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tv   FOX Friends  FOX News  July 2, 2019 3:00am-6:00am PDT

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>> oh put it back. put it back. oh, you are. jillian: this is going viral. a woman lick ago tub of blue bell ice cream and putting it back in the freezer. unclear where it was taken. investigating this can't be tolerated. rob: not cool. see you later. knot i hit the ground. brian: was there any controversy in showing that flag. the nike shoes, the rv park. ainsley: nike no longer going to sell those patriotic shoes because collin kaepernick complained. griff: yesterday first day on email chain looking who is going to be good or bad. collin kaepernick stop talking get on a team and play. brian: why should he. he has nike. one of the most powerful
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international organizations in the country to kowtow to what he's. by not playing for three years, he got an endorsement deal and now because he was offended the 13 stars on a flag, betsy ross flag, he now had a company lose all that money in marketing and distribution advertising and they have to ship them all back. ainsley: they actually made a lot of money. nike supported him and their stock up. they are thinking this might be an opportunity for stocks to group again. brian: on the fourth of july. griff: talk about this story i covered the border so much for you. that is alexandria ocasio-cortez going down to el paso and making a visit there with 13, i believe, other members of congress to include veronica escabar who is the congresswoman from el paso. you see her here. she is bringing heavy criticism toward the border patrol, toward conditions
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that are there. let's listen to a little bit of what she had to say. >> there is abuse in these facilities. there is abuse. this is them on their best behavior and they put them in rooms with no running water. and these women were told by cbp officers to drink out of the toilet. they were drinking water out of the toilet. and that was them knowing a congressional visit was coming. this is cbp on best behavior. telling people to drink out of the toilet. >> did you see somebody actually do that while you there were. >> i mean, in that last facility, i was not safe from the officers in that facility. >> wow, not safe from the officers in that facility. evidently something where she thought people were laughing at her. i don't know if that's what she was talking about. that's a heck of an allegation. ainsley: according to one article. this is according to the washington examiner two guys standing behind computers when she was walking through one of them leaned over and
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said something and was laughing. she assumed they were laughing at her. we don't know the truth or what they are talking about. griff: immediately yesterday my phone was blowing up. i spent a lot of time talking to these guys. one of the people brian hastings a chief law enforcement operations for the border patrol, weighs was on with martha last night and he is responding to all of this, take a listen. >> we don't treat people that way. we provide fresh water. we provide food. we provide sanitary items as well as items tore bathing and perm hygiene. we have fresh water at all times in our facilities. griff: go ahead. i just wanted to say it's important to remember these are not long-term care facilities. in el paso sector which is where she made two visits. there are more than 2100 percent unprecedented number of family units coming. they are doing the best they can and been very transparent in letting
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people sees a they continue to call on congress, on members like aoc to do something, to make a decision. brian: you mean she -- those same aoc who voted twice down for humanitarian aid who said nancy pelosi sold out and got boxed in by the president because she -- because the president got $4.5 billion worth of humanitarian aid which was about 6 months late? the same woman? ainsley: that's her. hector garza national border patrol council also reacts to her claims. listen to this. >> this is grandstanding. our border patrol facilities don't do that type of activity. those detention cells under surveillance. we call for them to release the footage so we can disprove what aoc is saying. brian: they are pushing back hard. they don't believe a lookout of it is accurate. one thing can i say. go ahead. ainsley: i feel like when she said she was going down there, everyone knew she was going to walk out and have a different afrozen to it than maybe other people going down there. our border patrol agents say
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they are doing the best they can. we don't really know the truth. she goes in and some witnesses in that washington examiner article say they were standing outside. they were being briefed on what they were going to see inside the facility, all 14 of these lawmakers. and she decides to go into, talk to one of families instead of being briefed. and she comes back screaming and crying and one of the witnesses said after sitting with that family she came out screaming and crying and yelling. they were stunned by her outburst in front of 40 people. again, that's "the washington examiner." this person didn't give their name to that reporter. they witnessed it, they said. she talked to this one family and comes back and says they are not being treated fairly. brian: here's the thing. picture yourself you have a house, family of five. you have a party 30 people over. maybe you have a big party and 100 people over and you have two and a half baths. okay with 30. after 100 maybe a little bit taxed get an outdoor facility. can you picture 5,000? you can have the best
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facilities in the world so overstocked. 670,000 have come here illegally already. they had 89,000 last month. the month before 130,000 coming illegally. facility that holds hundreds, not tens of thousands. now you are going to walk down there with the facilities that they gave. that they're not pulling out of their pocket. uniforms you gave them and say facilities are not right. thethey have been pleading for help. kevin mcaleenan and predecessor begging for help for months it. took a july 1st, last minute hail mary just to get humanitarian aid. put the border wall aside. if you don't watch fox, that's fine. did you watch 60 minutes? they did this whole feature already how bad it was. how the border patrol has got to change diapers and provide material. how the national guard has got to take over for the border patrol behind the desk so the press agents can go back there and pick up illegals and bring to fillings that are overcrowded. they can't build fence fast enough. it wasn't their idea to have
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a wide open border. bad asylum rules allow this to happen. and throw it all on border patrol. griff: important point. comparison to the concentration camps previous comparison isn't fair. all the people in custody came on their own accord. ainsley: good point. griff: the border patrol agents have been testifying in front of congress time and time again saying they are in full blown crisis mode because of the catch and release laws on the book. whether or not congress is going to decide to change those laws is to them. however right now in full blown crisis have you agents overwhelmed that are absolutely doing everything they can. brian: they are being made the bad guys. griff: she is driving them into further disarray. ainsley: comments some of the men are laughing at women in there and saying crude comments. if that is happening they need to find out who these agents are and if that is happening, get them out of these facilities. there is no excuse for that these are human beings. brian: facebook story about these border patrol agents who may or may not have been
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having this dialogue on facebook. that's a whole separate tact and that's going on and these people saying anything that's unacceptable nobody is defending that put that here, this is front and center. you were down there. i was down there twice. you have been been down there 50 times. only you travel with the caravans here. you know what el salvador's president said yesterday we are responsible for that horrific shot of the father and daughter face first. ainsley: in the water. brian: as horrific as that is. they had the ceremony for them yesterday. now kevin mcaleenan goes down to the other country and say guys can you stop it. the president has got to use mexico to stop at the border because congress won't help out on our border we have to ask another country to help out on theirs. that's embarrassment at washington not only the white house and congress cannot work together and the result is the border patrol is painted as the bad guys. ainsley: a group of pastors from chattanooga who went down there, seven pastors invited from the administration and they went to one of these facilities
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that had gotten criticism last week, and they said it was much better than they ever thought. the conditions were better. they said i felt like it was so clean i could eat off the floor. i did see the agents comforting kids and changing diapers. brian: kids in this place incredible care. i thought there were people resignation in america, children living in american in conditions much worse. people demonstrated true care and concern for those children. griff: we are ron vitiello the former ice director coming in. he is not in office. so he can speak a lot more intoly about the facebook thing the dishonored uniform upset about that. ainsley: secret facebook group of some of these agents. griff: there is another story, that antifa story is significant. because, really it is the first time have seen antifa just absolutely aggressively go out of gate and bring physical harm to an individual, in this case andy gno this conservative
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gilles. he was on tucker last night. amazing. tucker is in south korea interviewing andy gno. listen to what he had to say on tucker. >> we were most important institutions of the rule of law. the courthouses. the sheriff's office, the central police precinct while hearing people chant no hate, no fear. and suddenly bash on the back of my head a mob of people dressed in black and wearing masks started beating me with their fists. and some of them use objects to hit me. they beat me so much that i lost control of my go pro-camera that i was holding which was then stolen from me. i put my arms up to try to shield my face, as well as to signal to them that i was surrendering. and they started dumping what i believe were milk
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shakes and eggs, throwing it at my face, which blinded me. so i couldn't see. and i was kicked some more. punched some more. and all this time i kept thinking where are the police? ainsley: poor guy. if you listen to senator cruz and others. they say where is the mayor. mayor ted wheeler. a lot feel is he working against the cops enforcement on this. he pushes back over the weekend some chose to engage in violence is which is unacceptable and will not be tolerated. we stand against all forms of violence against all ainsley: they are looking for more. i was listening to an interview on "fox & friends first." they guy used to be a part of antifa and left the group. they probably didn't know who this guy was. a conservative journalist. they see one person attacking him and they all start doing it. he actually left the group for that reason.
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griff: we have harmeet dhillon on the show today. she is going to sue somebody into quote oblivion. ainsley: he finally made his way to the courthouse and then he asked the guys that were helping him. i guess law enforcement or medics helping him. i need to get to the hospital. well have you got to walk back through that group that just attacked you. he said i did not feel safe. brian: wondering where the officers were. andrew yang the first democratic candidate to speak out against antifa. ainsley: i wonder if who is in responsible for calling in the officers. if they are having antifa protest they need to be responsible. griff: what most police forces do is they go along and follow them. once it rises to a certain level they try to. ainsley: diffuse it right there. antifa antifa i can tell you who is not in antifa because she is wearing white is jillian. ainsley: and you can see her
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face. jillian: can you see my face, yes. president trump issuing a stern warning to iran in a fox news interview. >> we can't let iran have a nuclear weapon. and if something should happen, do far worse by not telling it. but hopefully we don't have to do anything. jillian: president's comments coming before iran admitted to violating the uranium limit of the 2015 iran nuclear deal. students at the university of utah honor the life of mackenzie lueck with a vigil. her remains found burned in a backyard after a week after she went missing. the estranged wife of her suspected killer speaking out. she says he once attacked her with a butcher knife. she tells the daily mail she would testify against him. >> he was real aggressive. he cut me. he was tried to do everything to me. it could have been me. it could have been my kids.
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jillian: the suspected murderer was accused of raping a co-worker in 2014. charges were never filed. los angeles angels in morning after tyler skaggs found dead. found unsupportive in hotel room in dallas. cause of death unknown. foul play and suicide both not suspected. team posting online quote tyler has and always will be an important part of the family. tyler has grew up a will fan and will always be. >> it was so sad to hear he had passed. i'm like a family of the all fans are family to him. it's just sad to see him go so soon. jillian: skaggs leaves behind his wife of seven months. brand new military tanks will be on display at the july 4th celebration in d.c. >> we're going to have some tanks stationed outside. we have the brand new
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chairman tanks and brand new abrams tanks. we have incredible equipment, military equipment on display. brand new and we are very proud of it. jillian: preps for the celebration america event are already underway. brian: pick the right roads or the tanks will grind them up. griff: i live in d.c. i can't wait to see the tanks. ainsley: fighting in front of your house. griff: decorated navy seal in the hands of a military jury. will he be convicted of murder even though somebody else confessed to the crime? take us inside that next. advil is... relief that's fast. strength that lasts. you'll ask... what pain? with advil liqui-gels. puberty means personal space. so sports clothes sit around growing odors. that's why we graduated to tide pods sport.
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griff: the fate of a decorated navy seal now in the hands of a military jury deliberations underway against eddie gallagher accuse of killing isis fighter in iraq. closing arguments the defense team argued the defense argument had huge gapping holes and subject of fixation by military prosecutors that ignored everything that didn't fit their conclusion. what can we expect? attorney done h don hakari joins now to weigh in. what do you make of this? what is going to happen? >> good morning, griff.
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you never know with a jury. and this case certainly has a lot of interesting twists and turns. you know, just from the evidence that we have heard on tv, i got to think he is going to be convicted of something. >> that's interesting you say that this case has divided a special operations warfare community what we have seen when you had corey scott witness who said it was he that did it himself. is it your sense that the prosecution is choosing as the defense attorney says to draw its own conclusion? >> well, i think it's interesting that scott, you know, testified during the government's case and that the prosecutor's didn't have, you know, any clue what he was going to say during his testimony. i'm assuming he was called.
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when he cop 'fessed to the murder it had to be a shock to him. the problem chief gallagher has in my opinion lesser included offenses in murder. particularly with the article 1, 34 violations. the orders violations. i think there is evidence out there that something he might be convicted of something. griff: is that because -- >> -- we will see. griff: they are charging him with article i 34 because they couldn't charge him with conduct unbecoming. >> conduct unbecome something for chief gallagher he is a chief there is no conduct unbecome for enlisted man. the orders violation accompanies a lot of things that we don't have in the civilian world that's why i think taking that picture, you know being and the text messages and stuff are going to be pretty harmful. but we will see. you never know with a jury. they may just not like the government's case. may be recovery reaching,
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some of the things that have happened. you never know what a jury will do. griff: you never know with a jury. if you put yourself in those jurors shoes how would you see, this don? >> i don't think i would find him guilty of the murder. you know, i think if, you know, they don't have an autopsy so they don't know what killed the isis fighter. but, certainly there is credible evidence that chief gallagher that could be an aggravated assault. the text messages, the pictures. military juries are very smart. this jury composition is very interesting having five marines two sailors, one seal. griff: don, we shall see. very interesting. thank you for taking time join us today. >> thanks for having me. griff: free college, free healthcare, free cash. the dems want to give it all away. the next guest says we have enough to make it all happen. really? you have got to hear this. ♪ ♪
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camp out on the sidewalks. austin texas changing ordinance forbid anywhere in the. overturn that ordinance. brian? >> that will increase the quality of life. meanwhile you heard 2020 democrats pledging to give americans all kinds of free stuff. >> your signature policy is to give every adult in the united states $1,000 a
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month, no questions asked. >> that's right. we must make public colleges and universities tuition-free. >> yes we are supposed to be for free college. >> healthcare is a basic human right. >raise your hand in your coverage plan would include coverage for undocumented immigrants. [cheers] brian: there you go. the list could go on. we just only have a three hour show. who is going to pay for all of this. ask someone who agrees with some of these plans, chris, the author of dignity seeking respect in back row america. chris, this free stuff as a liberal democrat, does it concern you because it's unon affordable, unattainable. >> no it doesn't concern me. i'm glad to hear the candidates speak about it. before i was an author and writing a book on poverty and addiction in america. i spent 20 years as a bond trader. the bond markets are telling us we have plenty of money to spend. we can spend more. brian: you want, for example, let's raise minimum
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raise? you are for that, right? >> i'm certainly for that, yes. brian: right. how many restaurant owners or franchise owners have you talked to about that? >> >> when you see my book i probably spoke to about 1,000 different -- i visited 1,000 different mcdonald's over the country the last five years. i have spoken to plenty of customers and workers in those restaurants i can tell you all the workers want it. brian: the workers want more money do you understand they are going to automate because the margins on these restaurants and franchises are so small if you raise the minimum wage, everybody's wages guys up. the profit diminishes the place goes out of business or you get machines. >> mcdonald's is a smart company. they have already automated what they can automate away. i have been to 1,000 franchises. i can tell you nobody uses the kiosks. they have been trying to put kiosks in there.
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there is not much more they can automate away. that's not the actual issue. so often when we talk about these things we forget about the basic morality about the issue. brian: do you want a social system where everyone is taken care of or frequent system that allows to you go as far as you can in this. >> i would ask people to look at my book. i spent six years looking at what that frequent ha free marks done to communities. places in west virginia, places in texas, places in nebraska. these communities have been hollowed out. and that hollowing out is not an accident. brian: chris, do you believe that san francisco, los angeles have showed us the way to go? do you see the embarrassment which is happening on our streets? >> i think that has nothing to do i think, with the question of whether or not we should raise wages for hard working americans just
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trying to live a decent life. these communities i go to like prestonburg, kentucky like portsmouth, ohio, like milwaukee, their communities have been devastated by factories leaving. all that's left is in many cases is honorable work, working at walmart. working at mcdonald's. that's honorable jobs but doesn't pay enough currently to build a decent life. >> where is the money? do you think just rich people are holding on to it and not giving it to poor people? >> i think there has been this belief, this wrong belief in the united states that we can't run deficits as long as -- as large as we have been running them and somehow the investors, the bond market will flee look where the 30 year treasury is trading right now. brian: there are people here hearing you talking about minimum wage are not talking about stocks and bonds. they are talking about the restaurant down the block staying in business. the franchise that's around the block staying in
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business. to do that these hard-working managers or investors are on very small margins, especially in the restaurant industry. if walmart is not paying enough, then target will. and those market forces work out that way. if amazon is not paying enough. they will move on. when the economy grows. those salaries grow. and we are seeing it happen right now. >> i take -- i will push back at the idea of hard working investors. what i see is hard working. >> there is a woman i will never forget works the evening shift. she wrings her child. in 6 years old to sleep in a booth because she doesn't have the money to pay for child care while she works the overnight shift. she is a wonderful woman. her kid is well taken care of because the other employees watch her kid when the kid is sleeping. that's the person i think of. i don't think about the stock investor in new york city. brian: neither am i.
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you are the one that brought up bonds. i'm not even bringing up stocks and bonds. you brought it up. >> i'm bringing up bonds to tell you that we as a country, the united states, can spend a lot more money than we currently spend without having necessarily to raise taxes. for instance, right now. brian: chris, you know, you are a very successful by. you know that the average person in that horrible 10% or 1% is already paying over 50% of income back in taxes let alone like new york city san francisco or los angeles. you are asking people working 18 hours a day to give more of that money to give $6 of every $10 away as if they are the bad guys. that's what i was hearing on that stage last week and that's what your book says. >> my book doesn't say that first of all. i would say simply that the people who make over $1 million a year can put a little bit more taxes. we don't need to worry about that right now. again, i think raising the minimum wage is not an issue that is going to raise the
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deficit. brian: talk to a restaurant owner. if you talk to these businesses they say their biggest worry is minimum wage. not that they want to rob people of money. if they are going to work 70 hours a week and be away from their families they have to make some money to keep people employed. just walk around and talk to the small business owner which make up 80% of this economy. but, chris, i have to let you go. i appreciate the conversation. we will have you back. >> thank you for having me. brian: all right. >> read my book. brian: you got it. coming up straight ahead. journalist attacked by antifa. where is all the outrage like we saw during the clash covington high school students and protesters? charlie kirk has that analogy, he will talk about it shortly. -keep it down there. i have a system.
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♪ everybody was kung fu fighting. brian: that is your shot of the morning that is actor jason statham bottle cap challenge after singer john mayer urged him to try it. ainsley: goal to untwist the cap off the bottle round kick without moving the bottle itself. griff: impressive move like conor mcgregor to do it. brian: is that conor mcgregor? did he shave his beard? griff: is he in the may fighter he is going to have less trouble. brian: not making contact. ainsley: jason centralham patrol car ticked karate when he was a child. really good athlete. diver. brian: action movie star who does his own stunts. griff: brian at the break was trying to do it. i think can you do.
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brian: my crotch is a little tight on my pants it might cause fraying if you know what i mean. i also don't think i can do it. but, i would like to try it. ainsley: practice? griff: make this happen. do it in the air. griff: i got your back. brian: ainsley if you could go drink a bottle of sprite. you loosen the cap at the end ever the show i will do it. ainsley: i think it would be better if i don't do it will have more weight and stay on the table. brian: i'm looking to spin the cap off. if i somebody else will have to clean up. ainsley: few bottles of vodka in your office can we bring that in. brian: you know that's not true because i make my own vodka and it comes right out of the still. griff: somebody else who can do this is charlie kirk authority of battlefield. you probably do this probably every afternoon, right? brian: can you or not, charlie? >> not so much i wouldn't be
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able to say. brian: campus battlefield is now out. is that correct? >> that's right. that's correct. yes. and also today we're excited to announce through our other entity turning point action the launch of students for trump heading to reelect. we are almost 500 days away from the election. it sure seems that there is a lot of activity. a lot happening. ainsley: tell us about that what are you doing? >> so, through our turning point action, our 501 c 4 organization, we are going to be reaching out to college campuses all across the country. the work that i have already been doing the last couple years but specifically towards getting this president reelected. democrats know that in order to win back the white house it goes straight through college campuses. we will add sobriety and realistic type approach towards these really unreal his promises that democrats have been putting forth toward our generation. we will be talking to the success of this president to our generation that have been benefiting from them.
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something they will not be hearing from their liberal professors. i believe this president has such an amazing record of accomplishment to sell to college students. that's what our effort is going to be doing going to 20206789 really excited to get it underway starting today. brian: looking for a million people. what's your headline to sign up for 1 million college students? >> well, obviously election day 2020. our goal is to get a million new voters to the polls by 2020. mostly college students. understand, this has never really been tried before on this magnitude. look, this president has done stuff before that have never people never thought of. students are gravitating. the left's free speech. the left's socialist policies opening up an opportunity for us to communicate to common sense young voters. we are so excited to get this underway. there is a lot of work ahead of us. we have a lot of resources to put together. a lot of staff to hire. a lot of energy to put forward. but i will tell you this
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president is such an inspiration to me and our generation we can't wait to do everything we can to help get him reelected. griff: charlie, you and i -- i want to change topics a little bit. you and i have been at these antifa events over the weekend and we were talking about this journalist andy noe ango attacked. this is more violent than what we typically see. what do you make of it. >> it crossed the line. i saw something similar to candace owens last summer eating tea breakfast place in philadelphia. and 50 antifa members stormed into the cafe. this is so egregious what happened in portland. and where is the denouncement from the democrats running from president? brian: have you one, andrew yang. that's it. >> totally, yeah. andrew yang. i don't even think is he a democrat in the traditional sense. he seems to be more just -- you are right, totally
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right. good for him for saying that the leading democrats say nothing. isn't this attack on the free press. andy is openly gay man and happened on last day of pride month in the reason they don't say anything is a lot of andy's work is investigative work exposing antifa. the type of work that journalists used to be involved in. this is an attack on the free press. and an attack on speech. total crickets and silence many people said good things about antifa and their violence is increasing. the port mayor is completely silent on this. he is not totally silent. is he kind of passive on it. that's the right way to describe it. the port police, where were they when he was getting assaulted? nowhere. ainsley: that's what he was wondering too. thanks for coming on with us. congratulations on the book. brian: jillian, while we were talking to charlie, you were finding out what else
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was happening. jillian: i was. you don't see the bottom of the bottle. i think people are holding the bottom of the bottles. brian: does the bottle move. ainsley: very first one the guy who started it his bottle was moving maybe in the beginning it wasn't. ainsley: look at it next time. talk about this in the meantime. immigration officials are investigating a secret facebook group for current and former cbp agent. members are accused of making sexist comments and mocking migrants online. carlos provost releasing a statement saying quote these posts are completely appropriate and opposite from the honor i see from our agents day in and day out. those agents will be held accountable. crash landing caught on camera. watch this. >> you okay? >> thank you, god. >> incredible video from
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inside the cockpit as the plane smash into the mo mojave dessert. no one was hurt. the two people inside needed to be air lifted since they were miles away from the nearest road. business owner refuses to take down his giant flag no matter. what the ceo of camping world has been fighting the city of statesville, north carolina for months. in an exclusive fox news interview. marcus says he knows is he breaking the city's rules. >> when veterans show up at the stores for the flag raisings, when they come on saturdays on their motorcycles, when they're doing their veteran rides and they weep at the bottom of the flag pole, that's the conviction that i need to say it's not going to come down. i would rather go to jail. jillian: there is a $50 fine every day the flag stays up. hundreds of thousands of people have signed a petition to keep it flying. thou shall not overshare personal information on facebook. the church of england unveils the 10 digital
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commandments to warn of the dangers on social media. first one don't rush. in church is think before you post. number four is don't hide. in other words, don't create fake profiles and the last one is be mindful of your security. that means sharing too much online can put your safety at risk. ainsley: so formal. tough explain what you mean. jillian: kind of funny. brian: do you know what that means standing up the star of the prophet i don't know that's his company. griff: camping world. brian: i wonder if cnbc. brian: fantastic show. goes in and helps these companies turn around tough love i'm pro-tough love. ainsley: make a profit. brian: they make a profit in the end everyone hugs and cries. ainsley: adam klotz is outside is he not hugging or crying. adam: there are folks out here pretty happy to be out here. it's a beautiful day for any
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visitor to new york city. it's going to be a warm one eventually and really warm one across the entire country. already on the east coast temperatures run into the 70s. hotter in the middle of the country. take a look at those maps getting up to close to 80 degrees in chicago early this morning. a little bit of a frontal boundary back behind it. there could be storms in the middle of the country also. everything south of that frontal boundary that is heat. temperatures running up into the middle 90's, the lower 90's for your tuesday it. stays hot into wednesday. you actually see a lot of that shift a little bit more toward the mid-atlantic. so d.c. running up into the middle 90's. add in that humidity, and we are talking about feels like temperatures getting up close to triple digits in a whole lot of places, guys. it will stay this way from now all the way into the holiday weekend. so we have got several hot and steamy days on the way coming up here throughout the rest of the week. brian: i made a decision as an adult. complain about the winter or summer. i have chosen to complain about the winter so i will not complain in the summer. adam: me too.
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brian: not complain. it's your job. i have got to tell you i'm very excited july 19th and 20th and august 9th and 10th. fox nation off my series what made america greats. i want to see everyone in bonita springs fort mired 19th and 20th orlando florida. charlotte august 9th. birmingham in alabama august 10th and san antonio november 16th. more red than blue. ainsley: south texas. brian: singing your song. ainsley: i love that area. thanks, brian. congratulations. melania trump is a supermodel. why isn't she featured on more magazines like mitchell obama is how the media targets and memberships minutess
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conservative women.
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♪ i wish i had jessie's girl ♪ i wish that i had jessie's girl. jillian: good morning and welcome back. rick springfield calls off upcoming show in the dominican republic. the singer says quote the safety and well being of our fans band and crew will always be the most important consideration in any situation. at least 13 americans have died in the dominican republic since last summer. and after extreme backlash, kim kardashian west will rename her new shake wear line. accused of cultural
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appropriation can i money know, kardashian says her brands and comments are built with inclusivity and diversity at core. new name hasn't been announced. ainsley? >> thanks, jillian. turning now to the nationwide measles outbreak now the worst since 1992. the cdc logging 18 new cases last week alone bringing the total to just over 1,000 for the year. our next guest sounds the alarm about loopholes of vaccination requirements that could lead to further infections. here to explain the ceo of independent women's voice heather higgins. thank you for being with us. ainsley: tell us about the loopholes, this is very scary especially as a mom. >> and you are a mom too. have you written very movingly about what a gift hayden is to you. ainsley: thank you. >> she is three and a half now. particularly when infants are small, we all see these measles outbreaks occurring all over the place. in fact, we are about to crack, we have already cracked 1,000. during 28 different states. the countries at risk of losing its elimination
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status if we continue to have this go through october, we were actually paying attention to this. idf has a couple women who work there. latest baby. a week ago. and griff jenkins was reporting about how the flood of immigrants no longer young men from south america. people from all over the world that he was seeing. so one of our colleagues m.d. was curious went and looked up what are the cdc regs on this? turns out enormous loophole. if you are coming into the country and legal immigrant we very sensibly have all these, much like other countries vaccination requirements that you are supposed to fill. but if you are coming in any other way including as illegal immigrant, either one apprehended, there is no such requirement for you. so we created a petition at
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iwv.org asking people to have sensible vaccination requirements for people coming in to the country. ainsley: that makes sense to protect all of the kids here already and individuals. >> yes. ainsley: you also wrote an op-ed for foxnews.com here is the title media manipulation of conservative women is a disgrace. why did you write this and what did you mean by that? >> i wrote that because i had done an op-ed for or actually a video for prager university which talks about the way in which media can manipulate a story to either helevator slam someone. using conservative women versus liberal women as an example. so, for example, one of the things in there is vogue magazine has had covers of hillary clinton and they have had many covers of michelle obama but you get to barbara bush. you get to laura bush, you
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get to melania, no covers. vogue is free to do that. it's a private publication. it's a pattern you see over and over and over. ainsley: especially with melania's past modeling career and styles exquisite. talk about what was going on at maria claire 50 up influential women and why they're voting in the 2016 election. what did you find there? >> they are highly selective. there is a lot of tokenism about maybe you sometimes include a republican. i believe in the maria claire one there wasn't a single republican. ainsley: out of 50? >> you would think. the point of these articles really, if you are operating at a metta level is they do things because it helps either do damage control or it promotes a larger narrative. and so, for example, when people were making fun of or not liking -- when they're
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making fun of hillary's pantsuits suddenly i believe it was glarm whole spread making pantsuits sh chic. when elizabeth warren was viewed as harsh and fighting all the time and bitter. they started doing exposes about what a tough fighter she was and these are characteristics to be admired. ainsley: when we are in the grocery store i wish they were fair. >> when you are in the grocery store remember if you have an infant going back to the first topic who is 12 months or under they can't get the mmr vaccine. they are highly vulnerable. the world health organization just declared that pandemics are the new normal and the big reason? porous borders. so we do have a real problem. doctors who treat people who are legal immigrants tend to be operating illegally can't report it to the cdc. ainsley: thank you so much for your efforts to make our
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country safer. we appreciate you, heather. >> thank you. ainsley: big show. kellyanne conway and jason chaffetz and newt gingrich all here live. ♪ let's get down to business. the business of family time... ...and downtime. ...and you time. ...and forgetting what time it is...altogether. modernized comfort inns and suites have been refreshed
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i think we are right on schedules. we have done one hour. two more straight ahead. great guests coming up. >> we have great guests also, you know, coming in hot may be the perfect song to play for when brian tries to kick the bottle top off of a bottle. we have been working on that. there is progress. i will just be kind progress. i don't know if we are ready
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yet. brian: i don't know if i will do a spin kick or front kick. ainsley: practice tonight and maybe have you do it foam. deal. brian: really? i think i'm doing it today. the ship will have been sailed by tomorrow. ainsley is trying to buy me time. ainsley: practicing. griff: i can easily do. it. i do it all the time. ainsley: what can't do you? [buzzer] brian: president trump issuing a stern warning to iran telling them not to play with fire. griff: admitting to violating the uranium limit in the 2015 deal. ainsley: rich edson joins us. >> nuclear watchdog confirms it iran's uranium stockpile exceeds the limit set in 2015 nuclear agreement and the president is warning iran to step back. >> no message to iran. they know what they are doing. they know what they are playing with i think they are playing with fire no message to iran whatsoever. >> white house press
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secretary adds, quote: it was a mistake under the iran nuclear deal to allow iran to enrich uranium at any level. we must restore the longstanding nonproliferation standard for no enrichment for iran: terms of the deal because it's responding to the united states withdrawal from the agreement. last may the trump administration left the nuclear deal and restored significant economic sanctions against iran. iran officials recognize the benefits of the deal they will reverse course. the administration says the pressure on iran will remain until iran changes its behavior. back to you. ainsley: thank you, rich. brian: question is now the uranium means say staying in the deal will stay in the deal. now they are vialing the deal. what leverage, what reasoning do the europeans have now of stay not guilty deal? let's bring in newt gingrich, former speaker of the house, fox news contributor and author of the brand new book collusion host of newt's world podcast. newt, right now iran kinded of made a bad tactical move
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in my estimation now the europeans have no rationale for say not guilty deal because they have exceeded the parameters, right? >> yeah, although the european real reasoning is they want to do business is iran. a lot of big european companies have vision of multi-billion-dollar deals with iran. and they are desperate to maintain some kind of relationship. so, i am not sure you can do anything to the europeans bad enough to get them to change their pro-iranian posture as long as they think there is profit there. the problem for the iranians and we have seen this now with the attaches on tankers. we have seen it with an attack on an american drone. the sanctions are really biting. and month by month. their economy is getting worse. and people are getting more and more unhappy. and i think their lashing out desperately trying to somehow change the circumstance either by
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getting us to back off or frankly by getting us to attack them. i think they think that they could use nationalism, defend the homeland against the americans and i think president trump was very wise two weeks ago be calm, be patient, just continue to increase the pressure economically and i think they are very close to breaking. i think this is a very, very shaky regime. griff: newt, hold on one second though. you say they are close to he can brag. clearly iran made it clear they are going to keep with the provocations. they have got the strait of hormuz. the world's most important passageway. and i don't think the president or the administration anticipates that they won't see more provocations. how do they respond? >> well, i think there may be more provocations. the first thing i hope the administration will do and the president has mentioned this is say to the chinese and the indians and the japanese what are you going to do since you are the countries that need the soil in remember, we are now energy independent? thanks to president trump's policies. we actually export energy.
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so, the straits of hormuz are not a crisis for us. they are a crisis for china, india and japan. one level may well be the chinese bring pressure to bear on the iranians because the chinese really would have a huge problem if the straits were cut off. ainsley: if we pull out of the deal, these other countries aren't getting upset with iran. know they are dependent on oil. it's up to them to pressure on iran not us. because we are out of the deal. why is america upset. why are they upset when america pulled out of the deal? isn't it up to the other countries? they need to push back on iran that are still in this deal with them? >> yes. you know, look. i think the president i suspect he had this conversation at the g-20. he needs to remind the chinese the japanese and the indians they need to put pressure on the iranian government. they're the last hope that iran has and they are much more important to iran in the long run than europe is.
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so i think if the iranians really go crazy, we obviously will respond militarily and we can obviously respond with enormous power. but i think as long as they are just being irritants, we are better off to keep increasing the sanctions economically and keep squeezing down the iranian dictatorship. brian: absolutely. at the very least they are not financing the terror organizations wreaking havoc throughout the middle east. before we switch to illegal immigration here which is a white hot topic. talk about north korea. among the people complimenting the president for daring move going to the dmz and crossing into north korea is david ignatius in the "the washington post" today. trump wisely seemed to have accepted that denuclearization won't be immediate disarmament but a gradual monitoring process. he said sunday speed is not the object we want to do progressive good deal. brought up the personal factor and diplomacy. china may have been ready for opening in 1972.
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took nixon to go to beijing. egypt might have been primed. jimmy cart tore negotiate camp david's accord. could this be one of the moments? >> yeah, i thought it was very telling. calista and i had been at the dmz a couple months ago and thinking back to that experience, i thought it was very clever of trump to say why don't -- to do a sort of semi spontaneously. why don't we get together? oh, don't you invite me into north korea. they walk in 10 or 20 steps. turn around get a nice photo op. walk back in to south korea and spend an hour negotiating in a building exactly technically in south korea. what it communicated was that we are allowing north korea to begin to be a normal country in terms of relating to it without having dropped a single sanction. remember, trump didn't give them anything in terms of economic sanctions. he gave them a nice photo op., had a nice
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conversation. they are now reopening the negotiations. and apparently they have upgraded it on their side. i just saw a story this morning where secretary pompeo indicated he thought that the new north korean negotiating team would have more authority and be more responsible. brian: might have killed the old one. the problem is he might have killed the old ones. griff: newt, let me turn topics because i was covering that 2020 debate in miami. we had a moment. you may have seen it. they asked the candidates raise their hand healthcare to undocumented immigrants. 11 million undocumented immigrants. we now have a new poll out on whether the government should provide health insurance to illegal immigrants. it's a cnn poll. 38% say yes. 59% say no. 3% no opinion. what say you? >> i think it's crazy and i think people think it through, if you say to the entire planet if you get sick and sneak in to the u.s., we will provide you free healthcare. we are asking for an
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unending flow. brian: yep. >> people coming here to get healthcare. at a time when there are a lot of americans who have a hard time paying for their healthcare, there is something infuriating about a democratic party which has decided to cares more for people who break the law. that's what we're talking about. people who break the law coming into the u.s. democrats care more about them than it cares about taking care of people who need help here in the united states. i think it's pretty crazy. but it fits everything else we are seeing. it doesn't matter in the end hot democrats are going to nominate. it's going to be essentially the same ideologically left wing person. totally out of touch with the average american. brian: what happened? we had chuck schumer talking about the outrage. we had bill clinton building a wall. harry reid talked about the idiocy of chain migration. the illogic of it. was this a tack kick call move by democrats? did they think they were wrong when they were strong at the border? >> i think what's happened
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is that the left wing of the democratic party now defines the democratic party. the left wing is made up of people who want open borders. flood people. want to fundamentally change america. these are the people who believe that americans come last not first. so, these are the kind of folks who, i was pretty outraged when you got a left wing. [coughing] >> excuse me, when you have a left wing democrat who goes to the border attacks the people who are trying to protect us. brian: aoc? >> well, the democrats fail to solve the problem. fail to fix the law. and now we have a huge mess. but that mess belongs to the democrats in congress not to the border patrol trying to do its job. brian: she refused to -- she did not vote for the humanitarian aid at the border. but she decries the humanitarian conditions at the border. make sense of that.
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>> you can't. i think it's total hypocrisy. i think it's frankly disgusting. and i think it's support of a general anti-americanism that runs through that wing of the democratic party. griff: newt, you have this job. how does speaker pelosi now try and reign in members like aoc who are clearly taking politics to a whole another level because it sun denial now, even by democrats' account that we are in a full blown crisis at the border. and now you have a handful of members given to the left wing progressive ideas that is really making this a lot worse than it is. how does speaker pelosi reign this in? >> well, she does exactly what she just did. she caves to the senate majority leader. i mean, mitch mcconnell won 100 percent to zero in the struggle over passing the humanitarian bill. and she had no choice because her left wing wouldn't do anything rationale and her moderates are now are beginning to
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realize they are going to get beat next year if they kept hanging around with left wingers. the only thing she could do is side with the house republicans so kevin mccarthy and mitch mcconnell defined the bill. nancy pelosi was basically left with no choice. that's going to happen over and over for the next two years. brian: i'm hopeful that lindsey graham and nancy pelosi work something out. they spoke for an an hour over the weekend. lindsey graham needs four and so we deed need four asylum fixes. not political. maybe something could get done. ainsley, i don't think this issue works for democrats. ainsley: i don't think they are going to come together. we haven't seen that happen yet. brian: i'm hopeful. ainsley: i think both you and i need some water, newt. let you go. have a great day. jillian: everyone is getting choked up over here. brian: i do that to people. jillian: yes, you do, brian. it's all your fault. start off with this load line we are following right now. white house hopeful cory booker unveils sweeping plan
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to overhaul our immigration system. the 2020 democrat just releasing his plan promising executive order that he says will, quote: virtually eliminate immigration detention. the new jersey senator vowing to support sanctuary cities while decriminalizing illegal border crossings. booker vowing to end travel restrictions president trump imposed on certain muslim majority nations. well, do you remember when then presidential candidate donald trump said this about former army sergeant bowe bergdahl? >> he was a traitor and he should be dealt with accordingly. jillian: now a military appeals court is deciding whether the president's traitor comments tainted the case enough to drop bergdahl's conviction. he pleaded guilty to deserting and endangering his fellow troops after leaving his post in afghanistan in 2009. bergdahl was imprisoned by the taliban and sent back to the states in exchange for terror detainees. now to a fox news alert. just moments ago nsa trying out the emergency response
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on a new rocket in cape canaveral. >> 2, 1, ignition. explosion] jillian: the mission called assent aboard two tested the or i don't know space craft in case of emergency. pull engines. after the system performed the test and separated the orion capsule fell into the ocean. how about this? nike reportedly pulling these betsy ross inspired sneakers for july 4th after complaints from collin kaepernick. the "wall street journal" says the former 49ers q.b. claimed the flag was offensive sings it has connections to slavery. nike says it dropped the shoe because it featured an old version of the flag. kaepernick known for his national anthem protest was a face of nikey's just do it campaign last year. brian: i cannot believe they are kowtowing to a guy who has been out of football for three years.
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jillian: i would think they knew that was an old version of the flag why now an epiphany. griff: that's a good-looking shoe. jillian: i would love that shoe. griff: that would be a shot shoe. people people people know there is no 50 states without the 13 cyclones? do people understand that? does he understand that? unbelievable? i mean, i cannot believe that nike thinks this is a good move. they are putting all the money to put tout, advertise it. now paying all the money to pull it up because one washed up quarterback says it's insulting. ainsley: their stock went up when he supported nike when he said that about nike before. they want stocks to go up again. griff: we need to talk about that. ainsley: friends of murdered utah college student, they are speaking out and firing back at people trying to blame her. >> he was, in my opinion, hunting for women. there is a lot of people who say she deserved this because she put herself in this situation.
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ainsley: does social media really make you a target? a forensic psychologist coming up next. my digestive system used to make me feel sluggish but now, i take metamucil every day. it traps and removes the waste that weighs me down, so i feel lighter. try metamucil, and begin to feel what lighter feels like. too many people a restless night's sleep. there's a better choice. aleve pm. the only one to combine a safe sleep aid and the 12-hour pain-relieving strength of aleve. that dares to last into the morning. so you feel refreshed. aleve pm. there's a better choice.
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♪ >> he was in my opinion hunting for women. no person, regardless of their gender or dating life deserves to die. mackenzie is not responsible for the death and murder of mackenzie. there is only one person responsible for that. and we are here to hold him responsible and we are going to keep holding him responsible. ainsley: friends of murdered utah college student mackenzie lueck speaking out fox news exclusive attention now turning to the new risks involved with social media and online dating platforms. here to weigh in police and forensic psychologist and author of the upcoming book "evil thoughts, wicked deeds" chris. > >> good morning. ainsley: you can't victim shame and blame her for this guy's evil-doings? what do you stay in. >> her friends are absolutely correct. there is no part of this that is assignable to her.
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the guy, the offender, he is the one that is responsible. she is living her life. she has a right to do that. we have got over 2 billion people worldwide that are using social media, the internet and unfortunately, wherever people are, that's where offenders go to find their victims. that's what this guy was doing. he was using these applications to -- these apps to hunt for victims. exactly like what her friends were saying. ainsley: this case is so crazy and young ladies need to pay attention to this make sure they are doing things in a safe manner and take friends with them and not someone at a park at 3:00 a.m. this is so bizarre. he wrote a murder mystery or murder novel and talking about burning people, a tire wrapped around someone and it was on fire. burying girls alive. and then a handyman in utah says that he was asked to build a secret soundproof room in his basement with strange hooks on the wall
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4 feet by feet long. does this show that this guy was hunting for women and he did have a plan? >> there's no doubt about it. if all of these facts are true. this is a very organized offender who was operating off of a variety of sadistic fantasies. this was not something that just all of a sudden happened because of an argument. he was out there with a criminal presence of mind organized hunting, looking for the ideal victim and that's what his thing was. and the internet provides an ideal opportunity for an offender like this to, you know, massively increase his ability to hunt for people it. takes him from having to put himself into a community in realtime and expands his universe of potential victims, you know, astronomically. we have one more minute. what are your thoughts about this case? >> i think it's a sad, tragic case. i think we need to focus the attention where it needs to
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be which is this man's responsibility for what happened. and the lessons that we can learn about basic, you know, social media safety procedures. that's not to say one bit of this is mackenzie's fault. but there are lessons to be extracted about the same safety things you talked about. having a buddy system. being mindful of where you are going. those kinds of things. ainsley: yeah. keep this in mind young girls if you are watching. this thank you so much, chris. even his wife said she will testify against him in court. >> thank you. ainsley: alexandria ocasio-cortez making shocking claims after visiting a migrant holding center down in texas. >> there is abuse at these facilities. this is them on their best behavior and they put them in rooms with no running water. >> former acting ice director ronald vietello says she is the one in the wrong. he is here to explain coming up next.
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♪ ♪ ainsley: time now for news by the numbers. first, at least three. that is how many top staffs are leaving john hickenlooper's campaign. his campaign manager, national finance director and top spokesperson all bowing out. polling below 1% in most national polls. 1189 how many families are getting their medical bills paid off thanks to a michigan church. the community raised nearly $2 million through donations and nonprofits. and finally $218. that's how much a nsa intern paid for more than 1,000 tapes of the apollo 11 landing including this one of neil armstrong setting foot on the moon. they could get $2 million at auction. griff?
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brian? griff: thanks, ainsley. aoc verses cbp. tearing into border agents after touring a holding facility for migrants. >> these women were being told by cbp officers to drink out of the toilet. they were drinking water out of the toilet. that was them knowing a congressional visit was coming. that was -- this is cbp on best behavior. brian: ron vitiello also served as cbp acting deputy commissioner. he joins us now to act. do you tell the people you work with or supervise you tell to you give people toilet water. >> no. that's not how these fillings are designed. that's not what our people are trained to do. those facilities are very well scripted in the sense of people get regulated coming in, coming out. how often they get fed. the temperature inside the cell. the cleaning, all of that stuff is regulated very highly by the men and women of cbp. griff: ron, these facilities are not intended for long-term.
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they are not made to hold people. yet, in poolsz wher el paso whec was 2,000% increase. are people losing sight of what the agents are trying to deal with. >> here is the problem. these facilities are built for the book in procedure. in the facility for a couple of hours. agencies can get fingerprints, identify who they are place them under daca control in place of families eventually released. they are being overwhelmed. there are tens of thousands of people coming to the border all week long and there is only so much floor space. there is only so much computer time that agents have to get people through the process. brian: ron, the thing about you guys is you ask us to come down. you want to show us what you are dealing with on a regular basis. we want you to see this. we are overwhelmed and congress isn't responding. they went up to july 1st without any aid. the funding was going to fall off a cliff unless there was a last second deal. humanitarian aid. >> all the delays for that funding caused delays and
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backlogs at the cdc facilities. hhs has to be equipped to take the kids into shelter care. brian: there is 51,000 of those kids since november. >> that's right. >> unaccompanied minors. hhs has the responsibility of taking care of those children. get them placed in society. cbp and ice have to have facilities to move people through their space. so that supplemental funding will add floor space and computers and add humanitarian aid for the situation. but if congress doesn't act and close these loopholes, we will be back in the same place this time next year. griff: i have spent so much time with the border patrol down there on the border in mexico and honduras and guatemala. you know, when aoc says a woman told her that she was made -- told to drink from the toilet, have you ever had an instance like that? do you recall ever hearing about a situation like that? >> these stories come out all the time. one of the stories is about how cold these facilities are but no one ever talks about how cold they are. why the temperature is regulated.
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these are forced air facilities. it's airconditioning. the air needs to flow through. the agents have to be comfortable and people in custody have to be comfortable and cared for. how cold is it in a facility like that. the average temperature is 70 degrees. that's not cold for you and me but if you come out of the dessert and overheated then that makes you feel cold. griff: temperature aside, you never saw any migrant drink out of the toilet. >> i have never seen anything like that. she was there for three minutes and now expert on what this facility looks like. how about the people who have been there years and years and years and overwhelmed by the system and loopholes forcing people and enticing people to come to the border with these children. brian: she comes out and says border patrol is laughing behind her back. she also said she felt physically threatened by border patrol agents when she walked through. she felt her security was threatened. and then she also said with the migrant just told her about the toilet water. now it looks like border patrol is enemy number one, especially when you talk about that facebook story where some inappropriate things were reportedly said on facebook among agents. >> this is an unfortunate
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distraction. the facebook post. this site, it needs to be investigated. i saw the statements made by cbp office of professional responsibility are looking into that people need to be held to account for what they say in public. that doesn't change the crisis what's going on in texas, el paso, in arizona in the huma valley. they still have a huge problem over there this distraction is a distraction. what's happening on the ground needs to be fixed. i have seen this administration do more than any previous government that i have worked for. any administration that i have worked for. i have seen them do more. you see unprecedented support for mexico which we hope is sustained and continued. brian: is it working. >> they have seen a deduction. june is a time when traffic starts to fall off in the summer. we will see. they have to sustain that and continue to do it. and iterate their deployment so they can get smarter than the smugglers. griff: mexico has deported more than 15,000 illegal aliens would have been crossing over. that is clearly a plus. >> from where i sit, i have seen them do more than they ever have before.
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what needs to remain is their continued sustainability of that operation to reduce the flow at their southern border and through their country. brian: somehow we have to leverage to make sure do that they tend to lose interest after a while. >> right. this president moved them. the threat of tariffs made them do what they have never done before. brian: there is a crisis at the border. now even democrats reveal it. they want to blame the border patrol for it. it's unfortunate because, to me, they the least to blame. >> i agree. no one does more than cbp and border patrol. griff: this hurts morale it? >> does. instead of focusing on the crisis and fixing it. brian: thanks, ron. griff: he can't kneel on the sidelines anymore. colin kaepernick still has a problem with our flag. nike just pulled this patriotic sneaker you see it right there because he complained. jason chaffetz is fired up. he's on deck. ♪ ♪
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♪ brian: hear about this nike reportedly pulling plans to release this american flag sneaker already in the stores by the way. supposed to be there july 4th. ainsley: according to the "wall street journal" nike nixed the betsy ross shoe after nike complained about it being offensive. griff: jason chaffetz joins us now to react. we were talking off camera. you are not happy about this. betsy ross? come on. that's about as american as it gets. shame on nike. colin kaepernick how is he still calling the shots? i just don't understand how -- this is purely american. and i'm tired of these guys coming up and saying that they essentially hate america. that's what they are saying. ainsley: nike spokeswoman said this: nike has chosen not to release the air max one quick strike fourth of july as it featured the old version of the american flag. are you buying it? >> i'm not buying any of
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that i mean, what's going on in this country? you had that segment earlier about the flag in north carolina. you have nike taking their stuff down. i went to under armor i went to brooks running and i went to champion and looked at their websites. they are all promoting shoes that have the red, white, and blue. they are proud american except nike. go look at their website. nothing to do with america and now they are taking down these shoes? brian: why aren't you upset with our flag now 13 stripes on it to represent the 13 cyclones. 13 colonies: no one is happy about the original sin slavery. part of the american story which we all embrace. governor doug ducey heard this and he is governor of arizona. they were about to open up a plant in arizona. ainsley: a nike plant. he tweeted this out. today was supposed to be a good day in arizona with the announcement of a major nike in good year, arizona. nike has made its decision and now we are making ours. i have ordered the arizona commerce authority to
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withdrawal all financial incentive dollars under their discretion that the company was providing for the company to locate here. arizona was doing fine without nike. we don't need to suck up to companies that consciously denigrate our nation's history. >> oh, yeah. doug ducey the governor of arizona taking a tough stance. why should they get financial incentives which essentially the people of arizona taking taxpayer dollars out of their pockets at the same time they are going to attack the flag. colin kaepernick there is a resolution in this. can you go play in the canadian football league if you hate america so much. so go after betsy ross is so wrong. it is just anesthetic call to where we are as a country. griff: you are fired up. you should write about this. you have a book coming out on something else. >> yes. i was in congress 8 and a half years. i wrote this book. took the better part of last year power grab, everything nancy pelosi and the democrats are doing is about grabbing power. everything they do. everything they project and so if you want to see kind
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of behind the scenes what's happening, the presales on now. you can order in t. online ship december 3rd. power grab will show you and tell you stories that you have never heard and seen before. ainsley: are you suggesting they don't base vote based on what constituents want. >> i am saying there are tactics things they do utilizing not for profits and incentivize them to do some things. their bill about how to go after elections and whatnot. it's all about grabbing power. how they issue subpoenas to people that they know can never appear. how they ask for classified information they know can never be provided. it's all about painting a picture to try to demonize donald trump, take down the g.o.p. make them look like something they are not. and they are using these tactic that's learned about for 8 and a half years and i just exposed that. that's what power grab is all about. brian: july 17th, bob mueller comes to town. >> they know he can't talk about it. they know they will frame the question by saying -- they will ask him questions that they know that he can't
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answer thus trying to get this narrative continuing to go to say that the trump administration is stonewalling things. it is a tactic. but when you see it, when you read power grab and you go through you say oh, now i recognize it and understand what the democrats are really doing. griff: will that backfire on democrats by the way? because when mueller is asked about strzok and page and the dirty dossier origins, he can talk about that. > >> he allows people like jim jordan and john ratcliffe to go after him how come you didn't look at this? how come you didn't look at the bias? and so it will be a frenzy but it will go on for four hours. but, mueller is a reluctant witness at this point. the case has already been closed. brian: right. jason, thanks so much. are you on hannity again tonight. >> no, not tonight. headed back to utah. brian: good job last night. >> thank you. brian: jillian, you have the news, i think. jillian: stow away falls thousands of feet out of an
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airplane. the man's frozen body landed in backyard in london feet away from where someone was sunbathing. found a bag food and clothes inside the kenya airways plane. the flight from africa to london was nearly nine hours long. look at this, a dad's drone spots a shark swimming towards his kids dan watson immediately telling his wife go get them out of the water. >> i was like get out, get out, get out. i didn't know why. he immediately brings the drone to me and he shows me the frame in the drone and you see that shark swimming right at our kids. it was terrifying. >> yes the close encounter happening off new smyrna beach in florida. thankfully nobody was hurt. do you remember this iconic scene from dirty dancing? ♪ i've had the time of my life ♪ jillian: pretty much all of us wanted to relive that at some point, right? here's why you shouldn't.
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[yeah a bride protesting this video online of the father dropping the flower girl on the ground at her wedding in texas. can you see her give a thumbs up when she realizes everything is okay. look at headlines, go outside to adam klotz. good morning, adam. >> a guy who would never drop the flower girl, trustworthy hands here good looking forecast across the country. everybody give me a woo! [cheers] adam: i don't know what i was going to have them say. woo is good. pretty steamy out here already. temperatures hovering in the lower 70's. humidity is there temperatures in the middle of the country going to be hot the next couple of days. here are your highs for today getting up into the mid, the lower 90's. if you add in that feels like temperature, that's the humidity that you are walking through and gets sticky. the air is really heavy. it's going to feel a lot
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hotter. temperatures getting up closer to triple digits in a whole lot of spots. run from tuesday into wednesday. eventually into thursday. you see a lot of that heat spreading along the east coast. spots will be getting up close to triple digits in the nation's capital on the fourth of july. now, i think you guys are outside here, too. as we are going to be cooling off with some drinks. toss it over to you and coming over there myself. brian: come on over. we are ready for you. independence day a couple days away. just around the corner. best patriotic drinks to help you celebrate the red, white, and blue. ainsley: she always does a great job. here is lifestyle expert barbara majewski this is for the adults. brian: make our lifestyle better. >> we will make the party so great. i started with a daiquiri. how fun is a nice cool daiquiri. put a little whipped cream. what i'm suggesting for everyone this holiday season is to use american products. i pulled this rum right out of kate may county. it's delicious. team u.s.a. ainsley: what do you call this.
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>> this is a federal paradise. >> make their own liquor. >> right? a little cherry. delicious. right? and another one you want to drink it? go ahead. brian: who wants a drink? >> it's good for you. it's good for you. a little adult juice. this is a layered cocktail. what everybody loves doing is they like seeing the red, the blue, and the white. can you see it in certain lights. i have a little trick to this. i already put the gree green gre heaviest. put these applicator bottles pouring in and layers it and slow it down. really great add the vodka. and i use state side vodka because it's distilled and bottled out of philadelphia. the birthplace of our constitution. brian: you want new bottles you?
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don't want used bottles. >> exactly. layer it all out. the crowd loves it. it's going to be great. the hydration station for the kids. a little bit of red. ally with the of blue and love a mason jar. less waste and the kids love it. dilute with more ice and less sugar. bottle keeper i know they look like water bottles if you twist it off. put your beer in here and go to the beach. a good time had by all. summer school? >> for summer school. okay. you said it, not me. and how much some snacks? red, white and blue snacks? how delicious are these. some pretzels, twizzers look it's an american flag, team u.s.a. and then we have got the fire cracker popcorn. try that out. it's really good. i mean it's good for you. if you are going to. >> buy it like that. >> melt the little chocolate melts over the popcorn and you sprinkle it in there let
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hots in there. everyone is going to love it. >> tastes so good and sweet. just remind you keep in mind you are getting drunk. there is a lot of liquor in it that you don't understand there is liquor in it. >> these drinks? >> yes. >> i would pour these shots over ice and add maybe a little bit of ginger rail, club soda. a little spray. >> adults can go to the kids station as well. >> the kids can't come here but adults free reign do whatever they want. brian: how many people wants drinks over there. >> there we go. thanks very much. griff: coming up. journalist attacked by antifa and no cops in sight. how does this happen? andy gno's lawyer joins us rive. that's coming up. enjoying freshly squeezed orange juice. now no fruit is forbidden. nexium 24hr stops acid before it starts for all-day, all-night protection.
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>> good morning to you. welcome back. quick sports headlines now. the u.s. women's national team will take on england in the world cup today. the teams facing off in the toirmt's final four at 3:00 eastern time on fox. if u.s.a. wins, they will face off against either sweden or the netherlands for the championship. get it done, girls. a teenager shocks the world at wimbledon. how about this 15-year-old cocoa gauf meeting her idol in a major upset. [cheers] standing ovation. >> isn't that incredible. gauf youngest person to win a match in the british tournament since 1991. ainsley? ainsley: that's her idol, too. brian: wild card entry and wins. >> her dad was excited.
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a reporter brutally attacked by antifa just steps from a portland courthouse. now he is speaking out describing the assault where no help he says ever arrived. listen. >> i kept thinking where are the police? i could still see the justice center in front of me but no police ever arrived. i eventually stumbled away bleeding. griff: ngo asking the public to identify his attackers as he suffered bleeding in his brain? can he sue the city for failing to protect him? will he even have a case? brian: harmeet dhillon is andy ngo's attorney. >> will couple people attacked the police. the multiple people attacked andy as well as two other gentlemen who have been seen on video yet as of saturday
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still have not been apprehended. that's disturbing. law enforcement is aware of the names of those people, at least some of them. ainsley: my question is who is responsible for getting law enforcement out there? if there is an antifa protest, they get so violent. police need to be there. who is responsible for making sure they are there? is that the sheriff or the police chief or is it the mayor? who should -- who should line that up? >> well, the police chief is for actually designing the plan and providing where the police are. the mayor and the city leadership ultimately give the instructions to the authorities as to where they are supposed to go. now, the situation on the ground in portland and policing is so bad that the sheriffs of the adjoining counties have refused to send mutual aid to portland because they don't want their own officers to be assaulted. portland has consistently under staffed these types of incidents. there have been many incidents. not the first incident. they knew they were aware that this was going to happen. and they did nothing to prevent it.
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griff: harmeet, the hollered mayor is breaking his silence. he said over the weekend some chose to engage in violence in portland unacceptable. won't be tolerated. we stand against all forms of violence regardless of someone's political leanings. we will do everything we can to make sure that those who have committed violence are held accountable. is it your intention to include the mayor in your lawsuit. >> his words are empty platitudes ratio on that tweet represents the fact that nobody is buying it. and, you know, even liberal first amendment lawyers are very upset about this. journalists should not be attacked despite of their political persuasion. and portlandens antif portland's wild. concern antifa will target them. this cannot go on in america. and i do intend to hold the city government and potentially the mayor libel to the fullest extent to the
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law. there are precedents that help me. it's uphill battle but we are putting together a legal fund to sue everybody responsible for these attacks. brian: you wilyou are going to e everybody. >> i will support everybody who the law supports i mean everybody. ainsley: are there laws gone before this that set a precedent. >> there are laws precedent protect police authorities. i myself have sued the city of san jose for violating the right of trump supporters in 2016. that case was allowed to proceed where the police allegedly created a dangerous condition. one would argue that here as andy told viewers of fox last night on tucker's show that you showed, the police actually asked him to cross into the mob to get to an ambulance to get to safety. they did not provide the type of medic support that was required either. they put him in further danger. and other people as well.
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and they weren't -- you know, it was designed so poorly that people were assaulted and that is a violation of the law. griff: all right. harmeet. thank you for joining us. we look forward to it. we hope your client is doing better today. >> thank you very much. i will let him know. griff: alexandria ocasio-cortez making shocking claims after visiting a holding center in texas. the cbp commissioner here to react next. brian: also coming up if we can name-drop a little bit. kellyanne conway, toirm lehner and karl rove. do you know who is who? play that game at home ♪ only in america ♪
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brian: yet to see ronnie atkinson on the summer concert series. >> this song so so popular. he is so good. brian: he was on two weeks ago. i reached my goal. griff: i like to see american flag on pair of sneakers. ainsley: only going to see that on the picture. they pulled it. brian: talk about the other major story. first time in a long time, democrats went to the border. they want to make this border story. first it was manufactured crisis, that the president made into win the midterm elections. then he talked about the caravans, they were made to be bigger than they were and tried to disproportionately show what happened at our border. there was a battle for the actual wall. along the way anyone that went to the border they said it was crisis. if you talk to border patrol, they said they were over welled. congresswoman alexandria ocasio-cortez went to the border. what she say is creating
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headlines. >> this is what she said. >> there is abuse in the facilities there is abuse. this is them on their best behavior? they put them in rooms with no running water. and, these women were being told by cpb officers to drink out of the toilet. they were drinking water out of the toilet. and that was them knowing a congressional visit was coming. this is cpb on their best behavior, telling people to drink out of the toilet. >> did you see somebody actually do that? >> i mean in that last facility i was not safe. some -- from the officers in that facility. brian: she said they were drinking toilet water and she felt threatened by them. griff: we reached out to the deputy commissioner robert perez. we'll put question to you. is anyone dripping from toilets in the facilities?
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>> thanks for having me this morning. griff, i can tell you with the utmost confidence, anyone and everyone in our custody at all of our facilities have ready access to fresh water. they have access to consumables. the standards that we apply to make sure that on a recurring and very timed basis, that not only they have access to the types of consumables and fresh water they would need, in between if they make those requests, our agents and officers at the ready to provide those types of requests to them. and, i have never heard in 26 years of being in this business ever heard of that type of allegation being made. nevertheless i think i have to emphasize to you, griff, just like any other allegation of misconduct, if there is an allegation made of some sort of misconduct made by one of our agents or officers, we take those allegations very, very
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seriously. and so we report those allegations to our office of professional responsibility. our dhs office of inspector general, to run the facts to ground. so if there is anything factual to any of these types of allegations we will get to the truth of it and hold people to account. i have never heard anything like that before. ainsley: it was really bothersome especially as female, she walks away from the group, witnesses told "washington examiner," goes over starts talking to the a family. the family tells her this is psychological warfare and, that you guys are interrupting their sleep for no reason. called them names, names i can't say on tv. aoc says she was walking through and some of the officers were laughing, having conversation looked like they were laughing at her. is there truth to this? she talked about upset at a secret facebook group where border agents are saying
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inappropriate things about her, putting up caricatures of her, graphic, vulgar jokes is that happening? if that is happening what will happen to the folks that are doing all this? >> thanks for the questioning. there are a couple things. first let me start with the facts we've been speaking of regarding the crisis, overwhelming nature of that crisis vis-a-vis facilities we're holding migrants in. these are facilities that were never designed to hold migrants for the duration we had to hold them, numbers at time, 2, 3, 400% beyond capacity. we've been speaking to the crisis for better part of 18 months, highlighting the legal framework need to be changed and resouths we need to get people out of our custody as quickly as possible. the other point that you made, the question you asked regarding the facebook page, that speaks to what i was mentioning before. we have very clear standards of conduct in cbp.
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we also have very clear policies with respect to social media. these are policies that are long-standing. the social media policy was just put out last year. this is standards of conduct have been in effect for decades, refreshed more than half a dozen years ago. these are standards very well-known amongst the agents and officers. we do not tolerate any type of misconduct of this nature. we will first have to investigate the allegations, get to the bottom of the facts. if we find factually there is misconduct, people will be held to account. brian: robert. brian: right now, for the most part, can you give me a percentage how overwhelmed even of your facilities are with illegal immigrants? >> look, brian -- brian: 20%, 50%, 40%? >> i didn't check the numbers before i came here to speak with you, brian, but i can tell you across the board we're still well over 11,000 people in custody. what that means we consider being overcustody anything over
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4,000, okay? that is already a crisis. we are still holding and having over 11,000 people in custody. look, there is one other point i have to emphasize here. brian: i will stop you one second. if i put, if four seasons can hold four thousand and i put 11,000 in the four seasons hotel, they complain about the sanitation, they complain about the food, they complain about the accomodations because it is not equipped to handle it. all you have done for the past year-and-a-half is ask for more help, all congress has done is nothing until july 1st. then they will come down condemn you for the facilities and accomodations. you can't win! >> thank you, brian, on our own we got the supplemental, we're frankly glad we did, we built additional soft-sided facilities in the rgv sector and el paso as well, to again deal with that very overcrowded and the point i
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wanted to make is this, despite allegations of misconduct getting a lot of attention right now, we take very seriously, this is not representative of the 60,000 men and women of this agency. this agency prides itself on its professionalism, on its vigilance, on its integrity. the acts and potential misconduct of a few is not indicative of the over and above professionalism being put forth by our front line agents and officers all our employees every day to deal with this crisis, to do their job every day. griff: commissioner you and i talk a fair amount about this. let's walk this out. court occur, her ultimately 535 members, got together, change the asylum laws, would that alleviate the unprecedented crisis of family units showing up have to be put in these centers? >> unquestionably so, griff.
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we've spoken about it before. i have spoken about it on this network dozens of times in the last year, year-and-a-half. what it is essentially what is the bill that, i believe up on the hill right now that our acting secretary spoken to as well, testified on, just a few weeks ago, the legal framework and loopholes that we need fixed. the flores agreement to be able to keep families together through an expedited asylum hearing so that claim could be adjudicated. we need the trafficking victims protection act so unaccompanied children can be repatriate trod non-contiguous countries, and we need the asylum laws changed to change the threshold as people arriving. alien smuggling organizations are exploiting loopholes, have been now for better part of two years. until those legal changes are made, that network of illicit human smuggling is going to continue. one other point i will tell you, look, we've been, as transparent
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as you can imagine and or have as far as any law enforcement agency is concerned. we have inviting, have been for months, congressional delegations to our facilities with pleasure so they can see themselves what it is we've been dealing with. we have never heard anything until like what came out of that last visit than any other visits we had. brian: why is that? why do we get this response? why do you get this response? >> brian i'm stating the facts to you. brian: i will say this, that person said that also denied humanitarian aid to your facility. if she had her way you would not be getting $4.3 billion. >> well, look, brian, again i'm here to share with you the facts and the facts are nearly every week for the last six to 12 months we've had congressional delegations come through our facilities we want them there. we want them to see what it is
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that we've been dealing with this crisis, so they can be better informed. ainsley: what reaction when you have 14 democrats from the house that come through, that voted down to give you guys money, have constantly gone on television, media outlets, bashing you guys, saying that they want to abolish i.c.e.? you have all these, 14 democrat coming down there, what did you expect was going to happen? i'm glad you opened your doors was going to happen, but what did you expect? >> well, ainsley, tell you what i expect of our agents and officers, and that is, that we will conduct ourselves with the utmost professionalism and share the facts of what it is we're dealing with with this crisis. again look we have as transparent as you will find any law enforcement agency can be. we welcome the opportunity with anyone, and everyone to educate them on what it is this crisis is all about and what we believe the fixes are to, that have to be followed through in order to
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postively impact and end this crisis. so what i can speak to, share with you all folks, our expectations on ourselves. frankly it begins with me. that is we will always conduct ourselves with the utmost professionalism, state and share the facts on the ground, and make sure that we exemplify our core values of vigilance, security, integrity every day. ainsley: thank you, robert. griff: appreciate you taking time to come on. ainsley: sort this out. continuing to investigate that family, that family aoc was talking to, asked them if that is really happening, find out who is responsible. brian: it's a shame. we're so frustrated with congress, that our homeland security secretary is visiting other countries like el salvador and guatemala to get them to control the country and president has to use leverage against mexico because we can't
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control our own border. griff: amidst a crisis that was already bad. this is definitely not helping agents that reach out to me. brian: makes them the bad guys. ainsley: put people before politics, please. jillian has headlines. we begin with fox news alert. a isis inspired terror plot on churches and government buildings. three people are under arrest in new zealand and australia. they did not have guns or explosives. they met each other online. pitcher skyler skaggs is found dead. he was found unresponsive. his cause of death is unknown. the team posting online, tyler has, always will be part of the angel family. skaggs grew up an angel fan and
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was living his dream. fans making a memorial outside of angel stadium. >> so hard to hear that he passed. all fans are family to them. sad to see him go. jillian: he leaves behind his wife of seven months. fate of navy seal eddie gallagher lies in the hands after jury. they must decide whether he is guilty of war crimes including murdering a isis prisoner. he says he was subject of fixation by military prosecutors. that the prosecution's case has huge gypping holes. if convicted, gallagher could spend life in prison. dozens of girls chasing a bachelorette star through central park. there is a good reason for it. tyler cameron starting a running club in new york city, he encourages people to keep each other accountable. he is not just getting hearts racing. he is raising awareness for a children's charity. one runner sells the
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"new york post," all the girls are just sprinting after him. he is gorgeous. there you have it. ainsley: all for a good cause. he loved "the bachelor" so much. was he -- jillian: he is on the current season. ainsley: he is cute. griff: would you sprint after him? ainsley: no thanks. if i'm in central park i'm with my daughter on the playground. brian: colin kaepernick still has a problem with our flag. nike pulled a patriotic sneaker because he complain the. this is story everyone is talking about. tomi lahren is coming up. ♪ . my experience with usaa 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.
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hey! i live on my own now! i've got xfinity, because i like to live life in the fast lane. unlike my parents. you rambling about xfinity again? you're so cute when you get excited... anyways... i've got their app right here, i can troubleshoot. i can schedule a time for them to call me back, it's great! you have our number programmed in? ya i don't even know your phone anymore... excuse me?! what? i don't know your phone number. aw well. he doesn't know our phone number! you have our fax number, obviously... today's xfinity service. simple. easy. awesome. i'll pass. ♪ >> they know what they're doing. they know what they're playing with. i think they're playing with fire. brian: president trump reacting to the news that iran breached uranium stockpile limit, set under the 2015 nuclear deal. low-enriched uranium can be used in nuclear reactor, not in a bomb. this comes down two weeks after iran shot down a military drone. time for a show of force by the united states?
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in a new op-ed, our next guest says yeah. joining us syndicated columnist deroy murdoch. you're not saying naval attack but a naval ships. >> we need a teddy roosevelt style show of force. lead a naval convoy to escort ships through the straight of hormuz, gulf of oman that will provide a visual presence. we'll paint the iranians into a corner. if anything goes wrong, we have forces right there on the spot to respond if necessary. brian: european union was going to go around our currency in order to continue this deal, continue to finance the iranian government but now they have no grounds to continue in the deal. they flagrantly breached the uranium enrichment levels. this is bad move by iran all around? >> it is. i think we had no way of knowing ever or not ever they agreed to
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the deal to begin with. the deal says military facilities are off site, off base, they can't be inspected. why would anybody look for anything fishy on military base like nuclear weapons. walking into suspected bank robber's home, tell the police, look around for anything but safes or vaults. brian: they still have missile testing. they were allowed to still finance terror. because they were allowed no face-to-face inspections, maybe that is why not schumer, senator menendez, senator cardin didn't vote for the deal they never liked. >> correct. this deal was never signed. there is no signature by iranians on this deal. you wouldn't get a plumber contract without the plumber signing it correct? brian: right. >> the nuclear weapons deal was not signed. it was laughable from the beginning. it is vacated of the we need to put boats in the water, with navy japan and confront iranians that way with strong deterrent
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military force. brian: they're trying to hit our allies, create tension on house. here is what the house statement was last night confirmed by the iaea. maximum pressure on iranian regime will continue until its leaders alter the course of action. the regime must end its nuclear ambitions and maligned behavior. now, what would get their attention? now you know if there is iranian nuclear power that saudi arabia is poised to do the same exact thing. that would neutralize anything, and put the world on notice. >> it would. it would have more nuclear weapons in the middle east with iran and saudi arabia at each other's throats as it is. those two regimes hate each other's guts. having both with atomic weapons would be destablizing. rather have no weapons than both sides having atomic weapons. brian: you would have them escort ships? >> yes. brian: iran will hit allies or those of like mind. what are you expecting to happen next? what does that indicate to you
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the pressure on their economy? >> i suspect, i help hope the president does what i suggested. if not i think sanctions will continue. there is the precipice this regime is suffering. i hope there is an uprising on people in tehran and iran against the ayatollahs. they suffered enough under this regime. time for it to go on the ash heap of history. brian: they know itbe them and might be a better path. >> come to the table to negotiate their way out of this mess. brian: deroy, thank you very much. >> great to see you. brian: remember this moment from the democratic debate. >> raise your hand if your government plan would provide coverage for undocumented immigrants. [cheers and applause] brian: and the crowd roared. turns out most voters don't like that idea. karl rove sounds off next. that is carl's picture. ♪
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griff: welcome back. one of the most staggering moments from last week's debates. democratic hopefuls pushing their agenda on immigration and health care. >> raise your hand if your government plan would provie coverage for undocumented immigrants. [cheers and applause] okay. griff: they didn't ask voters because voters disagree. 59% say the government should not provide health care to illegal immigrants. karl rove was senior advisor and deputy chief of staff to president george w. bush. he joins us toe react. quite a moment, karl. what did you make of that? >> i made it we saw more evidence of the pandering for
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the presidential candidates for the far left of the democratic party. you're right, 38% said yes in a cnn poll. 59% said no. even on that stage, my sense was, that the democrats knew how out of line this was because they tried to soften it by saying, we're talking about health insurance, meaning that you will have to pay into that insurance program. well, that is not the way it works. it is like a gigantic magnet, come here, we will give you free health insurance. the idea that somehow or another somebody who comes here, comes across the border, is released while their asylum request is being deliberated somehow will get free health insurance paid for by the american taxpayers is just astonishing. griff: karl, what does it say, we're on the opening night, basically, we have 11 debates to go? more than 215 days to iowa caucuses, this is where we start? >> look this was not the only
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thing. we had a discussion about abortion. no limitations on abortion. let's repeal the long-standing bipartisan agreement we're not going to have, we're not going to use government funds for provision of abortion so we don't require a lot of people for whom that is morally objectionable to pay for abortions. we'll get rid of that. kamala harris did a flip on it, but virtually everybody up there gave lip service to "medicare for all" including the abolition of all private health insurance t was just sort of a left-wing nutty night. we're likely to see this get worse and worse. we'll see some people like bennett of colorado and hickenlooper of colorado and delaney of maryland, attempt to sort of add some realism into this we can't go for all this nut sy socialism. they were outbidding each other for the left on wednesday and thursday night. griff: clearly, the first debate
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showed there is no room for moderates. harris is up 8 percentage points on hers and biden dropped in a recent poll 10 points from 41 1/2% to 31 1/2%. what do you make of that? >> let's be a little bit careful. here is the rcp average are with the race stands today. biden at 29.9. that is down. he is down five points during june. we'll see if it continues during july. sanders is down, down a little bit. warren is up. that is the interesting one. her movement upwards began before the debates. it continued after the debates. harris, who in the "real clear politics" average gone from seven to 10 today. we'll see how much that continues up. and buttigieg down just a little bit, but relatively flat. robert francis o'rourke taken off the list. be careful about this, we have three data points since the debate. a cnn poll with joe biden at 22. we got a hill "harris poll"
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where he is at 33. we have "politico" morning cult which i'm a little dubious at 33. i want to be, i will bit premature that the debate itself had a huge impact. he was declining before the debate. he had a up bump up after he got in the race. down about five points in may. down about five points in june. we'll see if he stablizes somewhere in the high 20s. but if he is the front-runner, he is a very weak front-runner. you have basically four candidates or five candidates who have the potential to hit the 15% flesh hold that democrats require in order to get delegates. griff: will be fun to watch. i will be trusting one thing for sure as we follow it. your whiteboard. >> thank you, buddy. whiteboard appreciates it. griff: president trump makes history as the first president to cross into north korea. was this the breakthrough moment to make a deal on immigration. we'll ask kellyanne conway.
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i got goosebumps. i didn't see the segment. they showed the yellow sport one. ainsley: that was my favorite one. that everyone wanted that. griff: going on spring break vacation in high school, i just bought toto's new album, rain on africa with the walkman. ainsley: you had high-end one. i got the one from eckerd's drugstore. behind the register. it was like $20. brian: i don't know what is more uncool going on spring break with your parents or listening to toto. ainsley: when you get a cd, now you have to have a dvd player. or a cassette. put it right in there. they took that away even from our computers. brian: it's a shame. kellyanne conway never had a walkman. it was before her time. >> no, i had men walk men. my first cell phone was this big. ainsley: it was in a bag, right? >> it was indeed. i'm old enough to remember that.
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old enough to remember a time before texting, twitter. brian: it was 1953 we've basically never had peace with north korea. korean war never came to a close. we had armistice. the president put his neck out there, tweeting, kim jong-un, what if i come over? he said yes. it happens. listen to what senator chuck schumer said about the historic meeting. >> this is one of the worst few days in american foreign policy and american diplomatic history. >> why? >> in a long time. it is reality show foreign policy. he wants the photo-op. he wants the little hit. if anyone thinks this doesn't hurt america in the short term, long run, they are sadly mistaken. brian: kellyanne, worst weekend ever. >> well it wasn't. of course president trump was handed the nobel peace prize but president trump is on his way to earning one. that is because he has an obligation to at least meet with leaders and speak to other
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countries and try to bring peace where he can. really to reduce the nuclear capabilities while tank shuns continue. he made very clear, he made very clear to chairman kim himself, sanctions will continue on your country. look what could happen. economic development and prosperity for your own people, simply work with us to denuclearization of the korean peninsula. he has been very clear with the public and press every single time to see what is happening with conversations with chairman kim. he also said if it doesn't work out, it won't work out. he walked away what he thought was a bad deal, great negotiation businessmen and politicians in washington still don't understand. he walked away from the deal. people were shocked how can you walk away empty handed? this man is never in a rush to make a bad deal. chuck schumer, i prefer chuck schumer last week one of 33
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senate democrats to vote for the humanitarian aid package that the president signed in the oval office, $4.6 billion in humanitarian aid for something that chuck schumer and his sidekick nancy pelosi five short months earlier said was a manufactured crisis. i have a whole list here of anchors and people on tv and democrat who said it was manufactured crisis, who dropped word manufactured, are calling what they see at the border a crisis. chuck schumer wants to talk about photo-ops. i saw one yesterday, called, alexandria ocasio-cortez, going down to one much these facilities and making this outrage just claim that a woman is drinking from a toilet, everybody who has control over that facility, control for the border patrol says that is not true. they have not heard of this. when she was challenged by one of the few reporters who actually ever challenges her facts, she put the window up, don't let the air-conditioned up. she put the window up. people need to challenge this. she is one of 95 people,
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democrats who voted against the aid package. you want the humanitarian aid, 4.6 billion to go and help, you want the photo-op. chuck schumer will use the words, i will turn it around on 95 democrats in the house, who couldn't see their way for $4.6 billion in humanitarian aid that this president signed yesterday. great bipartisan effort. ainsley: talk about iran too. because the president sat down in that exclusive interview with tucker carlson, he had this to say about iran. gave them a stern, tough warning. listen. >> no message to iran. they know what they're doing. they know what they're playing with. i think they're playing with fire. so no message to iran whatsoever. ainsley: says no message, there is a message there. they're playing with fire. what does he mean by that. >> the broader message that the president hardly needs to append this week he has taken us out of the terrible iran nuclear deal. he has sanctions on iran. where is iran's economy? what is happening with them? so the message is very clear
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from this president, as compared to the lasted a administration that could not be more stark. he doesn't need to add to that message. he is watching iran. he also told your colleague tucker carlson, has told even chuck todd the week before and others people thought he would go to war with iran. he is going to have a disproportionate response. he got credit from unlikely corners for it not in fact attacking iran the way many said he would. he wanted that to be a proportionate response. so again, i think one thing that is often lost about this president, is how deliberative and patient he is. how he takes the information, the inputs from his professionals, and weighs the consequences and then he makes a decision. he has been incredibly patient and non-impulsive, really flying in the face of many people's irrational predictions about his leadership qualities. iran is latest example of that. brian: do you have any hope,
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have you heard anything, kellyanne, lindsey graham, conversation with nancy pelosi about easy asylum fixes? has that gotten back to the oval office, the president was overseas at the time? have you heard anything promising there? >> the president is fully read into the conversations. the fact that the conversations placed what is important. an hour on the phone with senator graham and speaker pelosi. the week before between vice president and speaker pelosi. you got the humanitarian aid package. three weeks before that vice president mike pence the lead at the negotiation table with mexico to get that done along with our secretary of state, dhs, white house council. that is how this should happen. people should have the positions in our government. you saw the vice president wants no credit ever, getting mexico to the table helping instead of tariffs. graham talking to pelosi. we need congress to step in, fix the asylum laws, tpbra.
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brian, yesterday is a great step forward. if they have come and put that bipartisan humanitarian aid package on the president's desk, they're breaking ranks with other democrats who are saying no, no win. abolish i.c.e., get rid of cpp. they're terrorists. don't give any aid. fixing asylum is next big step. president is ready. they can do that. griff: very quickly your dhs secretary kevin mcaleenan in el salvador. is the administration prepared or should anything come in terms of trying to stop the root cause of that northern triangle of honduras, el salvador, guatemala of overwhelming numbers coming? can we expect some movement, some sort of development there? >> that is clearly one of the ongoing goals. look what happened, when the president, vice president, secretary pompeo met with mexicans. they have been terrific. they have done more than the democrats. they have mexicans coming to
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agreement about their northern border, their southern border. helps us at our southern border. if we can help those northern triangle countries. help the people of the northern triangle countries understand what a treacherous, perillous journey is, no guarranty at the end of it, you're putting these children at risk, these women at risk, i challenged democrats, no one able to tell me, if you can tell me what happens to every man, woman, child comes on journey interior of country, are they all asafe, alive, not trafficked? this is great that our dhs acting secretary is there. we'll continue to talk to these countries. president said yesterday in the oval, come here legally. 33 million people that want to come, come here legally. ainsley: have a great day. >> thank you. brian: baseball world is morning the loss of angels pitcher, tyler skaggs. ainsley: the 27-year-old was found dead in his hotel room in texas. griff: we are live outside the
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park where the angels are expected to play tonight. brandon. reporter: good morning, guys. we're hoping to learn more details today about tyler skaggs death, specifically the cause of death. that is one of the elements we don't know now. south lake police here have already said they don't expect foul play in this case or suicide. his death comes as you mentioned, the angels were here in town to schedule a four-game series against the rangers. left-handed pitcher would have turned 28 on july 13th. he leaves behind a wife, who he married just seven months ago. found in south lake hotel yesterday where the team was staying. mlb commissioner extended his deep condolences to tyler's friends, fans, teammates, colleagues. fans we talked said skaggs will be missed. rangers front office reacted to the news. >> one of those moments, you're numb to life. this is something that we don't
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deal with on a daily basis or even, it actually happens far too often. i feel hey -- reporter: after the news broke, friends brought flowers and signs to angels stadium. some dropped off baseball hats. the electronic sign over the main entrance is now a memorial to tyler skaggs. of course the angels still reeling, really just in recent years from rookie pitcher, nick aiden heart, two others killed by a drunken driver, two hours after he pitched six shutout innings. this is something they're dealing with once again. skaggs was scheduled to pitch in thursday's game against the rangers. management said yesterday's game which was postponed will likely be scheduled at a later date. guys back to you. brian: brandon, thank you. 15 minutes before the top. hour. jillian you have other news
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we're following all morning. jillian: let's get you caught up with this story. a man who claims to be a victim of the sante fe high school shooting was never there he david briscoe was negative hired as substitute teacher like he told other media outlets. a man whose wife died that day, speaking out about the hoax. >> pretty despicable that somebody would go to that extent with a tragedy of this caliber and portray himself as somebody that was actually there. jillian: investigators say briscoe lived in florida, not texas. 10 people were tragically killed in the shooting last year. a warning to watch your kids, your step and your kids. watch this heart-stopping video. you will see why. a little boy falling into the gap between a train and platform in australia. bystanders rushing to pull the child to safety. he was not hurt. police releasing video back in february, to remind parents to
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keep an eye on their little ones this summer. you know and love his songs. [sweet caroline ♪ ♪ good times never seemed so good ♪ ainsley: now neil diamond's life story is becoming a broadway musical. much it still doesn't have a title, it will document his rise from a poor childhood in brooklyn, to becoming one of the most successful songwriters ever. diamond said he always loved broadway. he drew inspiration some of his early songs from musicals like my fair lady and "west side story.". ainsley: those shows are popular. like "jersey boys," temptations. we'll have to all go. brian: meanwhile 13 minutes before the top. hour. griff: kneeling during the national anthem but colin kaepernick still has a problem with our flag.
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nike pulled that patriotic sneaker because he complained. ainsley: tomi lahren is fired up about that one. she is here next with some big announcements. ase cleaning power per drop, it tackles tough grease on a variety of surfaces. try dawn ultra. most people think a button is just a button. ♪ that a speaker is just a speaker. ♪ or - that the journey can't be the destination. most people haven't driven a lincoln. discover the lincoln approach to craftsmanship at the lincoln summer invitation. right now, get 0% apr on all 2019 lincoln vehicles plus no payments for up to 90 days. only at your lincoln dealer. plus no payments for up to 90 days. but in my mind i'm still 25. that's why i take osteo bi-flex, to keep me moving the way i was made to.
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♪ griff: welcome back. brand new surveillance video shows jussie smollett walking around the scene at the night of his alleged attack. ainsley: matt fin joins us live from chicago to break it all down. this is the new information, this surveillance video is being released. reporter: this video was obtained by fox news via freedom of information request. really first time appears to to show after jussie smollett and osundairo brothers circling.
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they appear to show jussie smollett walking by in the same white sweater he was seen wearing when police entered his apartment. 30 seconds later, looks like the owe sun darrow brothers walk buy the attorney says she thinks it is them this is an hour before the 911 call. they show the brothers right below jussie smollett's below the apartment building. you can see the flash of a red brimmed hat. police notes and store video one of brothers purchased and wore a red brimmed hat for the alleged hoax. new video shows smollett in the white sweater walking in middle of the street. smoking heading away from the apartment building, heading towards the subway restaurant police said he want. the audio appears to place smollett and brothers at scene of the incident.
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jussie smollett's legal team has not responded to any comment on the new video. brian: i'm starting not to believe jussie smollett. i think there is something to this story. might be something more to it. maybe it is me. thanks, matt. ainsley: nike pulling plans to release these american flag tennis shoes for the 4th of july. brian: according to "the wall street journal" nike nixed the betsy ross themed shoe after colin kaepernick complained about it being offensive. griff: here to react. fox nation host, author of the new book, "never play dead." tomi lahren. hi. >> good morning. griff: what do you make of the sneakers. i can't run out to get a pair. >> let's let this sink in. he feels oppressed and offended by a shoe. that is where we've come in this country. a vintage american flag offends him enough, nike would listen to him, and pull it, i think it would be a best-selling shoe. does nike not think
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conservatives, american patriots don't buy shoes? have they dismissed us all together. ainsley: nike chosen not to release air max one quick strike, fourth of july, it featured the old version of the american flag. that is the reason. >> he hates the new version of the american flag. he doesn't like the national anthem. my question for colin kaepernick, don't like our symbols, national flag, don't like this flag, that flag. brian: don't like the envelope. >> doesn't like anything. he is not a tree. he can move. brian: very good point. we'll see if he plays football. should have a few years left. tell me about never play dead. >> it comes out today. i'm excited about it. this is opportunity for me to set the record straight on lot of things people have been confused on in the past. a lot of things happened at my former network and my former time there. it goes into that. but also i think especially young women, we've been left out of the whole feminist culture. we've been left out of female empowerment. i think that is a farce. i want to provide a book for
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young women to go to say, hollywood left, people like miley cyrus, katy perry, anti-trump, supposedly feminist figures have left out conservative women. i want to provide them -- ainsley: perfect title for you. you've been harassed at restaurants. you're not afraid to talk about your conservative views. you say never play dead. how have you decided to continue to do this even when they're harassing your family when you're out. >> you can't let the mob intimidate. we can't as conservatives and trump supporters back down. the left will not back down. in portland they don't back down. they're aggressive. they assault and harass conservatives and trump supporters. why should we lay down and play dead? griff: i have teen age daughters. you write in here, so much pressure on social media, having followers and likes. you write okay to lose followers, don't lose yourself? >> i use social media as tool but don't become a tool that is the message of the book. we have to remember instagram,
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twitter, facebook, if they all disappear tomorrow, would we feel a void? if we are feeling that void we need to recalibrate. brian: i don't want to live in a world without twitter, instagram, facebook. you talk about rhino thick skin, where does it come from in terms of criticism. as conservatives we're built with that. we have to with stand a lot. he specially i grew up in era of media of donald trump, watching what he did, watching how thick his skin is. he is not afraid to offend people with the truth. that is what i do. conservatives need to get a thicker skin. we're the silent majority. we need to get louder. brian: talk to you on radio bit. ainsley: thanks, tomi. more "fox & friends" just ahead. brian: bring up the music. ♪ when you're not able to smile, you become closed off.
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>> tomi lahren has another reason to celebrate. >> i am engaged. i am officially off the market.
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that's my number two story, i also have a book that came out. >> okay, we are going to be cooking with our chef, he is going to be telling us how to make food for fourth of july. >> bill: good morning. brand-new information on the u.s., after tehran officially breaks the limits on enriched uranium that the world has been watching. critical moment as we say good morning. i am bill hemmer. >> sandra: good morning to you, bill. good morning, everyone. i am sandra smith. sparking this response from iran's foreign minister. a one-word tweet. "seriously?" >> bill: meanwhile, the president issuing a stern warning to the islamic republic. >> they know what they are doing. they know what they're playing with, and i think they're playing with

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