tv The Ingraham Angle FOX News June 14, 2019 7:00pm-8:00pm PDT
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244 years ago today in 1775. to top it all off, it's officially flag day, so be sure to fly old glory i am proud. "the ingraham angle" is up next. >> laura: this is "the ingraha angle" from washington tonight. the migrants in san antonio, texas. we told you about it earlier this week. an investigative journalist who spoke to them directly found ou some very interesting information and we have the tape . also he went viral for the impassioned speech about the diseases ravaging the homeless population in california and threatening to spread further, tonight dr. dre delivers a new warning about the inadequacies of our health screenings at the border and what can be done about it.
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an actor being praised for his hands off approach to women. and what is your sleeping habit say about you? a jampacked friday follies is ahead. the debate over the white house relationship with the press is front and center in the wake of sarah sanders announced departure. media talking heads are going out of their way to take personal shots on her way out the door. sarah sanders lied again and again and again. it's not my opinion, those are the facts. >> the hold for does it matter that she's leaving? again not really part. >> she has changed fundamentall the press briefing in a negativ way. >> per tenure has been blocked with, lies, and videotape. >> now, what you just heard there reveals much more about
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the pettiness of those people then anything about sarah sanders. the give-and-take between the house and this ministration has been one of the defining features of this presidency wit all of the very serious people telling us that this combative relationship is a stain, as stain on our democracy. >> the president is engaged in war on the prosperity give thei starting a little warrior with the press that they think is entirely to donald trump's advantage. >> it's danger is not just for international security but for journalists in the rest of the world. >> it is so dangerous because he's calling on the enemies it is dangerous to democracy. it is dangerous to democracy to denigrate journalist. >> this is a dark time to be journalist. president trump is in fact the most accessible president i think in modern american history .
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even the new york times yesterday admitted that mister trump prefers to speak for himself and takes questions fro reporters on a far more regular basis than most of his recent predecessors. we remember obama hardly did an press conferences. by the way the presidents may b some say his own best spokesperson, but should the office of the press secretary lay vacant? what does he actually need to. who better to ask than two men who have held that difficult post. the first press secretary for president trump and now the senior advisor spokesman for america first action. all right, let's start with you press briefings are kind of up in the air for the time being and my question is this. he needs more of a political operator in the position of press secretary then perhaps previous presidents, especially ahead of the 2020 election.
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>> i do think and obviously i'm a little traditional, that it can be very advantageous for th president, but it depends on who the person is and how tolerant the president is. i think if he has what i would call a happy warrior, somebody who loves of the president, believes in the president, but does it with a humorous touch, not a turbulent touch, he can turn that room to his advantage the press is so overwhelming it becomes an opportunity for a press secretary rate it lets th press if they do the job right. >> you stood their day after da dealing with it, and people say president trump is a tough boss you can't police him, we've all heard that. it's been said about other people too, but you stood there and you dealt with this press day in and day out. does he need a press secretary or as a kind of a superfluous position at this point?
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>> let me with make sure i wish him a happy birthday today. i do think he needs one and i'l tell you i why. the job and he knows it better than anybody he did it with class and just at the level of integrity that became a mentor to me, but the job that people see on television about 5 percent of what happens for there is a facilitation of access and interviews to other government officials to information coming in and out o the white house whether it's personnel, events, or policies so the press office is very bus all day long facilitating these other things, logistical movements of the press pool, th press arrangements for events. also speaking on a host of othe issues regarding the white hous that aren't always exactly the president himself so of course there needs to be press secretary in the press office. i would differ with ari a littl bit because the president has been so much more accessible an engages so much more i think th
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briefings serve the utilities. they should occur, but maybe not on a daily basis. to engage in the press, as you saw was sara, she's out there o the driveway all the time on camera talking to the press. they wanted in a briefing room where they can talk about them. they don't like it is much because it doesn't work as well further cable contract theory youtube views and things like that part. >> think that's an excellent point. they want to be the lead in the show for their network or their audience and i guess that's human nature. i want to get your thoughts on what cnn's jim acosta had to sa about sarah sanders. let's watch. >> i think she acted as another employee of the trump organization. we shouldn't be in the business of having referred to journalists or any segment of the population as the enemy of the people. i think she fell short of her duty to the american people and
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it's going to be part of her legacy. i think it's a cautionary tale for people who to go to work fo this president part. >> one of the most sickeningly pious individuals in the press corps right now. is that the press secretary serving at the pleasure of the president president question mike she's not serving cnn or fox or anyone else she is serving the president's agenda, and obviously wants to get it right she doesn't want to give the issues wrong, but come on. >> jim acosta just wrote a book i won't buy, but somebody said that he wrote in there at this day and age it's too important to be neutral. you have to be against presiden trump, that's a paraphrase of that tells you where jim acosta is. the press secretary's job is to first and foremost represent th president you are there spokesperson per your job is to take the podium and speak on behalf of the president to represent the issues the way th
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president would represent issues . it has nothing to do with your own demeanor, style, or viewpoints on issues. your job is to do it the way th president wants. ideally you do it accurately an all of that makes it a very difficult job. but make no mistake, your first boss is the president paired. >> even george stop enough us two days of access to the press? yes or no. >> i think whenever present trunk and get in front of peopl and show whether to journalist or a group that it is a good thing. >> laura: you don't have them
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in the oval office dating over the president united states. at don't like that at all. >> they shouldn't have let him back in. >> he is a little too comfortable in the oval office. >> i will say this. i think the president, there ar a lot of additional outlets tha have been very fair that deserv an opportunity or would do a better job of presenting the policies of the president in this administration. >> while trump isn't shy about speaking with the media, do moments like this indicate whil having an press secretary is so necessary? i never suggested firing mueller . >> that is not what he says break again i don't care said. >> why would he lie under oath? >> because he wanted to make himself look like a good lawyer or he believed it because i would constantly tell anybody that would listen including you
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including the media, that rober mueller was conflicted. >> laura: joined me now is a lot professor at chapman university in caillou's kailua's , former u.s. attorney. does trump need that buffer between him and the media given some of the ill legal issues that would still be on the tabl with this obsession with impeachment? >> i think it would be helpful for him to have a bit of a screen. i wouldn't have put him out in front of he is not earned that right it is laughable. >> when you look at the president's comments today on fox and friends, he tried to clarify and we will play what h meant in that exchange that got
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so much coverage about foreign interference. >> i don't think anyone would present me with anything better because they know how much i love this country. nobody's going to stop present me with anything back. if i was i would look at it if you don't look at it you're not going to know if it's bad but o course you give it to the fbi reported to the attorney genera or something like that. >> it doesn't matter they want to go with what he said in the sit down and go right to impeachment. >> frankly, i'm not sure the evidence at this point matters. it's almost like let's go back to the bible. let's go back to the molar report and see who was said what's. at the end of the day, you had very very experienced attorney general they made the decision
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and i think it was the right decision based on the evidence paired. >> the testimony of don mcgann is getting a lot of play. the idea of allowing him to go trust before the special counse in the first place, i didn't understand that at all. they decided to waive at least some part of the executive privilege, did they not. how is this going to all play out. >> i think the indication that they let them go and the first place demonstrates their view that there is nothing here. i think that's right the story that has now come out and the dispute between what trump said about that conversation and wha don mcgann said about it this guy has a huge conflict of interest. shouldn't we put somebody else and that doesn't have that conflict of interest? is that in order to fire him?
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in fact i didn't think mueller had conflicts of interest. it makes it clear if you have a personal or political relationship with somebody who is the target of an investigation or likely to benefit or be benefited by an investigation, you should step down from the prosecutors rolle prosecutor's role. mueller role with comey as well as the fbi i think both meet those standards right i don't think president trump was wrong to say we have conflict of problems. >> laura: with everything on the line, and we appreciate bot of you joining us tonight, you can't have an appearance of conflict at all. coming up an exclusive follow-u of both the migrants in san antonio we've been telling you about all week. in investigative reporter spoke to them and we have the video. don't go away. (photographers) candace! charlie!
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the real story for himself and he is here with exclusive recordings and information for us. you asked one of the migrants how they got here and this is what, she said. watch. [inaudible] >> they seem very reluctant to give you information very tell us about it that. >> i approached them on the sidewalk and then i asked them where they're from and how they came here and they said ecuador. it took a while that they were little bit warmed up and when they realize that i was asking about money and about who brought them here they were backpacking. they were not answering at all.
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and when i came back a few minutes later and. >> he speaks german, french, an english. so it was easy for you to communicate with them and you said there are very few translators, so the 30 so urso people that are outside the shelter you were able to speak to some of them. >> i think there was one other person there who worked officially. i asked them and they wouldn't tell me anything about how they got the air and then they started to get aggressive and we're contradicting each other. ones that they went through the forest and another said there was no forest. they were arguing amongst themselves and when it came to money and health that is when they started to get aggressive. >> i want to play some more of this. here is one of the migrants telling you about her journey. [inaudible]
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>> no, they don't want to tell you. why the secrecy about how they got here? it people are concerned because there's been another outbreak very to fairly serious of ebola in the congo. now there's a 21 day incubation. , so the sense is they could be bringing it here, but people want to be sure so that's why the questions are really important. >> is, that might be one side, but the other thing is i had th impression that somebody told them not to speak about this. when they said we are here now and the states, why'd you ask about our past and then became very aggressive commit now we'r help, you have to help, give us money. >> who is funding these migrants ? >> i couldn't get deeper down there than this. what i found out they said they actually do have money.
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quite a few of them because he spotted them under a tree counting a roll of money with hundred dollar bills. they just put it back in the pocket he didn't take it away from them of course, but they are still hanging there and waiting for public help. >> so where did they expect to be going? do they have friends or family here? >> they all want to go to for it . >> so this is like the congo an other african countries are being they are repopulating portland, maine with a huge contingent of these immigrants these migrants. and its overwhelming that authorities in maine. they are hoping to go there. >> they are hoping, they are told they can't go there. i was told there is no solution anytime soon for them. >> and you also found a documen that a group called has been
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handing out to the migrants and we are familiar with this group but this is what it looks like very telling us about what this document says and particularly an particularly disturbing part of it. >> so, they are handing that outbreak it's in french. they are handing that out to th migrants and they are telling them their rights, and when it comes to ice, it says ice is government, they are not your friends. i think what is this kind of information. you flip the page and it comes with ice and it says ice is kin of police, they are not friendly , don't ever tell them anything confidential. >> this is outrageous. so this is a nongovernmental organization assisting aid workers telling the migrants wh we're going to get money from the u.s. taxpayers not to cooperate with the government. thank you for going down there we appreciate your help tonight
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in understanding the story this story. the border agent to confirmed, tells us who inside the u.s. is making this harder for border agents. here is hector garda and vice president of the national borde patrol unit. you just heard they interviews with these folks, they are bein told not to cooperate and we have the document in our hands that he was able to get a copy of when he was down there. what about this? >> these migrants don't cooperate with border patrol agents. they're very evasive with no responses when they're getting interviewed. many times they are very vague and has for travel plans and that's because of these they're not allowed to cooperate furthe letting them know not to cooperate with border patrol agents or ice officials. >> and they have it all translated for the spanish-speaking migrants, give them spanish,, we heard from
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people down in del rio, texas will we we're at the border, that their middle eastern migrants also crossing the border who are claiming asylum and people from other countries not in the northern triangle, s these groups are facilitating more lawlessness and a lack of cooperation. at derek, how hard does that make the job of border patrol and then of course ice. >> pretty much sees open border advocates are advertising that we have open borders to the united states. they also contribute to these open borders that these guys ar advertising. now the agents in the real sector since may 30th, we've apprehended more than 500 peopl from the african continent people from congo, people from kingman rune, and even though the incubation. for ebola is 21 days, we don't know their travel plans, we don't know if they flew into mexico we don't know if they went and walked through central america.
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>> and they don't say are they don't want to say when border i asking the question, a lot of them said they heard it word-of-mouth in africa or they saw something online so word is getting out and apparently ther are 500 more preparing to make the cross into the united state and that's going to happen in a matter of a few days i understand. >> we'll be crossing in laredo in del rio and then they're going to dump them in san antonio where the citizens of san antonio are concerned about these people being dumped off i their safety. again, we don't know where thes people are coming from or what kind of diseases they are carrying. we know they're not back vaccinated. some of them have tuberculosis and other serious diseases. >> hector, thank you so much. doctor drew pinsky will be here a little bit later to tell us why these in adequate health skeen screenings at the borders
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>> good evening dui amalie lind bidart. president trump says iran is responsible for the attack on t in the gulf of them on earlier this week. in call to fox and friends, he said he cited this surveillance video. officials claim eight shows iranian forces removing an unexploded mind from one of the vessels. iran has denied any involvement. julian assange will not be coming to the u.s. anytime soon.
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he is serving jail time in the uk he faces an 18 count and statement for publishing hundreds of thousands of classi classified documents. more on iran at the top of the hour. now back to "the ingraham angle." they're calling him a respectfu looking online. this comes from autographs that surfaced online showing kiana reeves in photos with women. the 54 -year-old actor has his hands open. he's not hugging or making contact with the back of these ladies. he is being lauded for his
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response for personal space and bodily at ptolemy. this makes me think he looks more like at this point. i have a friend has a huge star every picture he takes is like this. he smiles and crosses his arms. he does that so they can't come back later and say he grabbed me . it is odd. >> biden often isn't touching where he smells the hair. to give there is a new study
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have to tell you about that we could all learn a great deal from. people are very territorial about the side of the bed they sleep on. >> be grateful i am still in th room. >> in a study conducted by a group called they've found a fe sleep on the left side of the bed you are more imaginative an creative and if you sleep on th right, you are more analytical and logical. where do you sleep question mike . >> i am on the right. >> at sea, is this pillow right or foot of the bed right? i can't figure that out. >> azure in the bed to bear it. >> i sleep on the left then, but, does that mean i'm more creative and analytical? >> i read somewhere it also means your politics your that means you're a liberal. and i'm on the right.
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>> i'm the moderation parade 40 percent of people say they select the side of the bed easiest for them to get in and out of very at hotels all sleep on the other side i think i choose it because of bathroom proximity. that's what i instinctively, i think we have the advertisers covered. >> do you sleep with your tv on? that's my question. >> i don't watch tv. >> according to the medical sleeping with the tv or light o is associated with weight gain in women. up to 11 pounds in ten years. >> what about lights everywhere. i have a tva never turn it on birth. >> we go around the room becaus you have the light on your. we have little coverings we put over them when we go to bed. >> this is raymond in normandy
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because rieman had to slip in the car so we slept in the car which of course we had to tell the president we slept in the car. i look over and we look to the glass and ramen has raymond has one of those airplane masks on and as the portability doors ar locked he can sleep through anything. >> the 60 -year-old material girl is reinventing herself. as part of the release of her new album, she's wearing an eye patch and has assumed a new identity which she shared with harry smith. >> madame x. >> that's correct. she jesus by committees a secre agent. she travels the world, she changes her identity. >> she his out of her mind. she has inspired me. i am this weekend going to be mister thin. him blocking out all the fattening light rays i'm going to sleep like this all father's
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day and i'm keeping my hands open wide when every year ladie are near. >> like a prayer, we want that segment two and. >> borderline crazy. >> she should just do the palmolive commercials brekke ge her tour is not selling. >> have a good weekend. the crisis at our border gettin worse by the minute and now we're learning the illegals being shipped across country aren't getting proper disease screening. yes, doctor drew is here next t explain what that means for you. stay there. salonpas lidocaine. patch, roll-on or cream. hisamitsu.
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and we want to say thanks. thanks for the boat rides and the bonfires. for camping out and jumping in. for the little fish, the big fish, and the bigger-than-me fish. because if it weren't for dads, we wouldn't be here-- and this is the place to be. at bass pro shops and cabela's, we join you in thanking dads everywhere for time spent in the great outdoors. save on great gifts for dad-- in store and online.
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>> tuberculosis is exploding. rodent borne, born, one of the only major that doesn't have a rodent. >> bubonic plague is likely, it's already here. we have this oral thecal root contamination which is typhoid fever, the entire population is at risk brekke leaders have set by why these california cities had been swallowed whole by homelessness and now disease. but now, get this, there is a new concern. acting dhs secretary issued a dire warning to congress saying that illegal immigrants being released into the united states are themselves not getting
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proper disease testing. we have no way to find out who is and who is not vaccinated. >> the diseases that come up in existing southern california aren't seen anywhere else in th country. wheezy diseases and enough use of the news from the ease goes last week somebody found a tapeworm in somebody's brain. wheezy that all the time. that's nothing unusual in southern california and los angeles. we have leprosy clinics there i exotic stuff that has showing u in los angeles for the last 30 years. that's fine, we've been able to contain that, but not when we have a population languishing i the street getting ill and running themselves down to the port where there are vulnerable
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to these illnesses. that's the problem. there is another issue i want t point out, which several hundre thousand undocumented immigrant coming into los angeles, some have ended up on the streets, but most of them without a country without citizenship, without a home, without a job, managed to find a place to live. how can our city call our problem housing crisis when people with nothing get absorbe into our housing are they sayin it's the immigrants pushing people out onto the streets or is it just the case that this i in fact a mental health crisis and not a housing crisis? >> friends of mine who live in downtown area of la, the part being slowly tinted fried, they say that a lot of these units where they have seven, eight, nine, sometimes as many as 13 people in a two-bedroom apartment. and often times they get busted and then they're out trying to find a new place to live, but yesterday, the dhs secretary
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testified in front of the senat and aside from sounding alarm o just the sheer numbers at play here, he also noted the issue o quarantines. was in part. >> we're currently managing ove 250 cases of h1 and one fluor w have an outbreak. we have two pediatricians we've deployed to the main stage in these individuals are quarantined. that's just a snapshot. ice has over 4,000 people in custody that are in quarantined. >> 4,000 people in quarantine, did you hear him say two pediatricians for 250 cases of the h1 and one flew? is that an appropriate number o physicians? >> it doesn't sound like it. i'm not there to know what thei needs are, but i'm telling you that this is the big picture problem. they're are policies that are
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ideologically driven that are resulting in human catastrophe. one after the other. we have to have a pragmatic approach for the people of this country that is realistic about what it means to have people in concentrated environments, whether it's a city, or whether it's an encampment of some type these are all ideologically driven. when you put people, when you create these circumstances, it' inevitable that infectious diseases break out. you must attend to the reality that we have for the last 800 years in our civilization that somehow because of our current ideology,. >> if you could write the polic that would minimize the risk of a spread of infection, either within a migrant population that's being temporarily housed somewhere, whether it's young people or adults or to the public at large, as a physician
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what would be the proper protocol to put in place? >> the proper protocol would be to have each individual evaluated by somebody with a board certification and a primary care specialty. that would be the ideal thing. the next best thing would be to have physician extenders like nurse practitioners and physician assistants under the supervision of board-certified primary care specialist watchin this and supervising this as it took place. this will be very expensive, very expensive. >> very expensive and when we have 140,000 people as we had i the month of may, coming across our border, just for the people we've apprehended, that's an entire small u.s. city. that's in enormous amount of resources and manpower that frankly the federal government right now just doesn't have and doesn't employ. >> i agree. i don't think it could be properly done, that's why we
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must get this thing under control. >> thank you for being here tonight, we really appreciate it . >> when the college admission scandal broke three months ago, it revealed an entitlement mentality run amok and tonight, we bring you a new controversy brewing at a prestigious school attended by the obama and clinton kids. that is next. findican be overwhelming.r dry eyes... for relief that lasts... you want soothe xp from bausch + lomb. soothe xp helps restore the eyes' lipid layer... ...seal in moisture... ...and protect against further irritation. soothe xp. the right choice for dry eyes.
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>> i totally forgot you go here. >> i'm sorry, are you here to see me? >> no, silly, i go here. >> you go where? >> harvard. law school. >> you got into harvard law? >> wet, like its hard question like. >> actually it's hard to get into harvard or any ivy league school, but a former dc prep school student is appealing to the supreme court of the united states after she was rejected b 13 schools including most of th so-called ivs. she and her parents nigerian nationals blame the elite schoo and their counselors for failin her. charging discrimination in the process.
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it should be noted that she did get into the university of pennsylvania which is also a phenomenal school, graduating last year and yet she is still complaining and still suing. after the college admission scandal, the district the lates example of what i think both parents and students in this super elite class expecting results instead of necessarily earning them very joining me no with some perspective on this i cofounder of admissions, is thi what they kids at these schools are learning, everyone's a victim if you don't get the prize at the end of the four years in high school, you move right to a lawsuit? i've seen a lot, but this one kind of takes the cake. >> the story is definitely very out there. i would say that among a certai percentage of students who attend elite public schools,
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there is essence that you are paying to get access to ivy league colleges or other top 20 colleges. so what just because you and attended an elite public school that doesn't mean you get spot at elite college or ivy league university. the acceptance rate across-the-board was in the single digits. at harvard last year it was 4 percent at you pen it was 7 percent and what that means is that the majority of straight a student to ed flay play do not get in. >> you say the merit-based system in higher education is being taken apart brick by brick . explained explain. >> well, this is kind of the entitlement that you were talking about great a lot of students and some parents feel that because they are paying fo in elite education that they ar entitled to get certain grades and they are entitled to get acceptances to certain elite schools.
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if we have a system where students are suing these independent schools and boardin schools over grades, over grade or over negative potentially negative council recommendation letters than these goals will b in a position where they're scared to write objective recommendation letters. what if this particular student wasn't a stellar student and merited counsel recommendation that wasn't very flattering. if that is the case, then schools are simply going to be scared to write objective. >> i've got to share this with you, i happen to know a lot of teachers and people people recently retired from teaching in the public and private schools sector. one of the top private schools in california, parents would routinely go to this network of teachers that i know and say wait a second, my son didn't ge an a this term.
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how do you expect him to get into x, then next elite school. and they are browbeating, the teachers are browbeaten to give the higher grades to the kids especially the really rich entitled parents and these teachers are fed up with it because they say were just braden impaired your kid isn't that smart. you can't say that, your kid isn't going to be an nasa scientist, but i'm sure he's going to do really well at something else. you can't speak frankly about a student's aptitude. if you do, you get sued or fired . >> that is a trend we see growing. not even at the high school, bu at private universities we hear of students approaching their professors after the final grad is given out and a lot of them get their grades changed and that's happening in very elite schools in the country. >> my dad's not going to give money. this stuff is maddening, but i think this lawsuit is extremely revealing of what we've been talking about on the show for
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the last year and a half, the entitlement mentality that we have been feeding and the probably the next generation. up next, a special birthday remembrance for president trump. you feel like you're itching all the time. and you never know how your skin will look. because deep within your skin an overly sensitive immune system could be the cause. so help heal your skin from within, with dupixent. dupixent is not a steroid, and it continuously treats your eczema even when you can't see it. at 16 weeks, nearly four times more patients taking dupixent saw clear or almost clear skin compared to those not taking it, and patients saw a significant reduction in itch. do not use if you are allergic to dupixent. serious allergic reactions can occur, including anaphylaxis, a severe reaction. tell your doctor if you have new or worsening eye problems, including eye pain or changes in vision.
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>> it is time for a last bite flashback. in honor of president from 73 rd birthday we would thought you would like to hear what his plans were when he was only 33. >> mister trump, what is left i your life. your worth all this money you said you didn't say you want to be worth a billion now. >> i just want to keep busy and keep active, be interested in what i do. i really am not looking to make tremendous amounts of money i'm looking to enjoy my life right if that happens to go with it, that's fabulous breath. >> i think he's enjoying his life and remaining active. happy birthday, mister presiden and happy birthday to our happy
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father's day to all the dads ou there. you have an important job and w salute you. check out my podcast at podcast one.com. the fox news at night team take it all from here. >> welcome to fox news at night. we are in washington where we begin with a fox news alert. tensions with iran escalating tonight as the pentagon now believes the crew of one of the two oil tankers attacked in the middle east has been detained b iran, which we have the very latest on that situation. top democrats unhappy with nbc hosting the first big debate th big winners and losers as we first know the primary debate set up. los angeles accusing surroundin cities of dumping their homeles within the la city limits.
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