tv The Ingraham Angle FOX News May 24, 2019 11:00pm-12:00am PDT
11:00 pm
the united states of america.is we can never thank you enough. god bless and good night. night >> laura: a special edition of "the ingraham angle", american crossroads. tonight's special is going to address issues in our politics and culture that are dividing america right in two. and what we can do to remedy this. we begin tonight with president trump's decision to give attorney general bill barr the two declassified documents related to the 2016 campaign surveillance. first and foremost americans need to understand that their government has their best interest at heart always. and when it became clear that someone in the upper echelon of the doj and fbi, and cia and eother intel organizations may
11:01 pm
have had their thumb on the political scale, a lot of americans were rightly outraged. that is why it is so stunning to see democratic politicians sworn to uphold the constitution, fight so hard to conceal present threats to it. take adam schiff, he called trump's decision to give the public more information un-american. if we can't even agree upon basic set of standards underer which these powerful organizations can act, especially in relation to the american people, then we are indeed atel a crossroads. now trump addressed this issue from the outside of the white adhouse this afternoon. let's watch. >> i declassified everything. everything they want i put it under the auspices of the attorney general. he will be in charge of it. i don't want him to be for me anybody else i just want him to gebe fair.
11:02 pm
we are being transparent. we are being ultimately transparent and that's what it's about. >> transparency used to be a good word. it's sunshine, but apparently not one president trump is advocating for it. joining me now with reaction, attorney and member of the trump 2020 advisory council. member of the conservative union and secretary of state under president obama. great to see you on a friday night. the left is accusing trump of some grand cover-up. why would he urge the attorney general to declassify all this information if there were all these nuggets and bits and pieces that were going towe incriminate him or anyone in his campaign. >> you're right to ask that question. transparency is good.
11:03 pm
we are concerned that there needs to be for example an un- reduction of the mueller report. if we want transparency, let's get it all out there. to have it in one direction to unmask american spies, those helping the united states international security. >> you're seeing competing atthings. we can unredact the very few not very much of the that is not available especially to members of congress who can go read it and read it almost in its entirety. some of that is probably very sensitive sourcing information and methodology, but this is kind of wild. i find this to be weird because i remember the democrats, they were like, "you got to get the man.he the man's going to keep the info for us. the fbi is going to hurt the regular people." and now the shoe is on the other foot, now they're big defenders of the spying agencies regardless of how much power they have. >> i think you started off talking about how we tried to heal the rift. you heal the rift by exposing
11:04 pm
what happened under the obama- biden, at the end of their term, what was done against their political opponents why did they let loose the fbi and other agencies to go over after their political opponents. if they have good answers, then let's move beyond this. i think that that is the key in all of this. somehow we skipped over the obama wrongdoing and moved right to the faux trump crimes, and we have been stuck on this russia collusion thing.on it's time to get to the real umstory. >> john kerry is one of the people mentioned in some of the stories about the circle. it was a very tight circle. i want you to chime in here. we learn more about how they met and how they discussed the origins of this probe and their theerns about russia andey election. originally it was brennan, clapper, comey, and i am missing one. so it's very tight and thin it included vice president biden,
11:05 pm
kerry, and ash carter and i guess the president of the united states was eventually brought into the loop. this is fascinating. we're learning how brennan would brief the president and keepin e info out of the daily intel briefing. that came out in the new york times today. i think we'll learn more about thatut very interesting double cone of silence. >> absolutely. some of the other things we'rere getting reminded about right nop is the fact that british intelligence to the obama ministration in 2015 about alleged hacking by the russians by the dnc, but they didn't do anything about it until very late in the game and until it was clear that they had lost that election. then everything fell into place veryat quickly. so what nancy pelosi and her colleagues are doing today is gas lighting the american people by calling the exposure of a cover-up and of a plot a
11:06 pm
cover-up itself. the language has no meaning with these people. this is kind of a doublespeak going on right now. i think the president is exactly right to delegate this authority to somebody with a long history of knowing how to confidential. >> they are trashing him. bill barr is now what halliburton was h in the bush years. you have to have the they have to have the evildoer. >> he is a punching bag for them. it's becoming a logical maneuver. that, well, we should unmask we should unmask and we should reveal all the sensitive intelligence that others thought should be redacted in the mueller report, but then we should not ask any questions about how we got there. most americans can see that the process was. the results are nothing.
11:07 pm
>> we have to talk about the media role in this. i think that is part of why people can't even agree on basic terminology. right now they are freaking out. the american media is freaking out over more transparency. i've never seen anything like it. >> donald is obviously melting down. there is no doubt he's unhinged as he was during the mueller investigation. >> he has proven himself in my humble opinion sort of the train seal of the administration. >> the idea of giving bill barr the classify all the within the intelligence community is really unprecedented. >> unprecedented. the attorney general. how was this unprecedented. >> with the directive that was put out last night, this is following a very clear legal path and the great thing about bill barr is he's been there before and the only reason he hasn't even made the decision
11:08 pm
yet the only reason he's being vilified is because he is good and they know he's good. and he's going to make sound decisions and they know that when they call him up in front of the senate and the house to ask him questions, he just played games with them. he multitasking plays with paperclips while he answers questions. he's ready for this. >> there is no match for bill barr. >> they're not good enough to get him to rise. >> even mueller said himself that bill barr and the way that he describes the report is inaccurate. >> on the call that was transcribed in the notes itt sad he didn't say he got it wronghen the conclusion he thought some of the nuance and tonality didn't capture the moment. he didn't say he got it wrong on this conclusion because bill bar asked him that in the call. >> where is mueller?
11:09 pm
mueller said he wants to go improvement. >> i have to ask about this impeachment. on-again off-again impeachment. the democrats cannot make a decision about what they want to do with impeachment. anlet's watch. >> we are seeing more members that recognize that the administration is acting in a lawless fashion essentially having obstructed justice is now obstructing congress. >> it'sob the obstruction of justice, these could be impeachable offenses. >> could, would, might be, might get there. the president wants to be impeached. >> i think the impeachment question is one where we are watching it unfold in front of us. >> what are they waiting for? they have the mueller report. >> i think clearly democrats want to have him up and testify. they want to have the
11:10 pm
transparency is key and if it shows something that should be impeachable than that's what democrats will do. >> i'm not going to put words in her mouth, but pelosi is definitely. >> harvey, real quick impeach or not impeached. that is the question are the democrats going to go anywhere near impeachment despite the fact all the talk about.th >> a lot of mockery has been made over this issue, but she is quite smart and she doesn't want to do it she's been pushed to do it however by her unruly left-wing caucus and ultimately it would probably be over. it's going to be political disaster for the democrats. the support of the president. >> panel, thank you so much. up next on this special american crossroads the city of seattle is dying in a den of homelessness, drug addiction and crime that's only getting that's only getting worse.ng democratic candidate andrew yang says he has the answer.
11:11 pm
my expera has been excellent. they really appreciate the military family and it really shows. with all that usaa offers why go with anybody else? we know their rates are good, we know that they're always going to take care of us. it was an instant savings and i should have changed a long time ago. it was funny because when we would call another insurance company, hey would say "oh we can't beat usaa" we're the webber family. we're the tenney's we're the hayles, and we're usaa members for life. ♪ get your usaa auto insurance quote today.
11:13 pm
11:14 pm
enter xfinity mobile. america's best lte with the most wifi hotspots. combined for the first time. when you're near an xfinity hotspot, you're connected to wifi, saving on data. when you're not, you pay for data one gig at a time. use a little, pay a little. use a lot, just switch to unlimited. get $250 back when you buy a new samsung galaxy. call, visit or click today. >> laura: as we've highlighted on the show many times once thriving american cities are now declining at a troubling pace. seattle is just the latest example of this within homelessness and crime running rampant. so why are those in charge
11:15 pm
actually doing less to control it? fox news correspondent dan springer has the disturbing details for us from seattle. >> in an effort to make seattle more just for certain minorities and poor people, leaders have stopped enforcing several laws and frankly routine policies. it's against the law to camp in public, but you would never know it because thousands of people are living in tents. drug possession is still a crime technically, but the city prosecutors won't charge people with a gram or less of the cops move on making arrest for using drugs in the open. after a library audit found people of color and the poor were getting locked out of their accounts more frequently than whites for notng paying late fines, the city decided to eliminate the fine but sincece that will drop revenue voters are being asked to pass a $213 million library levy. officials say the fines are not about personal responsibility. >> the fines don't teach
11:16 pm
responsibility they just distinguish people with money from those without. >> seattle public schools on racial disparity in kids getting suspended so this year it did away with suspensions at elementary schools and that could be extended to older students next year. after learning that the poor and homeless were being disproportionately impacted by bus fare enforcement, king county metro just changed the policy. getting caught dodging a fare and then not paying your fine is tino longer a misdemeanor. officials say they rarely collect and critic say it puts taxpayers on the hook for bad behavior and divides people along racial lines. >> it seems to me the more checkboxes you have in terms of which category you fit into, that makes you more important and that's not equity for anybody. >> they will decide if they like the city's direction or want to return to more accountability system. almost every city council seat is up for grabs in november.
11:17 pm
>> totally shocking. thank you so much for doing that report for us today. now at seattle like a lot of west coast cities is overwhelmingly liberal from the people themselves to the leadership. even the new york times taking note writing an op-ed this week titled america's cities are unlivable. claimant wealthy liberals. i'm not sure the solution of this particular columnist is really the answer. but what are the solutions. given their track record why should anybody trust the democratic party on this. democratic hopeful is with us. andrew yang thinks he has the answer and joins me now. andrew, first of all thank you so much for being on with us tonight. we really a appreciate it. seattle is one of the most beautiful cities in the country. it just is, san francisco, seattle, san diego, spectacular
11:18 pm
places. what can be done that is not being done now in this beautiful city given theno leadership thas in place and given the enormity of the problems? >> the cost-of-living in seattle in san francisco both of them have skyrocketed over the last number of months. my plan would put $1,000 a month into the hand of every american adult and that would create incentive for cities to be able to invest in people who are struggling with substance abuse or homelessness and hopefully get the economic resources to provide them a path forward and in some cases even access to shelter and housing. >> you think $1,000 a month is going to make much of a difference here? because it seems like we are way beyond that. i mean gavin newsom when he was mayor of san francisco or on the city council, he actually came in the day i started my radio show back in 2001, in april hera came in and he said giving cash to the homeless was a disaster.,
11:19 pm
he said we did cards, we gave them cards for extra food i think and shelter may be, but they found that cash payments eldidn't work at all. in fact they just incentivizeded people to be more or less industrious i would say and just on the money. according to cato, it was since the war on poverty was declared in 1964, we have spent about $23 trillion. it didn't seem to help us, at least in the city. >> the question is where did that money go? my plan would put economic resources directly into our hands. it would create a given an economic path forward for many people who right now are struggling and don't have access to, let's say treatment for substance abuse problems, or mental health issues because right now we have to have face facts where these problems are going to many of our cities and
11:20 pm
our current programs are not well designed to handle this particular program because in large part if there's someone who's on the street there is not right now economic incentive to help that person get back on their feet. >> the problem is if you give $1,000 to a guy on the street, not everybody, some people are down on their luck, but there's a significant percentage of people, and we know just two blocks from where we are now gethere's a homeless shelter wih a lot of people in a lot of problems. drug problems, mental health issues, so giving $1,000 to a person who alreadyal has a mentl health problem is probably not going to do the job. i mean that money is probably going to be quickly spent on things that are going to get that individual into more problems that is the concern of just giving cash to people because they're obviously not making good decisions, many of them to get into the position they're in already. i want t to read you a statement that you may just a few weeks ago to newsweek. you said, "when i talk to trump voters around the country they said that they are disappointed
11:21 pm
in what they've gotten from the administration. they feel like a lot of it was bluster and hot air." recent goldman sachs wage has picked up sharply. bottom 50 percent of wage earners are making more. consumer confidence is up, metrics up 71 percent since the beginning of polling on the economy. so, at this idea that nothing is working with trump, i just think that's an overstatement at best. >> i've been around the country and a lot of people don't feel like they are connected to a lot of the statistics coming out. if you remember donald trump the candidate in 2015, he said that a lot of these headline unemployment numbers were misleading and they don't report what's happening on the ground right now that he's in the white house he singing a different tune.'t the experience i'm having when i talk to voters around the country is that 70 percent of them are living paycheck to paycheck.
11:22 pm
70 percent are in trouble with an unexpected bill. >> a lot of people are vulnerable and there is a lot of insecurity. this has been going on for like 20 years, the flatlining income for 18 years preceding trump. finally it's going up. expected leadership because i think you're someone i don't may be agree with you, but you're someone that seems like you want to solve things.'t you want to solve problems and i respect that. forbes says the top five cities in the united states with the largest home in homeless populations are the following non- surprising new york, la, seattle, san diego, san jose. four of five of these cities the cities are run by democrats. how is liberal governance working out for these cities. my hometown of hartford is having real problems they've had problems for a long time. always liberal leadership in very detroit, chicago has big challenges. it's not like these are raging
11:23 pm
conservative districts in the country, andrew.w. >> that's one reason we need to build an economy that works for everybody by putting economic resources into the people's hands. we're in the middle of this winner take all economy. you can see it in the urban areas where there are rich and poor living next each other in different circumstances. unfortunately the dynamics of our economy will become extremely polarized as technology starts transforming industries like retail, transportation, food service, and on and on. we need to wake up to the fact that we're in the midst of the greatest economic transformation in our country's history and move in the direction of putting economic resources directly into our hands. >> did anybody give you a hand out to start working at manhattan prep, you started that, right? is that your baby? >> that was my baby. we've all had a hand. >> you did really well. you are a really successful entrepreneur. and you worked really hard. everybody gets help, but didri
11:24 pm
anybody hand you $1,000? >> a lot of people including entrepreneurs. >> laura: you're a capitalist. you're a sucessful capitalist. nothing wrong with that. you become a huge success because of the market and because of your hard work and because of your work ethic. all of that together your family i imagine not everybody has a family that supports them, but that's combined to really work evfor you. >> that's the great thing about, putting the economic resources into our hands and giving more people an opportunity to start businesses. they would create new jobs in the economy and reward hard work. right now many americans might have a great idea, but they're stuck with their heads down and not able to build around them and build a new business. >> i maintain the best time in my lifetime to be ann american f you want to work and you want a job, thehe sky is the limit rigt now i think. andrew, we appreciate you joining us tonight. very interesting conversations.
11:25 pm
11:29 pm
>> live from america's news headquarters president trump on his way to japan for over four a federal judge in san francisc is blocking the president of boarding parts of his border wall using funds from an emergency declaration. during a stop to refuel air force one in alaska the president also met with groups ahead of memorial day. trade talks expected between the in 19 billion-dollar disaster bill is temporarily blocked in the house. texas republican objected to
11:30 pm
speeding the bill through a nearly empty house chamber. he also complained 18 claimed for dealing with the refugee crisis at the border. the bill contained funding for puerto rico to help with the hurricane recovery. now back to "the ingraham angle." >> it's friday and that means it's time for friday follies. deceased singers return and messy political protest. joining us with all of the very troubling folly details fox nes contributor and best-selling author of "the amulet of power." tell us about a truly disturbing themepark thatet opened this we? >> in pigeon forge, tennessee, the national enquirer live themepark has opened. now you talk about america at the crossroads this is a museum dedicated to all that is wrong with the country. it purports to celebrate the
11:31 pm
stories behind the stories, but it's really like a tour of the seven rings of tabloid. it's ripley's believe it or not for the really twisted. you can take a selfie like kim kardashian, you can see michael jackson in a hyperbaric chamber will or the king of pop dangling blanket out the window of the berlin hotel. nothing says family entertainment like the re-creation of the oj murder scene. yes, i wish i was making that up right most controversially is a 3d journey to princess diana's final car ride. laura, this is the commoditization of tragedy. why are we celebrating or using murder scenes as entertainment? come on, kids, let's see how the princessen died. >> do we think this is going to be popular? >> i don't think it's going to
11:32 pm
popular, but inquiring minds might want to know, but i don't. >> okay, i have a spin on this. maybe we could do a different spin. if you could kind of re-create the interesting news moments like when president trump had all his aides lined up yesterday. tell them that. over this opposing hate crime that's going to be okay because it wasn't really a hate crime. it was him and his two friends pretending. i'm not sure what you are learning from this? >> i'm learning nothing from it because i won't go. i find it gross.in speaking of gross displays the whitney houston estate announcen it is planning to send the dead singer on tour via hologram. now other diseased acts like roy orbison and tupac are on tour thanks to the technology. now whitney's cousin, dionne
11:33 pm
warwick, reacted to the idea of a houston hologram tour yesterday.d >> i have no idea as to what that is. it's surprising to me too. i don't know what that is i think it's stupid whatever it is. >> i don't like this idea at all. i saw sinatra 30is times in concert, i wouldn't pay a dollar. >> it's not a friday folly unless freeman mentions sinatra. or new orleans or breeze, new orleans, or sinatra. >> at least breeze i can see live. >> i find it depressing. you know why it was depressing? because the really big acts. the real talent that's going to last for the ages, they there are not as many. a few years ago there were people whose music you're still listening to whether it's the beatles, the who, led zeppelin,
11:34 pm
or frank sinatra or dionne lewarwick or gladys knight, hearing their music. >> this performance is the interaction. the audience and that live moment the diversity of performance. this is really like watching a recorded concert because it. >> did dionne warwick say something about beyoncé? >> she said she doesn't quite think that beyoncé is at the iconic status yet that it takes decades to. >> she said she likes dear beyoncé and she's been watching her journey, but don't claim the diva icon status until you've walked in my shoes where that was kind of fun part. >> my final take on this they've got nothing, nothing, nothing. beenrbing trend we've seeing over the last few weeks that really should be resisted. aggressive political protest that crossed the line. arnold schwarzenegger was in
11:35 pm
south africa when somebody dropkickedsw the actor. of course, he's in such great shape at 71 he barely moved. then in the uk, several conservative politicians have been subjected to milkshking. this is where protesters target by dousing them with milkshakes. here is nigel faraj being milkshake in newcastle where he was campaigning for his party. >> now we're using that as a verb now. >>the other day, he had to shelter in his campaign because they had a bunch of people waiting with the milkshakes. >> i wouldn't shelter i would just bring a straw. let's not waste a perfectly good milkshake. >>the fact that they can violate schwarzenegger did not press charges. he should have. >> it's an assault. and much to say what we always say in these circumstances, if the milkshake were on the other lapel, people would be reacting
11:36 pm
differently. they wouldn't think it was cute, they wouldn't want to put a cherry on top they wouldn't ask if it was malted. but, bring a straw and say, "is that all you've got?" >> charge the guy. i brought a milkshake out. i was wondering what i should do with it. >> this is about the best thing i wear. this would be redundant or wouldn't do that, but monday a laura and raymond extravaganza on memorial day. >> this is almost going to be too much. you're going to watch because you're going to see what we do on fox nation and it is a bit wild. >> we go a slightly different direction. >> please drink that, coming up, transgender athlete stripped of titles after breaking records in women's powerliftingat
11:37 pm
11:40 pm
11:41 pm
transgender power lifter mary gregory who was born a man,u bt competed in women's events. gregory broke multiple records last month at the 100 percent raw weightlifting federation competition. and that sent shockwaves through the athletic world. now finding out the federation president stripped gregory of all titles insisting that the bylaws of his competition were based purely on biology at birth. so why has that reasonablele explanation become so controversial? he is here exclusively to explain, what is the reaction been so far? >> well, at the beginning it was terrible. i got a lot of hate mail for the first couple of days. the competition was on a saturday and on sunday when this became public knowledge on instagram, i started to get a lot of hate mail. by the time i realized what was going on and was able to put a
11:42 pm
statement together it wass about a day or two after that and while i put a statement together saying we're going to investigate and look into it, the hate mail was coming in by the dozens. it was terrible. once i made my statement it was about three or four days later i finally made a statement and since then, things have gotten much better i'm getting e-mails hundreds of e-mails from across the world i just had a woman rltoday, he from south africa thinking me. >> well, paul, this is gottenwo out of hand. we have a situation in connecticut my high school where i played sports in my high school i played a couple sports, athree sports, but track and field which i did not run, to biologically born males defeateo the top runners in the state and one in this particular competition. sure they're really nice people i'm sure they want to win and i
11:43 pm
get it, but you have the parents of these girls who have worked since they were little girls to be the best girl competitors, and they lost. and they lost pretty big to these two individuals who identify now as transgender females, but they were born men. and that sent shockwaves through connecticut and now this. people have to understand and maybe you can comment on this, just the biological differences regardless of hormone treatment and all of that. females are on average 9 percent shorter than men. male bones are bigger in size and density. females have shorter arms, legs, relative to the body size and females are around 35 muscle by weight while males are 40 percent muscle by weight. female ligaments are thinner and softer. paul, does all of this pure biology affect the results in your sport? >> absolutely. 100 percent.
11:44 pm
policy in we have a place where biological males compete against males and females compete against females by the transgender situation is relatively new in all sports. we have seen it happen in a different organization about two or three months ago. we have been preparing for it we've been trying to put together a policy it just takes a lot of time to get the facts and rules straight for the new policy to be put in place. we saw this coming and we tried to be proactive. >> you know, paul, sorry to interrupt, the equality act which passed, but it's not law yet, that would i think affect your sport. it would require you to allow transgender females to compete against biological females. what would that do to your records?s? what would that do to the sport of powerlifting? >> that would destroy the sport of powerlifting for the females.
11:45 pm
it is a terrible decision. i can't even believe we're even talking about this. it doesn't make any sense at all. women have worked so hard over the years for equal rights into get their opportunity to be on the sports field and now also women have good programs going to they have good records going, good sports organizations lots >> laura: it's going to append the entire female sports framework i don't care what anybody says. paul, you've got a lot of guts. you still have your bylaws. i think you're going to get a lot more supporters. use of respect all people, but these are the rules of your on federation. we appreciate your perspective tonight. with all the attention being paid to protecting transgender individuals are we losing sight of the problems dogging young men and boys? my next guest is the future of america herself is at risk and boys are facing a crisis
11:46 pm
economic health and mental health. joining me now is warren farrell co-author of the book "the boy crisis." warren, what is the cause of the series of problems the boys are facing? >> all 56 countries where there facing this, their common denominator is these countries are developed. survival is not such a big problem, so there's plenty of permission for divorce and plenty of permission for women and boys to be raised without dads and it's in the areas where there is a lack of father involvement that the problems exist. the boy crisis resides where fathers do not reside so it's one part of it and the other is where we have single moms who are not helping single moms know what dads typically bring to the parenting process so that the single moms can do things like roughhouse with the kids or teach the kids. >> i want to get into what we're looking at here so people get
11:47 pm
it. we're talking around the issue. just on the issue of suicide when i saw these numbers i have two sons, it just it shocks me. ages 15-19 years of age, boys have three times the suicide rate ofsh girls. they have four and a half times the suicide rate of girls between the ages of 24, 20-24. three times the rate and four and a half times the rate. for those two age groups. that is one of the issues we have.f we have a dropout rate higher. we have opioid use, i think we have a sound bite, he spoke about this, let's watch. >> the opioid crisis is millions of people, they tend to be young males, it is a very significant problem and it is part of a larger picture. >> laura: opioid crisis.t predominantly men, boys.
11:48 pm
>> exactly. the suicide rate, your depression rate, we used to always associate depression with females, but when we look at how the depression leads to suicide and the other characteristics of them expressed depression into video games their withdrawal into and there are so many dimensions of male depression that lead to suicide that we have been completely overlooking. >>i'm not usually one for promoting new commissions or studies but in this case i think it's long overdue.y doctoron farrell, thank you so much. a veteran's group is putting the brakes on an annual memorial day tradition because they're tired of being harassed during the dc event. we investigate next. not even our competitor's best battery can match the power of energizer.
11:49 pm
11:51 pm
most of us don't know how much data we use... ♪ ...but we all know we're paying too much for it. enter xfinity mobile. america's best lte with the most wifi hotspots. combined for the first time. when you're near an xfinity hotspot, you're connected to wifi, saving on data. when you're not, you pay for data one gig at a time. use a little, pay a little. use a lot, just switch to unlimited. get $250 back when you buy a new samsung galaxy. call, visit or click today.
11:52 pm
11:53 pm
ride in the nation's capital after 31 years. tens of thousands of motorcycles roar through the streets as a reminder of the nearly 100,000nd prisoners of war and those missing in action. organizers say they are tired of being harassed. standing by in washington with the story is david. >> organizers with rolling thunder say that harassment stands from logistical issues this is a memorial day staple thatss began earlier this evenig with the blessing of the bikes. rolling thunder officials tell us a larger reason this is the last year they are having problems with pentagon officials when it comes to parking and access issues great officials say there are logistical and financial issues they don't want to deal with anymore for example, vendors pay top dollar are being denied access to staging areas under the gun control. we reached out and heard from the pentagon about this issue and we are told people are not denied access. during a review after last
11:54 pm
year's event, we were unable to identify any instances when groups we're denied access to the pentagon reservation.in there was always the potential to experience a delay or detour transiting the pentagon reservation especially during large event such as rolling thunder either do exist with the general traffic flow or for other reasons. this statement from sergeant aarti moeller who runs ther events is in part we are not going away, we have a lot to still do. our military and our veterans need our support and we are moving on. we want a full accounting of our prisoners of war and missing and action from all past wars that is our goal. organizers say rolling thunder will continue, but not in a central location like washington, dc in the future there will be smaller rights and individual in individual states, the last right takes place on sunday. >> final thoughts are next. . you wouldn't accept an incomplete job from any one else. why accept it from your allergy pills? flonase relieves your worst symptoms
11:55 pm
including nasal congestion, which most pills don't. flonase helps block 6 key inflammatory substances. most pills only block one. flonase. .. has been excellent. they really appreciate the military family and it really shows. with all that usaa offers why go with anybody else? we know their rates are good, we know that they're always going to take care of us. it was an instant savings and i should have changed a long time ago. it was funny because when we would call another insurance company, hey would say "oh we can't beat usaa" we're the webber family. we're the tenney's we're the hayles, and we're usaa members for life. ♪ get your usaa auto insurance quote today.
11:59 pm
>> that is all the >> that is all-time we have tonight. i hope you think about taking a moment this weekend to think about what memorial day is, we like to be with our families and friends celebrating but it is really commemorating the soldiers, sailors, airmen and marines and their families who sacrifice every day and those who paid the ultimate price. we can never forget them. we always must on other and talk to your children. when you go by cemetery, you will see, there will be members of the armed forces buried, take your kids in there, say a prayer, think about how blessed we are to live in this country were great men and women make that sacrifice willingly every day of every year. god bless you all, fly your flags, spend time with your
12:00 am
family, have a meaningful memorial day weekend and check out my podcast on podcastone.com. don't miss lori and raymond monday. shannon bream and the fox news at 19 take it from here. shannon: welcome to fox news at night. we begin with a fox news at alert. the president vows to expose everything and get to the bottom of the origins of the russia investigation which he is calling an attempted coup. james comey says investigate whatever you like but is warning the danger of using the word treason, more us troops heading to the middle east to bolster security for existing american forces in the region and a partisan slip about the
118 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on