do discovery and exploration and science. what's important to note is we have hundreds of billions of dollars worth of activity in space plus our american astronauts. it's also true that on top of that, the annual economy for space activity is $350 billion annually. now, that's a big economy in space. steve: absolutely. >> and president trump is really doing the right thing by making sure that it's secure, which is necessary. steve: okay. absolutely. the way you lay it out you don't realize how much we do depend upon satellite technology. but is it too ambitious a
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goal? i mean they would like to have it up by 2020 that's less than two years from now. >> no, i don't think it's too ambitious at all. in fact, a lot of these activities are already being done. they are just being done inside the air force or inside the intelligence community. really what the president is saying we want to take these amazing capabilities and we want to elevate them if you will to its own military service so it gets the same representation on the joint chiefs of staff eventually maybe having its own service secretary so it's not subboard habit to the air domain within the air force. steve: preview of coming attractions. jim bridnestine. thank you very much have. a good weekend. >> thank you. steve: what do you think of b. that? email us are a little bit country or a little bit rock and roll? the answer could completely change your love life. what do you, a flag knocked over in a brutal storm.
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meet the soldiers who jumped into action to do the right thing ♪ i'm proud of the flag of america. standing tall for the whole world to see. upset stomach, diarrhea.♪ try new pepto with ultra coating. gentlemen, i have just received word! the louisiana purchase, is complete! instant purchase notifications from capital one . technology this helpful... could make history. what's in your wallet? oh! oh! ♪ ozempic®! ♪ (vo) people with type 2 diabetes are excited about the potential of once-weekly ozempic®. in a study with ozempic®, a majority of adults lowered their blood sugar and reached an a1c of less than seven and maintained it. oh! under seven? (vo) and you may lose weight. in the same one-year study, adults lost on average up to 12 pounds.
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it gives you super fast speeds for all your devices, provides the most wifi coverage for your home, and lets you control your network with the xfi app. it's the ultimate wifi experience. xfinity xfi, simple, easy, awesome. brian: hi, everyone. welcome to your headlines. i hope you like them. conservative commentator ben shapiro will donate $10,000 if alexandria ocasio-cortez agrees to a debate. the democratic socialist is not having any of it saying, quote. just like cat calling i don't owe a response from unsolicited requests from men with bad intentions. also like cat calling for some reason they feel entitled to one. what? shapiro tweeted back discussion and debate are not bad intentions. slandering someone as a sexist cat caller without reason or evidence does
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demonstrate coward disand a bad intent, however. odd. and check this out. an artist creating dozens of stars for president trump on the hollywood walk of fame. he made the replicas after the president's star was have and lied and the city council voted to remove it he tells the hollywood reporter if anyone rips up or destroys his stars 30 more will pop up. take that now to something more importantly. ainsley: thank you so much, brian. two army recruits showing true patriotism gale force winds to rescue an american flag that was knocked over during a storm. see the video there they were taking part in patriot week during an event outside of a shooting range in michigan trying to recruit others into the army when that storm hit. but, thanks to their bravery, the flag was saved seconds after hitting the ground and once inside, it was folded properly as you can see. here with us now are those two patriots from the south gate army recruiting center
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staff sergeants jared ferguson and eric barkhorn. thank you both for, with us. >> good morning. thanks for having us. >> good morning. eric, i will start with you because i know you were the first to run out, when you saw the flag and saw the pole starting to bend and saw that flag land on the ground what was your first thought? >> all i could think to myself i wasn't going to leave thing in on the ground. ainsley: jared, we see you in the video you ran out after him, correct? >> yes. sergeant barkhorn was out there pretty quick. definitely before i even realized what was going on. once i noticed him out there. i went out there to help. >> that's wonderful. what, eric, first, does the flag mean to you? the flag means everything to me. everything that we stand for. everything that we fight for. ainsley: and jared, how about you? >> agreed with sergeant barkhorn definitely. we wear the flag on our soldiers every single day we put on our uniform and it's
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definitely really important. ainsley: did you know anyone was watching? >> my friends and family around the country. ainsley: eric, how about you? did you know you were on camera, would you have done this without all the notoriety and publicity? >> no. i had no idea that we were on camera at all. it's something i would have done if nobody was watching anyways. ainsley: i think that's wonderful. jared, did you learn not to let the flag go down and land on the ground in the army or were you raised in a family that taught you to do that? >> my family was pretty patriotic growing up, definitely it was just further reiterated through my time in the army. ainsley: and, eric, from a young person's standpoint, people watching around the country, tell us what this country means to you and why you are at the recruiting office. >> i mean, this country means everything to me. that's why i joined the army in the first place. i want to make a difference for my country. i want to fight for my country and stand up for everything i believe in.
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ainsley: i think it's wonderful. thank you both. god bless you. i know the owner of top gun shooting sports, he said that he put up a new flag pole and there is a new flag fry flying and he posted that picture on social media. thank you for doing and thanks for fighting for our country. >> thank you. >> thanks for having us. ainsley: you are welcome. coming up, a police officer was refused service at a verizon store. so what happened to that employee? stay tuned. the mayor of philadelphia danced when a judge ruled that he could keep protecting illegals in his sanctuary city. and now one of those illegals is accused of a horrific crime. maybe that mayor should stop celebrating. iginally discovered. in jellyfish. in clinical trials, prevagen has been shown to improve short-term memory. prevagen. healthier brain. better life. where we're changing withs? contemporary make-overs.
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then, use the ultimate power handshake, the upper hander with a double palm grab. who has the upper hand now? start winning today. book now at lq.com. -morning. -morning. -what do we got? -keep an eye on that branch. might get windy. have a good shift. fire pit. last use -- 0600. i'd stay close. morning. ♪ get ready to switch. protected by flo. should say, "protected by alan and jamie." -right? -should it? when you bundle home and auto... run, alan! ...you get more than just savings. you get 'round-the-clock protection.
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...you get more than just savings. do you need the most in your wireless mouse? maybe not. no... maybe you could trust that during your fantasy draft ...no, no, no. the computer won't auto-draft a kicker, in the 7th round. maybe you can trust you won't be kept at night because you auto-drafted a kicker, in the 7th round. (woman laughing) maybe you could trust that for the next 16 weeks you won't think about auto-drafting a kicker, in the 7th round. or... ...you could just trust duracell. (duracell mnemonic) >> everyone around me tried to pick my candidate for me. >> um-huh. >> and then told me every time i said i liked trump that i couldn't say it out loud or my career would be
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over. i would get kicked out of black community. it took me a year and a half to have the confidence to stand up and put on the hat that represents -- it represented overcoming fear and doing what you felt, no matter what anyone said and is saying you can't bully me. liberals can't bully me. news can't bully me. if i'm afraid to be me, i'm no longer ye. that's what makes ye. steve: there have you kanye west sitting down with jimmy kimmel the hat he is talking about is the make america great again hat. of course mr. kimmel pressed him on mr. president trump. let's bring in the executive director of the hispanic society and host of the chris salcedo radio show. chris, i don't know if you saw that interview last night. we just played a clip of it. it's very clear that kanye said that he has taken a lot of heat from people out in hollywood. his hip hop colleagues as well for supporting this president. >> yeah. we all have.
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latinos and blacks. i have a name for this. it's called the great black awakening. and a lot of people in the black community are recognizing that the democrat party is throwing them overboard for illegal aliens. because. steve: what do you mean? >> well, the democrat party has been so good at promoting abortion inside of the back community. has been so good about curtailing the population of the black community it's no longer a growing demographic in this country as compared to the rest of the country. so the democrats see their future of importing illegal aliens from all over the world into this country and those in the black community here in the united states are witnessing the democrat party chucking them overboard and then have you got donald trump coming in with a prosperity message basically saying hey, look, what have you got to lose? and support among blacks to this president, keeps on doubling from election day it doubled to 2017, from
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2017 to today it doubled again. it's going to be a trend you will see continue. brian: the president looking to expand his base why not add to it instead of getting more of the people that he could potentially get. why not be the first republican president to give a true earth? and that happened yesterday with prison reform. because, there is an inordinate number of african-americans in prison. even van jones and other people have responded and say wow, i really like the plan. it might have bipartisan support. and if the president can get this through, it's going to be halder to take that away. just to be totally clear. i watched kanye west not be able to answer question to jimmy kimmel does president trump care about black people. he just froze and didn't say anything. i assume the answer would be yes or else they wouldn't be supporting him. it went to commercial. it was a bizarre interview. >> brian, i have got to tell you, i'm asked. how does the republican party or conservatives reach out to hispanics or reach out to minorities? and i say this is very, very complicated, folks.
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take your note pad out. i say talk to them. that's what this president is doing. is he talking directly to the folks. bringing the prosperity message that the republican party has been so timid and shy at bringing into these communities and it's working. ainsley: what do you make, chris, of what's happening in philadelphia. you have the mayor celebrating the fact it's a sanctuary city but then you also have these illegal aliens who are put in prison and ice is not notified and they get back out on the streets and this little girl is sexually assaulted as a result? >> ainsley, normally i look at my political opposition and i just normally shake my head and i disagree with them. this one gets me angry. let's be fair. it's a bipartisan affliction out there with illegal immigration. but, sanctuary cities is 100 percent the democrats. this is their doing. the philadelphia leadership, the mayor kinney and that judge that allowed this to happen, they all have this
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5-year-old's innocence on their heads. i took a phone call from a listen yesterday who said we have got laws. if a bartender serves somebody too much alcohol, the law can come back to that bartender and prosecute him. why can't we do the same to officials who pave the way for illegal alien felons known felons to be predators on american citizens. there is cull packet here and the american people are tired of this. steve: sure. this particular case, and how many times have we heard something just like it? this case involves a fellow by the name of juan ramon vazquez. he was deport from the united states. he came back in. he was arrested in philly and then they said, you know what? we're just going to drop the charges. and there was an ice detainer. ice should have picked him um and adjudicated it. but they never called ice and so a year later, because he is still on the streets, because they dropped the charges, he assaults this
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little girl and destroyed her life. >> there is so much anger out there because everybody sees justifiable being done. i call it the democrats' foreigners first policy. yesterday judge emit sullivan, he said he is going to threaten the attorney general of the united states with contempt because he put some individuals who were seeking asylum here for domestic abuse which is not something you qualify for asylum using that excuse. the judge says i want that plane turned around or i'm going to hold new contempt attorney general sessions. and there is so much passion by agenda. american foreigners people say what about us? you referenced this video there is a video of a high profile democrat doing a jig dancing and singing about a policy that allowed the rape of a 5-year-old girl. if the president isn't making this parliament of
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his stump speech from now to election day. if the republicans aren't using this in their ads all the way to election day, i really got to doubt the g.o.p.'s desire to win this next elections. steve: that was jim kiny, the mayor of philly. chris salcedo, we thank you for joining us on this friday from your radio perch. >> thanks guys. ainsley: hand it over to jillian. jillian: a video that will literally stop you in your tracks. a shootout nearly kills a state trooper. we do want to warm you this video is graphic. >> look at that terrifying scene unfolded last year. the video now being released because the suspect was convicted. officers pulled over the guy during a routine traffic stop in pennsylvania but things quickly got out of hand when troopers tried to arrest him, he breaks free, grabs a gun from his car and
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starts shooting. one of the troopers throws himself over the guardrail. then he ties a tourniquet on himself to stay alive. he was so badly injured his heart stopped for five minutes on the way to the hospital. both officers, though, did survive. and an update to a story we telling you about earlier this week. annual elementary school is scrapping a plan to ditch the pledge of allegiance. atlanta neighborhood charter school planned to have kids recite a chant written by students and teachers. the reason to be more inexclusive. that back fired big time and in a statement the school says, quote: we will return to our original format and provide our students with the opportunity to recite the pledge during the all-school morning meeting. a cell phone store employee is out a job after refusing to serve a police officer. cellular sales in massachusetts near boston now apologizing to officer dan collins. the store says the employee refused to help several customers, not just the officer. the police department has accepted the apology. hey, guys. listen up.
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if you want more dates you have to listen to music like this. ♪ she thinks my tractor's sexy ♪ it really turns her on ♪ she's always staring at me ♪ while i'm chugging along ♪ jillian: new survey by the dating site plenty of fish who list country music 32% more messages. women who listen to classic rock are 68% more likely to connect with somebody. ♪ ♪ start me up ♪ you make a grown man cry ♪ you make a grown man cry ♪ jillian: the study looked at more than 9 million profiles. i don't know what 90s hip hop gets you. ainsley: i don't know where you were going to go with that i think your tractor is
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sexy. there is a statistic on what is this about? women like a man with a tractor. brian: right. the question is does janice dean? do you like a man with a tractor janice dean you? are in a safe loixz. steve: you like a man with a fire truck. janice: i do like a man with a fire truck. steve: you married one. janice: 50's dating i would do very well big classic rock fan. big classic rock dj back in the day. steve: janice, i wonder if more people are responding to the classic rock profile. janice: maybe. steve: more people like that than country. i don't know. janice: we have some country music happening on the plaza today for our summer concert series. cody johnson is going to be here. it's going to be awesome. we have a lineup. a little crowd around the bend. they will be coming in very quickly in the next hour or so and keurig by the way is sponsoring the summer concert series. a beautiful day here in new york city. the humidity has been cut back, so the 73 that is happening right now is not
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as humid. it's not as sticky out here. we are going to see the return of some rain this weekend acontrols the east and across the southwest. but we are not getting the rain that we need across the west where firefighters continue to battle wildfires. all right. you want to come with me beer going to look awe're goinge crowd. are you ready for the summer concert series? how are you? can i borrow your hat? >> yes. of course. pretty big. janice: that's all right. i have a big head. steve: all right, j.d. ainsley: now can you ride your tractor. steve: starts officially 8:00 this morning. ryan brian president trump hosting a round table on prison reform. the goal is reducing crime and save taxpayers money can it indeed happen? get democrats and republicans to work together? phil bryant was at that meeting. we will tell you the story next. steve: wait until we tell you who is coming over the
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border now aside from that person? the numbers hard to believe ♪ an american girl ♪ your hair is so soft! did you use head and shoulders two in one? i did mom. wanna try it? yes. it intensely moisturizes your hair and scalp and keeps you flake free. manolo? look at my soft hair. i should be in the shot now too. try head and shoulders two in one. you shouldn't be rushed into booking a hotel.
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liver problems can occur with entyvio. if your uc or crohn's treatment isn't working for you, ask your gastroenterologist about entyvio. entyvio. relief and remission within reach. brian: president trump honing in on prison reform hosting a round table with state leaders. it happened yesterday in new jersey. the president saying we have a duty to help those seeking redemption disw. >> our first duty is to our citizens including those who have taken the seeking redemption. that's people been in prison and coming out and having a hard time. not having such a hard time anymore. brian: several in attendance from states that have already implemented reform. let's ask phil bryant who was at the meeting yesterday and joins you now. governor, you had something to add. it was more than listening. what did you learn in mississippi that improves your numbers.
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have you 2700 less prisoners from 2014 to 2017. what did you want to get across to the president. >> i told the president as many of the governors sitting around the table, you can smart on crime. i'm a former law enforcement officer. so i understand there are people who need to be incarcerated and there are people we are mad at. so not everyone we are mad at needs to be incarcerated. have you got to start on the front end and make sure have you drug counseling there. so many about 90% of those that are in prison now, incarcerated 2 million across america are there because of drug-related arrests. almost 100% of the women in prison related to drugs. we start there with drugs counseling, with interdiction to make prisons drug-free zones to start with that's a good place. start teaching technical training. let them get their g.e.d. while they are in prison. looking at the nonviolent offenders, perhaps, earlier release so that we can put them in the job market with some of the 3.9 million jobs
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that the president has helped create that are now open. we need these men and women to be out working with their families in their communities. brian: right. we know prison reform measure already passed the house. you want to make sure goes through the senate and gets okayed by the president is going to be effective. some of the things that's been brought up recommend parole for offenders u complingt on community service. just to name a futurecast things out there today. do you sense the president is president is focused on this and getting it passed before november? >> i do after yesterday. i think as he heard governor perry now energy secretary perry talk about what success they had in texas and nathan deal in georgia. edwards in louisiana. he heard how the states, mississippi, has moved forward with prison reform. how successful he has been. he understands 70% of the
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people across america support. this this is crime prevention, about 70 to 80% of those released from prison will commit crimes again. if we don't have an active rehabilitation program and give them some opportunity as they leave incarceration. brian: you know, this could get mislabeled soft on crime. it's not. i love your term smart on crime. i love anything that could bring both sides together. and i think the american people would love to see both parties at a signing ceremony this fall. thanks, governor, for the insight. appreciate it? >> you are absolutely right. thank you so much. glad to be here. brian: some states have shown improvement and take things on their own. maybe we can get it done nationally. meanwhile, come up straight ahead. kids are getting ready to go back to school and one elementary school has a new addition this fall gender neutral bathrooms. is that a good idea for 5-year-olds. biggest, most expensive phone of the year revealed. but, is the samsung galaxy note 9, is 9 worth your
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ainsley: it is back-to-school season. steve: that's right. we have. so latest technology that could or should be on your shopping list. brian: but i'm doubtful. >> of course you are. brian: impress me, kurt. >> upgrade your back-to-school so this is polar bear coolers. i love this line. they are great anywhere in life. but talk about a great idea to take the lunch. open that up. that holds ice for three days. their entire line is great. they make them in backpacks they have smart, smart line.
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ainsley: great for the beach, too. not really heavy. >> if i was going to a dorm right now. i would scratch the dorm cooler and go straight to one of these. >> then you can personalize. >> coach. >> how about teaching a kid how to learn. this is called fly blocks. dyi drone kit. it's meant to crash. so you would send it off and boom, and then it falls into pieces and then you build it back again. so it's a lesson about how to build things and make them work in life, it's a stem product. it's brilliant. just under $70. ainsley: buy something that is meant to break. >> because you rye build it you don't have a hammer. this is a brand new laptop. this is brilliant lenovo legion laptop called the wifi 30. a student going back that loves gaming. this is it a total new redesign of this laptop. super powerful, giant gaming machine. steve: if you are a student should you be gaming. >> during lunch and after
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school. on the screen is like you get your federal school loans for college. this is a new way to search for private loans to get the best rate called credible.com. incredible idea. credible.com. you go and shop loans to fill that gap. brian: people are now hiring coaches to teach their kids how to be better at video games. >> because it's an industry now. take a look at this. this is my mac book. this is the smartest accessory i have ever seen in my life. ainsley: what is it? a charger? >> it looks like it. it's from kingston. it's called the nucleum takes one of the ports that comes seven ports from video to sd cards. steve: one gizmo rather than 7. >> helps you connect your entire world especially going back to school. ainsley: is this the most expensive phone on the market now? >> it is. samsung note 9. ainsley: how much is it. >> $1,249 for the top end
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model that holds 512 gig bites. ainsley: how much more is that than the iphone 10. >> double. iphone 10256. they are forcing apple to go bigger with everything. so it's got really smart things like i'm holding the s pen and i'm controlling the camera. >> that's cool. >> click it one time and take as shot. it has artificial intelligence built into it. so when you take a shot like for example if we took a shot right now and brian blinks, it tells you oh, somebody blinked. you might want to take that picture again. brian: person? >> you take the pen and write the name. ains. >> we're going to make that your name tag. ainsley: is it worth it. >> if you are the person that has the have the latest and greatest this certainly hits that market. steve: check it all out at cyberguy.com. thank you very much. >> good to be with you. brian: see you over the weekend. ainsley: big hour ahead, the former acting director of ice jay homan, jay sekulow,
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to pick my candidate for me. liberals can't bully me. >> the time has come to establish the united states space force. ♪ those old outlaw songs ♪ my daddy used to listen to ♪ because it's in my genes ♪ i gotta be me ♪ ainsley: well, from prison guard to rodeo star. country prusek. cody johnson is going to be part of our summer concert series today brought to you by keurig. brian: i had no idea country music was big in texas but that's where cody is from. steve: perfect sound track as the guy from famous dave's slathers up the barbecue ribs. brian: here is your cereal. steve: brian thinks somebody watching should invent for
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brian a barbecue cereal. brian, i'm just guessing, i bet if you googled it there probably is one. brian: a barbecued cereal? kellogg's, this anyone at work at 7:00 on kellogg's i don't know working on special k. how special do you want to make it? do something else. steve: change it from special k to special q barbecue. ainsley: instead of adding milked a a bunch of barbecue sauce. brian: i do think milk should play a role i want the flavor to be barbecue. ainsley: what if they were rice crispies would they still pop? make a noise. brian: rice crispies can't be improved. let's do something else. steve: let's bring in thomas homan the former director of ice. he joining from us the nation's capital. ainsley: good morning, tom. >> talking about a guy arrested yesterday and charged here in new york, his name is brandon
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zybrowski he faces up to knive years in prison. on social media he offered 500 bucks to anybody who would kill an ice agent. he said i am broke but scrounge and literally give 500 bucks to anyone who kills an ice agent. as a guy who heads up ice, what do you think of this guy? >> i think he needs to be held accountable and be charged with the highest crime that's available. ice agent being threatened all across the country. i myself have had numerous death threats against me and my family. and ice agents aren't going to be bullied into not doing their job. can you continue to threaten ice agents. ice will take it seriously and not be bullied in not doing their work. brian: he already has threatened to kill senator mccain. how many threats before they actually pick him up? >> it should be the first threat. so i think law enforcement is taking this seriously. i know every time we used to receive a threat at ice or i received a threat, you know, the security detail would
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dig into the social media content. they would try to find out who made the threat and run it down. we take every threat seriously. but, again, for those people watching this show thinking of threatening ice agents prevent us from doing the job. not going to happen. ainsley: vox and propublica published this video talking about how ms-13 is not as dangerous as everyone is talking about. they are taking aim at the president because of his concern for gangs and for young kids here in america and for all of our safety. they mention you in the video. let's show our audience at home a little bit of this video and get your reaction. >> when you think of the street gang ms-13, what do you see? maybe something like this. or this. but what if i told you the typical ms-13 gang member in the u.s. actually looks like one of these young men on facebook? the trump administration has made ms-13 the most visible symbol of why the u.s. needs tougher immigration policies. especially as a reason to point a finger at central
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american immigrants. but here's the thing, ms-13 was born right here in the united states. brian: tom, why are you hyping the threat? >> look, if she believes what she wrote, then she has no journalistic integrity. i have been investigating illegal alien crime for 34 years. i have flown to new york twice for the president, to long island where he met with the families of children that were murdered by ms-13. he has met with local law enforcement, you know, i have personally been in briefings with the president on numerous occasions with ms-13. the president is 100 percent accurate. ms-13 is a border issue. they come in as uacs part of the family unit. take advantage of loopholes in the immigration system that we asked congress to fix. the president 100 percent correct. it's a border issue. immigration issue. he made a comment in long island when i sat down in the second meeting up there. we talked about his comment calling them animals. i told the president you know what? i disagree with you calling
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ms-13 animals because if you think about it. animals kill to survive. ms-13 kills for sport. they kill to terrorize. they kill for fun. so, ms-13, despite what this reporter says, they are a significant danger to this country and she is wrong. the command and control of ms-13 in el salvador. we have done numerous investigations. fbi, ice, local law enforcement. we're all not wrong. i understand her views. i have been reportin reporting m long island for ear year. she must be an expert then because she has been looking at this for a year. i have been looking at it for 34 years. she is dead wrong on their. want president is 100 percent right. we have a president that cares about at the border. he wants control of the border. he wants to fight ms-13. he is on point. we need to support him. brian: they say they ride bikes and have jobs. what's the big deal? it's behind up. if they really wanted to surround this issue, did they reach out to you, did vox reach out to the former acting director of ice? >> no. they don't want to reach out to me.
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the left side media don't. they don't want to hear from us. they don't want the truth. bottom line is this is inaccurate story. it paints ms-13 and try humanize them not all ms-13 have tattoos. yeah, no kidding. they change based on law enforcement tactics so they know, you know tattoos is one thing they look at. so these uacs that came across they didn't have tattoos either. one point is very important. we did operation matador in long island. 40% of the ms-13 people we arrested came into the country either as part of a family unit or uac which tells me that president trump is 100 percent accurate when he says criminals and gang members are coming across that border. steve: all right. let's talk a little bit about this. a lot of them wind up as you know, thomas, going to sanctuary cities. the department of justice has slammed the city of philadelphia because of what happened down there last two days we have been talking about juan ramon vazquez.
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he was in this country illegally. he was deported, came back, was arrested in philadelphia. philadelphia divided to go ahead, drop the charges. there was an ice detainer out on him. but they didn't call ice. they didn't say we are going to release him. a year later he sexually abuses a small girl and her life is destroyed. what does this particular case, which sounds all too familiar, say to you about philadelphia and their sanctuary city status? >> the mayor has failed his number one duty, protect the community in philadelphia. look, my heart breaks for that little girl. my heart breaks for her family. what do you think they thought when they saw this guidancing about sanctuary status? it's terrible. look. and this is one of many cases happening. ice faults because they didn't issue a warrant. probable cause.
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brian: wait, wait. let everybody home hear this and respond to it mayor jim kenny on being confronted on this exact cas case. >> if they had gotten a warrant we would have turned the person over and nothing of this would have happened. >> and if the city had held the detainer against the order of a child wouldn't have been raped. >> against the order of a common pleas court judge. >> do you see this though as a tragedy. >> yes. >> no way to look at it? >> absolute tragedy and all they had to do was get a warrant and we would have turned them over. brian: tom, he blames you guys he didn't get a warrant. >> he needs to talk to his attorneys and research it the way the law is written, ice does not need a judicial warrant to take administrative action on illegal alien. philadelphia took our detainers for decades. this is a political issue. and let's say he truly believes detainer is unconstitutional and need a warrant. his own local police department made the decision to lock this guy up. so, they thought he was a public safety threat or flight risk. they took his liberty away and put him in a jail cell. unless any don't even want
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to accept the warrant. they don't want to accept the detainer. what's preventing him from calling ice and saying is he going to be released tomorrow. here take control of him. there is no liability and no issue with a detainer. simply ice working with local law enforcement. he has failed the community in philadelphia. he needs to look in the mirror every morning. this is his policy and it's going to happen again. i have been talking about this issue with y'all on "fox & friends" for over a year. this is one of many. it's not going to end. unless the communities smarten up more children will be raped and killed. ainsley: you lovwe are reportinn people taking a knee for the national anthem, when we know people have died for this country. we are talking about an organization that's defending ms-13, that chops up people, not just kills them. chops them up into pieces. and we're talking about this guy who wants to abolish ice and is dancing for sanctuary cities and a little girl's
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life is changed forever. what is happening? what is happening to our country? can you make sense of this? >> you know, i retired a month ago. i no longer work for the president. but i'm not leaving this fight. this isn't the mercury grew up in. the america that, you know, i grew up in has a child. and when america used to respect law enforcement and held them in high esteem. america used the respect the president i'm here today and i'm not going to shut up on these issues. i'm going to keep fighting this fight. again, i'm not working for the president anymore. as an american, someone that has enforced immigration law for 34 years, i'm concerned. i'm concerned about the future of this country. that's why i'm out here being voyeur vocal. i'm hoping the american people are paying attention to what's going on. the far left wants open borders. the far left wants to abolish ice. the far left wants to attack the president and his family. they never let the president be a president for a week
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without attacking him and his family. think about where we come as a society and it's scary to me as somebody who loves my country and i respect the president. and for people that want to call the president out on being wrong on the border issue. is he 100 percent right on border wall and immigration enforce: 100 percent right on ms-13. you can like or not like this president but don't say he is inaccurate on this. he has taken a personal part of, this like i said, i have flown to new york with him twice. i have had numerous meetings. he has taken this seriously. we have a president. name another president who has taken this issue so seriously. another president who understands this issue so clearly. we got to wake up. and i hope, again, november is coming. i hope the american people are paying attention what's happening. steve: so many of these things are political as you said earlier. tom homan who used to be the acting ice director. we thank you for your service and thank you for showing up on this friday. >> you're welcome. thank you for having me. steve: all right. straight ahead on this
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friday. a terrorist compound uncovered in the united states. down in new mexico. a jihadi father trained with training kids to shoot up schools in the future. how did nobody know about it until just the last week or so? we are going to talk about that. brian: plus, as of now, kanye west not backing down from supporting president trump. >> to stand up and put on the hat. it represented overcoming fear. liberals can't bully me. news can't bully me. the hip hop community they can't bully me. brian: all right, diamond and silk are going to weigh in on kanye west's appearance with jimmy kimmel. don't move. ♪ i can't wait much longer ♪ i know i got to be right now ♪ because i can't get much longer m booking a flight at the last minute doesn't have to be expensive.
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♪ brian: prosecutors say this jihadi suspect was holding children hostage in new mexico compound and training them to carry out what they say were school shootings. this, as we learn the nypd had reportedly surveilled a mosque connected to this new mexico compound. but the aclu intervened. so, how does a terrorist training camp make its way to american soil and essentially move off the grid? how did it go undetected for so long? here to weigh in fbi special agent with the joint terrorism task force and u.s. army ranger chad
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jenkins. also the co-founder of the jenkins group. chad, when this popped up, i said where the heck did this come from? you said this looks familiar. what do you mean? >> well, we see too often this type of behavior from individuals who are devout followers of islam. this compound out in new mexico is very similar to what we see overseas. isis compounds in syria and iraq. the institute in yemen. al shabaab in, you know, in africa. it represently indicates that now we are seeing it here in the united states. and it's devout followers following the religion in a way in which mohammed started the religion back in the 7th century. they are following it to a t. that's where it's very difficult to decide how long do we allow for them to do this before they go actionable and actually try commit a terrorist attack here on u.s. soil. brian: the story is the that the fbi was surveying this and the local official said i'm tired of waiting. i'm going in. and they were totally wide open. there was no cover. so they were risking their lives. they don't have the terror training that you have.
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they went in and did a great job and they saved a lot of people. but, in the big picture, you don't think this is the only one. we have other places in this country where you can move off the grid between states and between areas. have you ever looked down when you are flying across country, you see places. >> yeah. we have seen this before. oregon had a compound not too long ago, a couple years back that was doing the same type of things. but, you have got to remember, brian. it's a very fine line and the imams and mosques throughout the country know how to walk it up to that first amendment right of freedom of speech and then to go ahead and teach their ways to go out and then have others go off the grid and continue in that instruction. whether it's doing it here domestically or trying to then facilitate individuals going overseas to join the fight of isis, al qaeda. sal shah bob. you name the terrorist organization. training them here to go over to do it overseas.
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brian: sunni muslim extremists. guess what the people in the muslim community know about it they have got to be the first ones to blow the whistle on it. chad jenkins thanks so much. >> thanks, brian. brian: 20 minutes after the hour will president trump and robert mueller ever meet for a sitdown who better to ask than someone on the president's legal team jay sekulow is next. one elementary school has a new addition in fall gender neutral bathroom? is this a good idea for 5-year-olds? before nexium 24hr mark could only imagine... a peaceful night sleep without frequent heartburn waking him up. now that dream is a reality. nexium 24hr stops acid before it starts for all-day, all-night protection. can you imagine 24 hours without heartburn?
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of governor jeff colyer his lead dropping after a series of discrepancies across texas. he asked who the state top election official to not instruct counties on counting ballots. kobach says the counties are in charge of tallying votes not his office. a former ohio state wrestler is backing off the claim that congressman jim jordan knew of sex abuse at the school. mark comey a former ufc champion said his comments about the then assistant coach are not accurate. coleman said maybe i spoke without thinking. i was angry and said words i shouldn't have said. other former athletes say dr. richard strouse assaulted them before killing himself. three others accuse jordan of knowing about it, which he denies. the pig farmer grilled by mollie tibbets now admits to taking a polygraph test. wayne cheney says fbi agents asked him if he had anything to do the 20-year-old's disappearance. the test results have in the
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been released. cheney denies knowing anything about mollie said some guy probably has her. mollie went missing about three weeks ago. thank you, guys. steve: legal team rejecting terms for interview with special counsel robert mueller. still working toward some sort of a sitdown if the line of questioning is very narrow. brian: so will the president and mueller ever go for a sitdown? ask jay sekulow a member of the president's legal time. chief counselor for law and justice, which we are all for. jay? >> glad to hear that. brian: law and justice. trey gowdy said this last night on with martha, i will tell the president to sit down and answer the question what, if anything, you would know about the russia in 2016 and then answer the question about who, if anyone, did it with your team. and then don't answer any more questions. how do you feel about that? >> well, look, i appreciate everybody's advise but they are not representing the president. and what people need to
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understand is historical precedent that could be set here. the idea that a president could be asked questions about, first of all, article 2 authority, it's counter to the constitution. i mean, this whole notion that a president should be put in a plates, especially in the scope of this investigation, to be questioned about why you took action against, let's say the former fbi director or whatever it might be. here's the problem. here the problem is not the president could answer the questions. of course he could answer the questions. the question is should under he circumstances the president answer the question? you are now setting a precedent not just for this president but for the presidency. and my concern quite frankly in all of in this is article 2 core constitutional power of the presidency. and to allow questioning to go on with regard to decisions you makes a president, i think, it's not only absurd and outrageous. it makes no sense under the way our government is set up. if that was the case, then any u.s. attorney that had any question about a president's policies you
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know i'm going to subpoena him and ask him some questions about that. ainsley: if they don't sit down. if he doesn't talk to mueller. what happens next and how long does this go on? >> that's the process question. they gave us an offer which obviously it's pretty clear now we did not accept their offer. we countered. this is how this works. if you look at this historically, this is the way the back and forth goes on these. we pointed out the irregularities in this investigation. i mean, the biggest news of late has been the whole bruce ohr situation. you had the number four at the united states department of justice, the number four. his wife happens to work for fusion gps. who happens to be retained to put together the dossier with chris steele. and chris steele happens to be talking to the fbi and to bruce orebruce ohr at the justie department. leaking information bruce ohr continues the ongoing dialogue. can you list the salacious dossier and put all of that together and say why in the world would this investigation have
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legitimacy at this point? it was really corrupt at its inception. steve: that's why it sounds like they are all going to get haul you had before congress again. goodlatte wants interview bruce ohr. >> yes. still there. steve: trying to put it all together, he was a narcotics prosecutor. how did he get involved in this? his wife worked for fusion gps they would like to talk to glenn simpson as well. >> he should. steve: too many questions. >> not just the questions the nature and scope of the conflict. after he was fired. fired chris steele for leaking. james comey another one that leaked, right? steve: he got fired but didn't stop talking to the fbi. >> still talking to the fbi and bruce ohr was still taping those conversations. inappropriate. that plays into this calculus you makes a to whether you will submit to an interview. so here's the question that will come at the end of the day. will would he be willing to sit down for an interview? will would he be able to do it by written questions or are we just going to say we're done? those are the issues that are. brian: at the end of the day you are going to make this
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-- >> -- i don't think it's going to be the end of the day. brian: this week? >> here's what we said this week. we responded. so we did respond this week. steve: with a counter offer. >> we responded. so now what happens they have to respond to us. and, yes, you know, i'm not -- i don't predict dates or percentages. but, i don't predict dates or percentages. this needs to be over with soon. i think it's been very bad for the country. and we're at a point in this inquiry where they can wrap it up. this has been the most transparents investigation in u.s. history. all of these documents given. all of these witnesses put forward. they really don't need to speak -- made constitutional case. brian: christian minister turkey you put sanctions on a country because they -- on a person. >> let me this. very difficult 21 months for this family. andrew brunson has been in
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turkey for 23 years. gets picked up in the aftermath of the coup although he was in the united states when the coup took place. the president has worked very aggressively to secure his defense. as aggressive as you can and to secure his release. he has been released to house arrest. so we're kind of 60% of the way there. the next part, the most important part now is how do we get from house arrest to back home in the united states which is where he needs to be with his family? i will tell you this. the administration, the president and his secretary of state, ourselves mike pompeo, the vice president, the president, of course, are working diligently on this. there is not a day that goes by where the president and i are not discussing it he will come home, i believe. brian: turkey did send people here to negotiate. any progress. >> those are ongoing negotiations. diplomacy takes time. working through that process. i remain hopeful. i think he will be home soon. steve: as we all do. jay seq. kuehl low, chief counsel for the law and justifiable. thank you. >> thank you. steve: if you thought you saw the last of the kneeling
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nfl players last year. you were wrong. this happened last night in the preseason. and one player says he has no plans to stop. diamond and silk fired up. they are next. good morning to you, ladies u. >> plus our all-american summer concert series rolls on this morning with cody johnson. ♪ ♪ allergies with sinus congestion and pressure? you won't find relief here. go to the pharmacy counter for powerful claritin-d. while the leading allergy spray relieves 6 symptoms... claritin-d relieves 8, including sinus congestion and pressure. claritin-d relieves more. whenshe was pregnant,ter failed,
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felt, no matter what anyone said and is saying, you can't bully me. liberals can't bully me. news can't bully me. if i'm afraid to be me. i'm no longer ye. that's what makes ye. ainsley: that is kanye west with jimmy kimmel last night. brian: when he rolled out the album i don't think he paid the price commercially. people are still buying himself. steve: the cap he was talking about was make america great again. that was the president's slogan when he ran for president. that is also something that diamond and silk, who are big trump supporters agree with. ladies, i don't know if you saw jimmy kimmel last night interviewing kanye west. but, you know, he revealed that he has taken a lot of heat from hollywood and his hip hop pals in supporting this president. >> here's the deal we commend kanye west for speaking up and speaking out about being bull idea supporting our president. is he think for himself he doesn't need anyone spoon feeding him a narrative.
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shame on liberals for trying to paint everyone in a box with the same thoughts. we don't have the same thoughts. we all think differently if he wants to support this president and wear his make america great again hat. he can do so. i commend him for speaking out about it. >> ladies on the left. if they can where their would you sayy hats, then certainl -- with usehats then we america great again hats. ainsley: some of the interview was very bizarre. at the beginning he talked about how he became famous. he said everyone was telling me. i was writing music. i was doing really good at that. and then i became a designer. i was really good at that and then he talks about how the black community, everyone said you are not going to be accepted in the black community anymore. your music sales are going to go down if you support this president. what has been the reaction from the black community? >> well, listen, people are getting on board. they have like the fact that the president is working on prison reform. >> that's right.
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>> bringing in more economic opportunity. people are able to thrive again in this country. they have jobs in this country. and that's what black americans like. nobody has the right to bully anybody. and what we call those -- the people that want to say oh, don't you support president trump? we call those people the gate keepers. the liberals are the gate keepers of what we call the democratic plantation. they want you to stay stuck in that slavery mind set. >> that's right. >> where someone can think for you or spoon feed you. we don't need anyone doing that to us. we want to support this president? we will. listen, black people are behind president donald j. trump and that's what scares the left. >> long gone are those days where we segregate ourself from being a part of the american dream. >> that's right. brian: have you guys gotten blow back from your support of the. >> ever since we supported him back in 2015 when we started supporting him. listen, the revolution started back then. we started telling people can you think for yourself. >> that's right.
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>> you can come off of that democratic plantation. what you see now is the evolvement. people are evolving into something great. they are thinking differently. we have gotten blow back. the more they mate the more we educate no. longer vote for a system that keeps handing us crumbs. i absolutely love this businessman. >> yes. >> that's truly making america again. >> you haters make it greater. steve: there you go. diamond and silk reporting from diamond and silk world headquarters at the end of the skype line. ladies, thank you very much. have a great weekend. ainsley: thanks, ladies. brian: take care diamond and silk. jillian, nothing to hate about you. jillian: thank you so much, brian. back at you. let's get you caught up on headlines right now. shocking video we want to show you. just released from inside a bus crash that left three people dead. we do wants to warn you though this video is graphic. [screams] >> you did a good job. did you a good job.
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>> jillian: the bus carrying 35 passengers flipped over when the driver lost control in new mexico. she was trying to avoid another crash on the highway when a tractor-trailer slammed into the bus pushing it down the road. us dozens were hurt. some more terrifying moments caught on camera. a large sign topples on to a group of people. watch this. isn't that scary in the nearly 20-foot long sign falling off a building in china and onto the crowd below. at least five people are hurt. good samaritans rushing in to help trying to lift the heavy debris and pull the people out. no word on the victim's conditions. as kids across the nation get ready to head back to class, one kansas city elementary school is welcoming their students with brand new gender neutral bathrooms. >> schools have certainly
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evolved over time. we have more open concept classrooms. our hallways have community learning spaces within them and restrooms have just been a natural evolution as well. >> district claims the open concept has been well-received by parents and allows teachers to better supervise of the students. the trump administration is making america great again. this time in space. >> time has come to establish the united states space force. >> at the pentagon vice president mike pence unveiling plans to launch the newest military branch by 2020. he is calling on congress to approve $8 billion to fumed the plan. earlier nasa administrator jim bride stmplet tine why this makes sense. >> the annual economy is $350 billion annually. that's a big economy in space. and president trump is really doing the right thing by making sure it's secure, when is necessary.
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jillian: listen up. the trump campaign wants your help choosing the logo. look at your screen. they sent an email from supporters to choose one of these six designs that you see right here. the question is which one do you like best? what's your vote? email us at friends@foxnews.com. i don't know. digging the red and yellow. brian: i like the one bottom to the right exactly. ainsley: i feel like bottom middle. brian: design the uniforms because they have to be unitards. don't all space outfits have to be unitards? steve: i don't think that is a requirement. brian: janice, do you know? janice: i don't. but look at this uniform. what's your name? >> owen loaf. you are the best dressed man in rock away. >> best dressed manual in rock away. janice: sunshiny. 72 in new york city. the good news is he would don't have a lot of humidity here. it's a perfect day for a summer concert series sponsored by keurig. here is the past 24 hours.
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a little bit of rain across the ohio, tennessee, southeast, as well as the southwest, unfortunately where we could see the potential for a little bit of flooding. there is your foist today. it's going to remain hot and dry across much of the west. are you guys excited? [cheers] >> oh my gosh, cody johnson coming up and best dressed man in rock away. steve: taking a bow. all right j.d. thank you. ben shapiro said he would give socialist carks 10,000 bucks if she debated him. will she do it? we have got the answer come up. brian: and he was a prison guard turned bull rider. now is he a country music star. cody johnson is live in the keurig corner. is he about to shake our hands. ♪
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jillian: drink beer, eat chicken, and win money? buffalo wild wings is actively explorlg adding sports betting to restaurants. the supreme court lifted sports betting in may leaving the decision to legalize it to individual states. if wings aren't your thing, how about hamburgers for life? sort of anyway. are order from the mcdonald's app. today for a chance to win a mcgold card. what's that get you? two free meals per week for 50 years. and if you are a fan of pumpkin spice, while it's 90 degrees in august and need something to wash all that food down. pumpkin spice lattes will return to starbucks. can you place your order on august 28th. ainsley, send it out to you. brian: good news is they are actually using real pumpkin now. my favorite. ainsley: all right. listen to this. this texas counse cowboy is takg country by storm selling out
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shows across the country. brian: the crowd roars. this morning makes television debut on "fox & friends." steve: that's right. can you pick up or download his new single on my way to you which is out today. ladies and gentlemen, cody johnson joins us. >> thank you for having me. i appreciate it. ainsley: cody, i love. this you call yourself a god fearing, hard working, beer-drinking fighting loving cowboy. >> that's about it. ainsley: sounds like the perfect man. steve: sounds like the perfect country western song. >> i will quote you on that tell my wife after the show. steve: back in the day when you were growing up in texas. you and a bunch of your fellow future farmers of america decided to put together a band. >> actually told me, look, man you are good at a lot of things putting this band together and play. forced me into it played first little competition and after that it was over. brian: you have the clearest, purest, strongest voice and i said where did it come from you said my
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parents. your parents sang. you are the one making money with that ability. >> music has been a part of my life u both sides of my family it was always what we did. it wasn't thought of a dream i was going to chase until i saw garth brooks at central park i thought maybe -- i don't know if i thought i could do that but i thought man, i sure want to. ainsley: married and two little girls. >> two beautiful little girls. ainsley: how old are they. >> 3 and 1 and they are a handful. janice: will they be musicians do you think? >> they usually get out in bouncy house when i play and screaming daddy i'm like you i go oh no. ainsley: prison guard, in the rodeo, how did you end up doing all those things. god works in mysterious. my career. forefront of my life. still continues today. and i think this is why i'm here. this is what i was put on earth to do and time to get real now. steve: and you are here. you are here in no,
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concreted canyon. >> that's a good way to put it. steve: how cool is it because have you been working on this dream and suddenly an overnight success but it's taken you over a decade. >> it's been just over 10 years of playing as an independent artist and tearing up the roads and playing every chance you get. a lot of closed doors. you have to find the open doors over the years. and during the 10 years you kind of look why can't i get a break? why is this happening? why is that happening? 31 you look back and say it all happened for a reason. we are here today. brian: you feel like you earned it and going to appreciate it what are you going to sing for us. >> new single debuts today "on my way to you." janice: are you guys excited? [cheers] steve: that is coming up. >> thank you guys. appreciate you. steve: also coming up ben shapiro said he would give alexandria ocasio-cortez $10,000 if she debated him. she has decided. what's her decision? it's coming up. brian: it is bizarre. if you thought you saw the
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last of kneeling football players in the national football league, you were wrong. it happened again last night. it happened a lot. and one player says he doesn't have any plans to stop. carley shimkus can play football but she won't now. she will put on the eye black for you in just a moment with that story. ♪ -i've seen lots of homes helping new customers bundle and save big, but now it's time to find my dream abode. -right away, i could tell his priorities were a little unorthodox.
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-keep going. stop. a little bit down. stop. back up again. is this adequate sunlight for a komodo dragon? -yeah. -sure, i want that discount on car insurance just for owning a home, but i'm not compromising. -you're taking a shower? -water pressure's crucial, scott! it's like they say -- location, location, koi pond. -they don't say that.
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steve: conservative commentator and friend of the show ben shapiro said he would donate $10,000 to alexandria ocasio-cortez if she agreed to a debate with him. brian: the democratic socialist not having it tweeting this and buckle up. just like catcalling i don't owe a response to unsolicited requests from men with bad intentions.
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and also like catcalling for some research they feel entitled to one. ainsley: okay. so how did ben shapiro respond? what's the fate of this debate? here what w. what's trending fox news headlines 24/7 reporter carley shimkus. hey, carley. >> hey, pretty surprising response from alexandria ocasio-cortez, huh? [laughter] steve: key to the response is the cat call part. >> what happened was he wanted to debate her. he invited her on to his show. of course, they have very different political leanings so he wanted to set up a debate even offered to donate to her campaign $10,000 for this. she essentially accused him of sexism. that request being a sexist request. ben shapiro defended himself on social media saying this: discussion and debate are not bad intentioned. slandering someone as a sexist catcaller without reason or evidence does demonstrate cowardice and bad intent. however, yeah, so, that's a
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stretch by any. brian: it makes no sense. her response makes absolutely no sense. ainsley: she doesn't want to do it. she doesn't want to debate him. so she has to make it sexist or turn it into something else. if she says no. then it makes her look weak. >> isn't a display of sexism when every news covers debates between president trump and hillary clinton? it's a part of our political system and should be celebrated. so much reaction to this on social media. candice owens female conservative commentator says and what exactly was your excuse for having turned down the debate with me? can't wrap that one up in fake feminism. i will double ben shapiro's offer. 20,000 charity of your choice. a capitalism vs. socialism debate. one person says if this were to happen and no matter how gentle he would be, ben would be savaged for disrespect and misogyny. he is fighting uphill battle with this. brian: yesterday was week
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one of the preseason. thursday a couple of games. we had a lot of kneelers. the giants had about 10. it looks like the jaguars had been three and the dolphins had. >> a bunch of national anthem kneeling issues. collin kaepernick tweeted about it my buddy kenny steels continued protest by taking a knee. albert wilson joined him in protest. stay strong, brothers. of course, he is celebrating this. the nfl came out and said that they are going to put a pause on punishing players for kneeling during the national anthem as conversation with the nfl players association continues. their rules require players to stand remains. brian: they didn't take a pause on taking a knee. >> no, they didn't. brian: negotiations right now. supposed to be some kind of resolve. that doesn't help. steve: carley, thank you very much. a lot of reaction online. let us know.
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straight ahead, what does geraldo rivera have to say about all the things in the world? he is outside and he's next on "fox & friends" for a friday. brian: he is talking about earth. ♪ you wouldn't accept an incomplete job from any one else. why accept it from your allergy pills? flonase sensimist relieves all your worst symptoms, . . . .
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♪ >> president trump unleashing on chicago mayor rahm emanuel and local leaders for unbelievable surge in gun violence. >> we must strengthen community bonds with law enforcement including cities like chicago that have been absolute and total disaster. >> defending deadly and violent gang ms-13, news outlets of vox and pro-publica are accused of in a newly-released video. >> ms-13 followers are working after school jobs and working with their parents. >> i've been investigating gang crime for 34 years. ms-13 kills for support.
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>> everyone around me tried to pick my candidate for me. liberals can't bully me. >> we commend kanye west speaking out and being bullied and supporting our president. >> the time has come to establish the united states space force. ♪ i'm watching an eagle floating on the breeze ♪ dreaming by my side, i wish i could you by my side ♪ ♪
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♪ i'm staying right here. brian: cold by johns son performing, wild as you. it took him tend years to break out. steve: our featured performer on the all american summer concert series by our friends at keurig. i perform a world premier of a new song on fox news channel. ashley: hi, geraldo. >> hi, ainsley. ashley: there is this guy in massachusetts. he was arrested in new york, cops tried to track him down after what he posted on twitter. social media, telling people, i will pay you 500 bucks, i am broke, i will find the 500 bucks, if you go out and kill i.c.e. >> he committed a crime. he should be prosecuted.
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i know he has been charged, that is a good thing. i feel so sorry for the i.c.e. agents. they are certainly getting the short end of the stick. coming as creature of the 1960s, i came era of cops were pigs. they were disparaged. their homes were vandalized, their children were harassed. it happened to returning gis from the unpopular war in vietnam. they came to the airports and were reviled. cops, gis, people you should esteem in society during the ugly periods in american history, they were scorned and should have been cheered. they were ridiculed, rather than supported by citizens. which is too bad. now i see something of that with i.c.e. i.c.e., is at least two agencies. i have spoken about this before
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in a limited way. the i.c.e. investigators. they are the guys that bust the cartels. they go after the transnational fangs. steve: criminals. >> they go after ms-13 and racketeers and the drug smug list. there is the enforcement and removal side of i.c.e. that is far more unpopular group. they smash in the doors. there is diego been here 20 years and take him out. brian: they have criminal records. >> i don't know where you get the statistic. brian: tom homan. >> i want to see objective review. i do not believe that. too often there is temptation to go for low-hanging fruit. they sweep up the poultry processing people. meat-packing people. pizza delivery guy. brian: we don't call dominoes and arrest the delivery guy. it is not 10 on criminal record. steve: ms-13 sympathetic
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portrait presented by vox and "propublica." forget about the murders on long island. look at this description. misunderstood its that ride bikes and live with mom. brian: with neck tatoos. >> when you think of ms-13, maybe you see something like this or this. but what if i told you that typical ms-13 gang member in the u.s. actually looks like one of these young men on facebook? the trump administration has made ms-13 the most visible symbol of why the u.s. needs tougher immigration policies, especially as a reason to point a finger at central american immigrants. but here's the thing, ms-13 was born right here in the united states. steve: so geraldo, what they're doing they're claiming that the president's depiction of ms-13 is terrible gang is too -- >> bizarre and preposterous.
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if you have a big glomy tattoo on your face and gun and knife on this with a tear from the people you killed in jail and your whole body is a mass of at that times to, and you operate, you fund your life by dealing drugs and you keep your drug revenue by eradicating or eliminating your rivals, ms-13 does not deserve to exist. anything that can be done to crush them and shut them down, i am 100% for it. just as i am 100% for going after the gangs and disciples and other gangs in chicago perpetrating terror on the windy city. i don't understand, i remember my friend bernie kerik when he was police commissioner, you had rudy giuliani was mayor and michael bloomberg was mayor here, we busted the backs of the gangs with stop-and-frisk and other aggressive police tactics. i don't understand, first of all
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how, brian and my long island neighborhood, ms-13 was allowed to prosper for so long. i don't understand why the full wait of the federal government doesn't come crushing down on native-born gang bangers in chicago and like it. brian: do it block by block. ashley: they are showing pictures of kids part of ms-13 that don't have any tattoos. tattoos are not, they could still be dangerous. part of a gang. out in long island they're chopping people up, geraldo. tom homan was on our show. we were talking about. listen to this. >> ms 1 is border issue. come in as uacs, part of the family unit. take advantage of loopholes in the immigration system we asked congress to fix. ms ms-13 kills for sport and kills for fun. she is wrong. president trump is 100% accurate
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when he says criminals and gang members are coming across the border. steve: he is not a fan of the vox show. >> "propublica" are very, very hard left. they are very progressive. they are anti-trump they would get to the place where they're almost pro-ms-13. i think it is, it is, it's a desire to put down the president, a desire to oppose the president in everything he does, and anything he does i think it is -- ashley: it's a reporter versus tom homan. a reporter spent a day, however long with them and that is their, that is their impression. brian: with 13-year-old voiceover. ashley: with 30 years experience. >> 30. 50. brian: talk about new mexico, the compound made out of garbage in middle of essentially two states. turns out these are muslim extremists it seems. plans include training children to go in and shoot up schools. some schools start in the middle
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of august. i was just on with a special forces guy says this is similar to a what grows out of the desert. this is how mohamed lives. >> i first thought they were survivalists. i wasn't on the air on monday when the story broke. i was surprised how little coverage it got. we covered it. most of the others were so obsessed with president trump an russia-gate and collusion illusion and all the rest of it, they paid scant attention to this first i thought it was survivalists. more i read about it, came to realize it really was an extreme isthmus him operation. this guy, the main guy, is the son of one of the unindicted co-conspirators from the 1993 world trade center bombing. these people have been on the radar a long time. brian: his mosque was surveiled by new york city police and aclu intervened. >> is that is exactly how it happened.
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but that surveillance program did generate some data. i'm surprised took the authorities that long to crack down on this place, to the place, to the point where you had 11 children who were starving to death, not only malnourished but dressed in ration and learning to kill. steve: breaking the story was the guy's father, the guy who is tied to the '93 attack on the world trade center, apparently he dropped a dime on his son because he was worried about his daughter and the kids. >> the 3-year-old, where is the 3-year-old. is that the bones they found in the backyard of the compound? a compound like this, this really resonates, if you see something say something. the neighbors should have raised holy hell -- brian: there is no neighbors. >> there are enough survivalists and others off the grid, you know, i understand they appreciate people's privacy but when you have little children running around in tattered rags, and you hear gun shots on regular basis. they raided the place.
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they came up with a ar-15. five or six fully shot or loaded 30-round magazines. the allegation, i haven't seen corroboration of it yet. the allegation they were training the older, the teenagers, the 15, 14-year-old to go shoot up a school. this is horrifying thing. so aberrant, this behavior, you can't ignore it. you have to become involved. that is why you really do. steve: geraldo, have a great weekend. brian: talk to you on the radio. ashley: behind you is jillian. jillian: morning. how are you? we're following a number stories guys, we'll start with one out of tennessee the state executes first inmate in a decade. he was put to death by lethal injection for murdering a 7-year-old girl he was babysitting in 1985. they denied his request to have
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it postponed. he used his final words to say he was quote, really sorry. the state hadn't executed anyone since 2009 due to difficulty finding heat this injection chemicals. a coach charged with assault after a man he punched died. jamil jones punch the man in new york and he fell on the concrete. unclear why he punched man or if they knew each other. in a statement the north carolina school says they will comment further once they receive details on the incident. former ohio state wrestler is backing off the claim that congressman jim jordan new of sex abuse at the school. a former ufc champion says the comments about the then assistant coach are not accurate. coleman said, maybe i spoke without thinking. i was angry and said words i shouldn't have. other former athletes say dr. richard straus assaulted
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them before killing himself. others accused jordan knowing about it which he denies. an artist tired of seeing the president's star destroyed over and over again is taking matters into his own hands. strategically placing them around liberal activist rob reiner. the city council of west hollywood voted to remove the real star. he says if anyone rips up his stars or he will tear them. steve: they are stickers. they look real. brian: engine newt. ashley: thank you, jillian. coming the first of its kind in the nation. colleges being forced to provide abortion medications. do you think that is a good idea? steve: we asked to you email us, what do you think space force logo should be? your answers, a little poll
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♪ ashley: california lawmakers are taking up a bill that would make the state the first in our country to mandate that public universities offer medication abortion as part of basic student health services. our next guest says this is the leftest proabortion, not pro-choice agenda. set contributor to dale hi wire dot-com and author of, the unholy trinity. he joins us now. thank you, matt for joining us. >> thanks for having me. ashley: how does this all work? what are your thoughts about it? >> this first thought i support the california secession movement. they will recruit the entire state of california into the space force and send them to a different solar system or something like that. here is what i'm thinking. i know it is crazy, what if rather than supplying a abortion medication, quote, unquote to college students, what if we taught them a little bit about responsibility, how to control themselves, how to be responsible? we wouldn't have to rely on abortion drugs because that's what the state of california, that is their argument, this is
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needed because kids in college are getting abortions so frequently. maybe we should go to the root of that. why are they getting abortions so frequently. that is my thought. ashley: 500 students at california public university, they seek this abortion medication every month, the senator who wrote this bill, connie leyva says the kids travel far to get the medication. she wants it available to all the kid. you can take the pill up to 10 weeks into your pregnancy. she writes this, no woman makes this choice lightly, but when you need it, you need to have access. matt, who will pay for this? >> well they claim it will be paid for by private grants and that kind of thing this is the game they always play abortion. well the money goes to planned parenthood doesn't fund the abortions except that money is fungible. so if you are supporting planned parenthood with tax money, at least indirectly you're funding the abortions. same thing with public universities. if the tax money is going to public university, that is then
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turning around and using some money, somewhere, using some resources to fund abortions we are indirectly at least supporting that. by the way abortion medication is a misnomer. medication is something that heals and treats you where abortion medication is something that ends human life. it is not medication. it is not necessary. it is never necessary. so there is absolutely no reason whatsoever to supply it. ashley: matt walsh, thank you so much. >> thank you. ashley: has to get through the senate in order to get to the governor's desk. philadelphia's mayor, you saw the video when a judge ruled he could keep protecting illegals in sanctuary city. >> sanctuary city. >> yes. ashley: now one of those illegals is accused of a horrific crime. so could this happen in texas? never according to the governor there. he is here next. but first, here is cody johnson performing, with you i am.
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it gives you super fast speeds for all your devices, provides the most wifi coverage for your home, and lets you control your network with the xfi app. it's the ultimate wifi experience. xfinity xfi, simple, easy, awesome. ♪ >> to fit into this dress, i'll tell you that. >> maybe something in this box. i don't want you to get too excited. >> oh. [laughter]. brian: i love that documentary. some quick headlines now, you remember him from movies like "pretty woman." richard gere could be gearing up, get it, for brand new role.
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congressman. he is being floated by for westchester, new york, to replace current congressman sean patrick maloney. turns out he was not irish enough. no comment from the 68-year-old activist. rich gere never faced this iconic role but a new face could. >> the name is bond, james bond. brian: all right. producers are reportedly looking at idri i elba as next 007. once daniel craig wraps up the another bond film. this is released by "entertainment weekly" is going viral. from the upcoming movie, ralph breaks the internet and "wreck-it ralph 2", that comes out in november. why does that wrecking the internet? i don't get it. ashley: every little girl in america wants to be at the slumber party. brian: they don't usually dress casual? ashley: i'm not sure about that.
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first time princesses are seen in their pajamas. ashley: mayor of philadelphia was seen dancing and now he is being blamed for the assault of a little girl. steve: they are accused giving that man who was in the country illegally a free pass after they dropped the charges before he assault ad small girl. brian: this is what potentially could happen especially where sanctuary cities flourish. why is that happening in our cities? here is governor greg abbott with the answer to that. texas there is no sanctuary -- how many sanctuary cities do you actually have in texas? >> well right now, brian, sanctuary cities are banned in the state of texas. i think texas is the first or maybe the only state in the united states that passed a law banning sanctuary cities. but what is going on in philadelphia, like alice in
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wonderland story, topsy-turvy the mayor is blaming i.c.e. or the federal government for trying to enforce the laws, being the cause of this rape. that is insanity. it is the sanctuary cities policies attract and allow in people who committees heinous crimes, just exactly what happened to kate steinle of san francisco, what happened in philadelphia, not only story like this. but going back in texas, we passed that law two years ago to make sure we would not have occasions like this. it is, it is a crime for law enforcement officials, for elected officials in the state of texas to promote or to support sanctuary city policies. and so, we will take swift action against any official in the state of texas that promotes or accepts sanctuary city policies because we have banned sanctuary cities in the state of texas. steve: governor, let's talk a little bit how you're trying to reform the bail system down in texas. i know after law enforcement
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agent was killed, his widow approached you. you have proposed the damon allen act in his honor. tell us about that. >> sure. damon allen was killed by a man who had twice been arrested for assaulting law enforcement officers. the second time the person who, the magistrate who gave him bail to let him back out on the street did not have all the information knowing about the crimes he had committed. this man was out on bail on $15,000 bail. and on thanksgiving day, he gunned down damon allen. damon allen was member of texas department of public safety, who pulled over the criminal for speeding. while he was writing the ticket, the criminal came out and gunned down damon allen. bottom line, what we want to do is several things. we want to make sure all magistrates will allow bail will have full information across the state of texas about any crimes that may have been committed by
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the person who is seeking bail. but secondly, with an emphasis on any crimes against law enforcement officers. we want to make sure that it is highest level of court judge which is state district judge in the state of texas make the bail decision as opposed to what happened in this case. a justice of the peace in texas, justice of peace are not required to have a law degree. bottom line we want to do more to protect the law enforcement officials themselves is so we can have a safer texas. ashley: you're growing the economy down in texas. jock growing surged ahead of the nation. annualized job growth through june is 3.6%. how are you doing that. >> the texas economy is on fire. i will add one more stat to it. we have 1000 people moving to the state of texas every single day. the reason is because texas is the home of economic opportunity. here is how we do it. the formula is simple and replicable. every state can do this. we have low taxes, try to cut
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taxes. we have right to work laws and reduce regulations. we have rule of law laws with regard to sanctuary cities we don't tolerate violation of law. i ask ceos why is it you're coming to the state of texas. they all tell me the same thing. texas has the best workforce in the united states. we promote economic opportunity. we promote free enterprise. that what attracts entrepreneurs to the state of texas. they know they can come here and grow here. ashley: no state tax. >> no income tax. steve: all right. governor greg abbott joins us from austan, texas, the capital city. thanks, governor. ashley: thanks, governor. >> thank you. brian: straight ahead, securing the border big time. wait until we tell you who is coming over the border now. a story you will not hear any place else. ashley: are you a little bit country or a little bit rock and roll? the answer could completely change your love life.
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brian: cue the band. speaking of country, here is cody johnson, with dear rodeo. ♪ beautiful skin doesn't have to cost a fortune. olay. bring you the fall hunting classic - with great deals. like savings of 35% on scentlok savanna crosshair jackets and pants. and save $20 on a 6-pack of big foot b2 full-body goose decoys.
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brian: wow. women who listen to songs like this, this, are 68% more likely to connect with someone. ashley: this. steve: roll it. ♪ start me up, start me up, i never stop, never stop, never stop ♪ steve: i remember when that came out. classic rock could be the key to finding love. a study looked at more than nine million profiles and found that a lot of people, more people, like classic rock, what is going on with that? we brought in dr. kevin layman to talk about something else. he is the author of the books, making children mine without losing yours, education a la carte. there are a couple of his books. he has written about a million of them. what do you make of the music study? >> i sort of think it is interesting that those men, country guys, women like that. ashley: they do. >> i think they see more down-to-earth real person, maybe
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authentic. ashley: strong. not afraid to get his hands dirty. brian: do you like that? ashley: just saying. ashley: you didn't dance to country music but you were damsing with the rock and roll. >> i'm an old rock and roller. i have five jukeboxes in my house. ashley: that is the point. men like rock an roll. >> we do like to rock and roll. steve: we called you in, there was a story, davidson college in south carolina -- ashley: really good school. >> steve: professors will allow students to grade themselves. you have to sign a contract say i'm going to do all the work but then the kid actually gets to give themselves a grade. >> steve, you tell that to a donkey, he will kick your brains out. it is amazing to me. this is another avenue, down through la-la land. the culture we bring up kids today in. not only is this trophy stuff, everybody gets a trophy, now you get to pick your trophy. that is crazy. move over jim carrey, this is
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dumber than dumber. brian: melissa gonzalez says, each student will determine what grade they plan to earn in the course and will sign a contract indicating the work that they will do in order to earn that grade. why is this important? it can help students focus on learning more than on grades, therefore make progress in their learning with less anxiety. what is wrong with that theory? >> well, brian, lots of things. notice only two people, i read the study -- only two people signed up. if more people don't sign up, it will be canceled. so, i raised five kids. we have six charter schools out in the west in arizona and colorado. what i know about education is this. kids like structure. they actually like to please us. kid the actually want to please their parents. students want to please their instructors. and they know when they haven't earned something. there is something wonderful about earning it.
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steve: what does it say to a society you do something like that in college, you go out and get a job, suddenly the job is a lot different than school? >> steve, it prepares them in fine fashion for a world that doesn't exist. ask any employer how difficult is it to get people to simply do what you asked them to do? young people today, want to start at the top. nobody seems to want to work their way through it. just part of our society deteriorating before our eyes. but i can tell you we build those schools, lehman academy of excellence, we put authority in the classroom teachers hands. brian: people embrace that regimen. kids want some structure. >> they do. even hermit needs a society to hermit from. brian: you know what i'm saying? >> good point. >> authoritarianism, we know that doesn't work, but neither does permissiveness. would you turn that music down, i'm trying to finish your science project!
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we snowplow the road for kids and wonder -- ashley: what is the best advice for parents? somewhere in the middle? >> be thor that's tiff parent. ashley: be, okay. >> let your yes be yes. your no be no. how much sense does that make. don't be afraid to pull the rug out. let the little buzzards stumble. you will not damage their psyche. we put helmets on them at birth. anyone successful in leave life even steve doocy. we know there is failure in your life. we don't have enough time. ashley: gave himself an f. >> failure is part of learning about life. brian: tell that to jillian. straight as. jillian: never failed anything. ashley: two people at college signed up for the class. give myself an a-plus. but i'm signing up. brian: back to education.
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ashley: take it away. jillian: serious news to get to right now, how about this? an officer's heart stops for five minutes after a shootout. the dramatic video was just released of that shootout that nearly killed a state trooper. take a look at this. daniel clary pulled over by pennsylvania troopers for speeding. asked to do a field sobriety test. he stumbles all over the road. when the troopers come to place cuffs on him. he bolts. troopers had to use a taser. that didn't work. watch what happens next. [gunfire] jillian: unthinkable. one of troopers throws himself over the guardrail. putting tourniquet. he was so badly injured his heart stopped for five minutes on way to the hospital. incredibly both troopers survived. not just central americans
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heading into our country. immigrants from india are flooding a tiny station outnumbering every group but mexicans. border agents captured six indians. this year 3400. they are eager for high value cargo like indianss paying up to $25,000 for the journey. our william la jeunesse will have more on the story coming up on "america's newsroom" at 9:30 eastern. on duty police officer looking for help in cell phone store like any of us is denied service by employee. the massachusetts officer, dan collins was left hanging at the shop near boston, that employee out of a job. the store is apologizing saying the employee refused to help several customers, not just the officer. the police department has accepted the apology. those are the headlines. send it back to you. steve: let's see. go out to the streets of new york city. janice dean, the weather machine.
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the big concert is about to start. >> cody is here on stage. getting ready to perform. are you guys having a good time? [cheering] i just heard cody is from texas. everybody says people are nice in texas. is that true? >> yes. >> everybody in the crowd here. what are you doing here today? >> supporting my friends. >> your friends are in the band. >> you're in the band? >> not really. happened to be here. saw they were being here. >> i always wanted to say i'm withed band. cody, can i say i'm in the band? he says yes. look at map. real exciting. it is beautiful day for a summer concert series here in new york city. no rain. we could see rain in the forecast this weekend. looking at a little bit of rain across the southwest. still dry for california and northwest. are you guys ready for a wonderful concert?! [cheering] we'll go back inside. cody and his band -- i'm with the band. i need a t-shirt. ashley: janice, you're too cute.
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brian: 18 minutes to the top of the hour. robert mueller and james comey claim they are committed to rule of law but our next guest says they are nothing more than swamp creatures. steve hilton here with a preview of his exclusive expose' next. steve: first, here is cody johnson once again with nothing on you. ♪ you've always impressed when you walk through the door ♪ clud, which most pills don't. and all from a gentle mist you can barely feel. flonase sensimist.
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>> we are going to washington to drain the swamp. >> comey and mueller are the target of his swamp of watch this weekend. here with a preview, steve hilton the host of "the next revolution," that is to say, airs sunday nights at 9:00 p.m. you're taking aim at comey and mueller. what have they done? >> exactly, steve. "the next revolution," we have big revelations sunday night as you said just then. the thing is, when you look at comey and mueller, right, you listen to the d.c. establishment you hear all the time they're straight shooters, such decent people. you know, you would think they're practically saints. we took a look at them, look at their record. not just in government but outside government, when they used famous revolving door between public service and the right sector, and it turns out they're not saints. they're swamp creatures. mueller and comey are swamp creatures just like all the rest of them, personally cashing in
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on their government service to make money. but worse than that, to help their clients get insider favors -- steve: like who? >> to help their businesses. one of the big ones we'll be exposing is really bad when you think about the role that james comey played, before he was at the fbi, he was for many years at the justice department, rising to deputy attorney general. he really pushed the whole idea of the surveillance state, using technology to spy on people. he then leaves government and joins one of the biggest private sector companies enacting the surveillance state in the world. steve: that is how it works. >> it is unbelievable when you think about the way these two, mueller and comey in particular are treated better than everyone else. they are exactly the same. they're as corrupt as everyone else. we will expose the details on our show this sunday. ainsley: steve, how much money are they making? >> unbelievable. look at the rise in wealth. >> as he left, the justice
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department he was on the public sector salary, his wealth was around 200,000, something like that. just in a couple of years he is worth multiple millions of dollars. just cashing in on his public service with that big contractor. mueller as well, going into law firms, helping clients that have direct connections with the business that he used to look after in the public sector. it is there just the same as all the others. brian: steve, i guess our country threating you down a little bit as you came to our people, right? >> we're doing our best to expose it, brian and we're going to drain the swamp. we'll do it together. steve: we'll watch sunday night 9:00 p.m. on the channel. ainsley: love your show, steve, thank you. brian: there he is looking at us in a different direction. thanks, steve hilton. he is one of country music's rising stars, is making his national television debut today. cody johnson performs life on our plaza. some say he is doing it there. steve: first bill hemmer performs in ten minutes. >> the immigration fight in court, who wins this round?
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we'll tell you about that. is nancy pelosi a problem for democrats in the midterms? what some democrats are saying about that the president a moment ago sounding off on the nfl yet again. the head of nays is a is here to tell us how space force will change the game. america's a team is lining up. america's a team is lining up. nine to morning. see you then. that's a lot less bulky. always discreet. (burke) so we know how to cover almost anything.en almost everything even "vengeful vermin."
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