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tv   Fox and Friends Sunday  FOX News  July 14, 2019 3:00am-7:00am PDT

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straight to a fox news alert. the trump administration's crackdown on illegal immigration now ramping up beginning overnight with i.c.e. raids in new york city. >> one of nine cities where raids are expected today. i.c.e. agents expected to target more than 2,000 illegal immigrants in the nationwide crackdown. >> going to be a big story today. >> we knew it was coming. >> well trump warned us. he said i'm going to give congress two weeks, you got to do your job were i'm going to get it done. these are people who have been told you have to leave that initially entered the country illegal pi. saying listen, we can't condone this behave your. >> it appears it may have begun here in the new york city area.
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mayor bill deblasio tweeting out we're receiving reports of unsuccessful i.c.e. actions in sunset park in harlem. new york city immigrants are connecting with others. remember you have rights call 311 and say action nyc for help. >> that's a pattern we're going see. we're going to talk about this a lot. a lot of mayors, leadership in the country, protesters as well who are standing with the people who enter the county illegally saying this is what you can do to protect yourself against i.c.e. that are trying to enforce federal law. we're going to see this behavior. >> he tweeted a video and it's really this guy that's been out for a few days now says listen, don't open your door, remain silent, record everything. >> you have a right to attorney.
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basically advising. now a lot of the mayors are becoming legal advisers to people who enter the country illegally. >> the focus is on 2,000 individuals today. but there's a new study from pugh. approximately 10.5 million illegal immigrant are in the country as of the 2017 pugh research city study. today the focus is 2,000. 10.5 million. tbrif, how many times have you been at the border. >> brapped. new study just out. when you look at those numbers, that's brand. -new information coming to us. when you look at -- i think you bring up a great point. when you look at the numbers. i lot of times when you hear about a problem you can't contextualize it. when you see a number like that and you realize the se fear i sf the issue and you see that
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congress has done nothing, democrats and republicans, no one has been able to come to the table and get something done on this, you realize the urgency that the president feels and you realize the justification for raids. if you keep incentivizing this behavior, it will never end, will get worse and worse and law breaking will become the norm. >> law enforcement is what is needed to address what they feel is a weak legal link. protesters taking to the streets in at least the ten cities and elsewhere across the country rallying against these i.c.e. raids. we saw them beginning really on friday and then saturday and now you have an incident out in the pacific northwest where one man came with a loaded gun and a propane tank, was trying to throw insen incendiary devices.
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the police engaged the individual and h was killed in this incident. you remember the conservative activist attacked by an antifa crowd tweeting out saying that the terror attack on the facile fi is not insignificant. last year he was arrested after attacking police. they found him carrying a baton and knife. the significance of the protests is they want all of the migrants detained in there released in the u.s. >> they also want to block local law enforcement from cooperating with i.c.e. they're stand in the streets and blocking, hoping to say listen, what so many of the mayors are saying. you have to get through us to get through them. law enforcement is going to be in the situation. how do we do our job.
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local law enforcement and i.c.e. are simply trying to do their job and now they're obstructed not only by a lot of protesters -- listen if they're thing disruptive or violent in any way, arrest them. these people being sought after are in violation of the law. think about that for a second. what other people in this country break laws -- think about different laws broken. should that be ignored? what is this country become fg you're not a nation of laws. we've been talking about the democratic mayors vowing to resist the raid. let's take a listen to what the mayors have had to say. >> what we're trying to do is lower the fear by giving them information and the information is empowering them. >> let me be clear. we do not assist with immigration enforcement. >> we have been and will be and will continue to be a sanctuary city. we will continue to stand behind our immigrant communities.
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>> with anyone who has compassion and concern for human beings. >> and jed you made a great point el. it seems like a number of mayors and democratic politicians are minting themselves as new immigration attorneys and that is a dangerous precedent to set. you're going to be giving legal advice, there's a degree you need to go out and get, pass a bar to do that. for those who are not lawyers twhab's a dangerous precedent to set. it's not just the democratic mayors that are running afoul of the immigration laws and just law in general, practicing as an nonpracticing attorney. individuals who may be caught up in today's raids or be an illegal immigrant to boot, they may be taking advis advice thoso to are not lawyers. >> when you talk about
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compassion you have to, for the many legal immigrants who came into this country saying why did i bother to follow the law if it was going to be praised -- if i hadn't followed, it was going to be praised and just fires by not only protesters around the country but by people in leadership. jeh johnson had a lot to say about enforcing immigration laws. >> deportations occur all of the time of those who have been ordered deported by an immigration judge hopefully after they've exhausted their appeal rights, had an opportunity to have their asylum case heard. we simply have to enforce the law, particularly if someone has been ordered deported. in other words they've exhausted all of their appeal rights. it's important for migrants to know they have rights. but enforcement actions themselves are not extraordinary. >> they're not. what's important about today's actions is this is roughly 2,000
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individuals. there are detainers, officials believe there's as many as a million who have been ordered by a court to be removed from the country. 2,000 they believe pose a threat to society. we are going to talk to the acting cbp commissioner, mark morgan as well as an exclusive interview with the acting director of i.c.e. later this morning. turning now to a fox news alert, several communities are facing a major flood risk as tropical barry moves slowly across the gulf cost. >> barry made landfall as a category 1 hurricane before weakening to a tropical storm. the governor of louisiana is warning residents to remain vigilant. >> don't let your guard down. the national weather service is telling us when it comes to rain, the exact opposite is true. the storm has a long way to go before it leaves the state.
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>> this is one of the biggest tests of the new orleans levee system since hurricane katrina devastated that area more than a decade ago. we have team coverage tracking barry's ever move. >> rick is live in the stewedy where his forecast. >> we begin with rob in louisiana where several neighborhoods are under water. good morning. reporter: good morning. we're just across lake pontchartrain from louisiana. the levee system has held up pretty well. the new levee system. but as you can see, i've got my rubber pants on. we're in residential flooding. there is some water here, a couple feet deep in parts, you can see the street sign behind me, the fire hydrant. some people are going to have water in their homes and that's part of the deal. the storm now downgraded to a
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tropical storm. as we head south we're going to tell you terra bone county, a couple of counties south to where we are now, much closer to the gulf. had a lot more water troubles. here's video of the coast guard doing rescues. there were 12 people that needed to be rescued. the only road in and out of this gulf coast community was completely under water so helicopters had to come in and pull them out of there. now another part of the county where we saw an alert on our cell phone about mandatory evacuations. a levee was being overtopped, storm water pouring over the levee. the risk there is it's going to breach. 400 people had to be forced from their homes. the sheriff took it into the danger zone there, we got to wake on top of the levee and he told us that their community had
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to pay for their own levee system is $70 billion and he has a lot of complaints about the way money was distributed after hurricane katrina 14 years ago. thawl of that money got hogged up by new orleans and used or their system and there wasn't a lot left for the smaller parishes that don't have a lot of people. the big cities hogging automatic of thhogging all ofthe money. as you see here in handville, this is what we have, standing water. the winds are down, which is nice. it's nice to just be rained on and not be blown over at the same time. but this thing could dump rain for another couple of days. this will continue to be a water story here in southern louisiana. back to you. >> rob schmitt doing work down there in louisiana. thanks a lot. it's all about the rain. we saw this in houston. rick, what is going to happen this time with the rain?
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>> as rob said for a couple more days. take a look at the radar here. stuff has expanded off towards the north. however the heaviest rain is still offshore. one tornado warning in parts of mississippi. heavy rain to the north of jackson, a big line of storms cut right through jackson, mississippi. rainfall totals will pile up. all of the heaviest is further off to the west, just to the west of baton rouge. all of this line of storms will rotate towards the east throughout the day today and we have an additional 10 to 12-inches of rain falling across the country part of louisiana over the next couple of days. >> thanks so much, rick. headlines for glow the 6 a.m. this is a live look in times square where the bright lights back on. power went out for more than 70,000 customers. the electric company restored
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power overnight and investigating what caused the outage. it caused major disruptions, knocking out traffic lights, leaving people stranded on subways and forcing thousands to evacuate a j. lo concert at madison square gardens. and the governor says if he's elected president he wants a u.s. soccer player to serve in his cob innocent. >> my first act will be to ask megan rapinoe to be my secretary of state. this could be a surprise to her. >> saying that the world cup champion who has been an inspiration who would indoors getting along. florida georgia line rocking the house and rocking our heroes. the on-stage surprise for one veteran that you have to see. ♪ ♪
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. 17 minutes after the hour as outrage grows ahead of the i.c.e. raids to begin today after a group of protesters pulled down the american flag at a krord i.c.e. facility and raised a flag of mexico in its place. protesters took down a blue lives matter flag and spray painted abolish i.c.e. on it before raising it back up upside down. here is former i.c.e. jason pick colo. >> you know the police were told to stand down as well. >> jason, i've talked to a lot out there, border patrol officials, and they want people to know how much this is really
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affecting them from a psychological standpoint to see things like we saw there in aurora, colorado. give me some insight on it. >> well the thing is the i.c.e. officers out there right now this morning are enforcing the same exact laws passed by republicans and democrats over the past decades. they're just doing their jobs that they're told to do. >> i want to show you a quote from one of these organizers who is denouncing it. we unequivocally denounce the actions of rogue protesters. the conversation turned into a divisive one that pits communities we love against one another. it's important to note that these raids that are occurring today, they got -- these individuals got a day in court. a court ordered them removed. try and give us a little bit of insight on exactly who it is that is going to be attempted to be apprehended today. >> today they're going to be
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individuals who have had a final order removal. they've had their day in court and now i.c.e. is out there ens forcing the immigration laws passed by the congress. >> jason, out in the pacific northwest in washington state there was one protester, an individual that showed up outside of an i.c.e. facility with a loaded gun and a propane tank, threw incendiary devices at the facility. he got into a situation, a gun battle with the police and was killed. but, you know, what does that say in terms of really how escalated the protests have become and the dangers this could pose to both my grants and officials. >> it's going to get worse, absolutely. this is just one step. you can see, they came on to an i.c.e. facility, took down the american flag and put up a
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foreign flag on our soil. you know, i mentioned this before on air, i was a former captain in the tour of iraq. and to see a foreign flag put up on our soil, there's going to be more instances of violence and more instances of disrespecting our flag on our own soil. >> and your final thoughts, jason, if democrats were able to succeed in abolishing i.c.e., what would that mean? >> it would mean we could create a whole organization called who knows what, probably u.s. immigration and customs enforcement/something, you know. >> all right. jason, thank you very much for joining us. we appreciate your time. >> thank you. the feud between house speaker nancy pelosi open freshman congresswoman alexandria ocasio-cortez is heating up. our next guest says the aoc feud is big but there are two people who are a real threat to the speaker. hhe reveals them straight ahead. ♪ ♪
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good morning. quick headlines for you. the sex trafficking case against jeffrey epstein has expanded ahead of the bail hearing tomorrow. there is an investigation under way in mexico where he owns a ranch. the state attorney general's office interviews possible victims who visited the property. he's pleaded not guilty to sex trafficking charges in new york. in this, the decades long search for a missing vatican teenager takes a surprising turn. crews discovered bones under a manhole in a cemetery. the bones will be tested next week. turning to the feud that's erupting between house speaker
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nancy pelosi and freshman congresswoman alexandria ocasio-cortez as they trade jabs this week. >> but our next guest says there are two people who are the threat to the house speaker. joining us now, former campaign manager for scott brown, collin reid. thanks for being here. let's get to it. who are those two people? >> well first you got to look at donald trump. his poll numbers are ticking upward and he's going to be on the ballot next year which he went last year when nancy pelosi won her majority. and if donald trump is able to keep the race close, which he will, then a lot of the congressional races are going to be close too and these folks who won last year may get swept out to sea. and the second, this is less obvious, is tom stier. look, i don't think tom stier has a prayer of becoming a president. i don't think he stands a chance in today's democratic party. but if he comes in and spends $100 million elevating the issue
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of impeachment and green new deal, those are the two issues which have divided aoc and speaker pelosi from the beginning. it could pour jet fuel on a feud that's already been simmering. >> let's take a listen to tom stier. >> i'm going to spend 100% of my time working to impeach and remove this president. behave 12 years to deal with our climate crisis or we will face unimaginable suffering. >> strengthening my exitment to need to impeach in 2019. i led the way in terms of climate fight. this is the beginning of moving to tim peachment and removal of this president right here. >> now, stier plans to spend at least $100 million if he enters. but a lot of people look at that and say is he really going to be that impactful? there's a lot of people on the
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left talking about impeachment and climate change bhap's the difference of this guy. >> $100 million is $100 million. he's not going to be on the debate stage at least in the short time. but if he wants to spend this money on ads and spend all of this time building his list on getting people signed up to impeach trump, this is going to drive the debate. these congressional races are at the mercy of the top of the ticket. the next debate is three or four weeks away and all of this discussion, everything we're talking about is going to be elevated at a high level. and if one of those 2020 democratic contenders decides to weigh in and take aoc's side, that's a new ball game. >> how much does it hurt the democratic left to have their number one environmental list being a ga zillionaire. >> exactly. i don't have a particular problem with that but i think
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democratic primary voters do. the whole feud between aoc and pelosi started back in november before aoc was sworn in when she was arranging sit-ins in pelosi's office. in a battle between etiology and elect abilityability, etiology s every time. >> in terms of the primary stage on the left, there is no moderate. sinejoe biden was trying to fige out who he was on the stage, trying to put in a caveat here and there. but i don't know that it will be impactful to have the division between pelosi and aoc on prospects if they ear prospects. >> if you're stier, you've won. everyone taking the same position on it.
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all of these extreme views. they're not going to play well in parts of the country that voted republican for 30 or 40 years before 2018, especially stuff with the new green deal which would end huge facets of the energy sector. that's what it calls to do. it's net a message that these democrats in trump country want to carry but they may not have a choice. >> thanks for being here. appreciate it. dog the bounty hunter bids an emotional farewell to his wife, beth chapman. we honor her coming up. >> she was the lion tamer. i cannot believe she's gone. this is not possible. i want to wake up from a dream.
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. we are back with a fox news alert. several communities are facing a major flood risk as tropical storm barry moves across the gulf coast. >> barry made lawndful as a category 1 hurricane yesterday. >> we have complete coverage. we begin with casey in new orleans. >> the mayor is saying make sure that residents don't wave the white flag here and declare this officially over because he says the threat pushes inland as the remnants of barry continue to push north and forecasters are
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predicting a lot of heavy rain heading to places like baton rouge, very far away from the coast which is unusual. no injuries or deaths have fortunately been reported but we want to show you this dramatic video provided by the u.s. coast guard. and it shows that several rescues were conducted yesterday by that agency by air and by boat, a total of 12 people and two pets were rescued near morgan city but everyone is okay. now certain communities along lake pontchartrain north of new orleans took a lashing. look at this video, slower-lying areas in mandeville and slidell along the north shore filled with flood water and storm surge rather quickly making some roads impazzable. even privately man trained levees began overtopping, not breaching but water spill over the top of them.
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again these are not federally maintain levees or mississippi river levees but those repairs have been made. now the american red cross has established a shelter now in baton rouge where they're preparing to take in the bulk of the people in the coming days as the heavier rain, as we mentioned, is now heading in that direction. the louisiana governor, by the way, has always been in communication with the white house. governor edwards sending this tweet out saying earlier this evening president trump called to discuss tropical storm barry. he asked me to tell the people of louisiana hello and he said he is pulling for us. i thanked president trump for his support and for approval our request for assistance. so again, an emergency declaration was declared both at the state level and the federal level as we are now going to be moving into the recovery of
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barry. but at this point it looks like the big easy was spared from the worst of it. back to you guys. >> casey, thank you. >> we're going to head over to rick hike meu reichmuth who is h the latest. >> we were talking about the haves and the have nots. right now the the haves are her. further off east, morgan city and baton rouge not getting that much. and then up in areas of mississippi, a lot of rain. this continues to rotate and pulling the moisture up in the bands. once you get under it you get three to six inches of rain in a couple of hours. there's the center of the storm and we still have all of this activity that is continuing to create energy down across parts of the gulf. that's moisture that's going to continue to rotate towards the north over the next couple of days and that's why we have two more days still of heavy rain falling here and the may jr.
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flood threat continue pg. parts of arkansas and the boot hill of missouri, western parts of kentucky and tennessee we're going to seat a swath that gets anywhere from 4 to 6 inches of rain and we have spots in louisiana that in addition to what you've already receive are probably going to get an additional 10 to 12-inches. you'll notice bands continuing to form. and this takes us into monday morning and southern louisiana still getting pummeled by heavy rain. this se ven event is not done. this flooding is a cumulative thing. we'll see what the flooding turns into tomorrow afternoon. long way to go. >> not a good forecast for the mississippi watershed. >> not at all. going to turn to headlines for you now. in an emotional service dog the bounty hunter says one last good-bye to his wife, beth chapman.
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>> she was our lion tamer. i cannot believe she's gone. this is not possible. i want to wake up from a dream. >> overcome with tears during yesterday's funeral service in colorado. she died from cancer last month. she was 51 years old. and remember when this democrat said this hours after being sworn into congress in january. >> bullies don't win and i said baby they don't. we're going to go in there and teach them [bleep]. >> well now she's doubling down on that. take a listen. >> where does that stand now? is it possible for us? >> we're going to impeach the [bleep]. don't worry. >> 84 house members are called for an impeachment inquiry against president trump. and florida georgia line is honoring our nation's heroes, helping to give wheelchairs to
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wounded veterans during their concert. >> the crowd chanting usa as the county band and our very own jennifer griffin present a wheelchair to a former marine in philadelphia. >> good stuff. that's great. good job, jennifer. we got a little promo for you. fox nation is celebrating america. you don't really need much more than the name. happening tonight, 8 p.m., abby horn sac is the host. a look at the new shows and celebrating america, july 4, independence this month. download the app. it's an awesome app to have. you get kilmeade shows, a bunch of other shows. and make sure you watch it tonight 59 at 8 p.m. on fnc and watch it on the fox nation app.
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if you're a recent arrival to planet earth, go to the app store and download fox nation. >> you guys laugh but i am not tech savvy. do need kurt the tech guy. listen. >> he refused to apologize. instead he sent us pizza. we asked that instead of delivering pizza the mayor deliver some respect for what police officers do. >> our next guest says this will have a big impact on the mayor's 2020 dream. "fox & friends" on a sunday. ♪ ♪
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disbloo time now for quick
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headlines. the justice department has launched a criminal investigation into johnson and johnson. aaccording to bloomberg a grand jury is looking into whether the company lied about the potential cancer risks of its baby powder. it's facing more than 14,000 lawsuits. and this, walmart is getting a jump start on its rival amazon by launching its own massive sale one day before amazon prime day. like amazon walmart is offering free two-day shopping on all openers today through wednesday. amazon prime day starts tomorrow and runs through tuesday. you can run out and go shopping. >> i'm so excited. you know me. >> 2020 pete butt 2020 pete butg backlash. >> last week whe he refused to apologize. instead he sent us pizza.
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our officers are brave men and women who put their life on the line fur our community each day. we asked that instead of delivering pizza the mayor deliver some respect for what police officers do. >> the fraternal order of police in south bend also sharing video of pizza boxes buttigieg sent. here to weigh in is radio talk show host in the great state of indiana, tony katz. we all love business disu but what does this whole incident say to you? >> this has got to be one of the weirdest stories out there and further goes along the line that pete buttigieg is disdisconnected from where he lives. when he did the town hall there was a police shooting, a man did die, the body cam wasn't on. the resident have a good reason to be upset. he's not interacting with people. he sets himself apart in a
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strange way. he has no ability to connect. even when he goes around the country talking about the douglas plan of his to combat racism, it's all clinical. there's an interview that discussed the fact that there's no heart in this and that's the problem with pete buttigieg. sending the police pizza while you're claiming they're based in a racist system is a weird way of saying you care. >> i want you to take a listen to mayor pete talking about policing in general earlier in the campaign and then i'll get your opinion on the back side. >> my community is in anguish because of an officer-involved shooting, a black man killed by an white officer. this is an issue facing our community and so many other communities around the country. until we move policing 0 out from the shadow of systemic racism, we will be left with the bigger problem of the fact that there's a wall of mistrust put
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up one racist act at a time. >> tony, is this is an example of a systemic racism or a guy getting shot after attacking the placpolice with an 8-inch knife. >> if you listen to what pete buttigieg said, regardless of what we learned, still racist, still racism. doesn't seem to care about what the result is of an investigation. all he wants to do is move down the line because he knows he has a south bend problem, he has the problem of a firing of a police chief who is black. he hasn't been able to connect with the black voters. in south carolina pete buttigieg doesn't crack the top five democrats and he's now put out these other plans to try to find way to connect but there's no soul. as i said, he's barack obama but without the charm. he has no way to connect to the voters. all calculating and no heart. he's told you that no mat whary
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the investigation should bring, he's going to keep talking about the police is racist, he just won't stop. >> here's what mayor pete's office said about this. the mayor and members of our office have reached out to the fop since june 16th and has not received a response. the mayor remains eager to sit down with the fop to discuss their concerns. if he wasn't running for the highest office in the land, do you think his response, knowing him, south bend and the state of indiana, do you think his response would be any different or is this just him in. >> i think this is just him. and i think when you talk about mayor buttigieg and we talk about the situation, i don't knee if you can see it or not, but i have a map that i picked up -- i just went to google maps. the fraternal order of police they're seconds away from south bend. he could drive over. you don't send pizza. you go and talk to them and
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engage with them. but as he proved in his own town halls, that's not what he does, that's not what he's about. the problem is indeed him. and if we've learned anything, the leadership is lacking. south bend is telling us this about pete buttigieg. and i don't think he's ready for primetime. >> tony katz thanks for getting us with us this time on sunday. the battle over privacy heading to the classroom with companies collecting data on students. how can parents keep that information safe. cybersecurity expert weighs in next. ♪ ♪
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. a new front in the battle for privacy as more schools and their vendors amass vast troves of data on students. what ki k they do to keep their information safe. here to weigh in is cybersecurity expert eric hole. welcome. this is a terrifying story to me. i taught in schools for a long time. was a dean at one point and i didn't know that all of this data was being amassed on students and stored on these third-party vendor servers. what kind of information are we talking about? >> essentially anything you do on a computer or electronic device is being recorded. the second a child logs in, everything they type, everything they say, everything site they surf to is recorded and stored. >> talk to me about parental consent here.
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i don't think that parents know this is happening. and as far as i know they don't have to opt in and they can't really opt out of this process. so parents that find this information out, are they helpless in the process? >> unfortunately this is covered under your additional rules. many schools have video cameras, some have security surveillance. you're allowing the schools to do that and cybersecurity and monitoring just fits under that. so yes, most parents have no clue that everything their child does is being mon h monitored. and they need to educate their children that a school computer is not private and they have to be super careful of what they do and say. >> and the risk here is obviously not just hacking and getting that personal information which we've seen happen in some instances but also extortion of the school that some third party, somebody could hack into it and say listen, you give me your money or i'm going to reveal all of this personal information about your students.
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is that not right? >> that's a big problem where you're seeing blackmailing, hacking. because let's face it, these computers that store information are not 100% secure. this information is available. and the other bigger concern is what if your child make as mistake in fifth grade, surfs an inappropriate website and then colleges find out about that and start using that to impact your child's life in the future. >> so you know people at home listening to this already are feeling probably panicked as i am right now. what do we do? you hear this stuff and you hear, there's no real consent. we feel powerfulless. powerless. is there anything that people can do about this? >> parentsneed to get educated or technology and cybersecurity. most kids are smarter than their parents when it comes to technology. when my smart home breaks, i call my kids because nay know more about it than i do. parents need to get smart, educated and then they need to
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sit down with their children. most parents tell their children about physical safety, don't talk to strangers, look both ways before crossing the street but they hand them an iphone and never talk to them about cybersecurity and the dangers >> hopefully the schools can put in a program that they can omit the data that's hanging around out there. i'm slightly more calm than twhen segment began. still ahead, acting cbp commissioner mark morgan and one of my faves, maria bartiromo here live. ♪ ♪
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. straight to a fox news alert. i.c.e. raids under way already in new york city as part of president trump's nationwide
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crackdown on illegal immigrants. >> the raids are expected in nine major cities but protesters and elected officials could make things difficult for our i.c.e. agents. >> our own mike is in one of the cities, chicago, with what to expect today. >> good morning. so far chicago is largely a quiet city. the hispanic neighborhoods are largely empty. the streets have not been empty downtown. for the last couple oval days protesters have packed the streets to the tune of thousands. and like mayors in other sanctuary cities, chicago's new mayor has been vowing the city will not cooperate or share data about individuals in the city or country illegally. >> i hope that the president and somewhere his conscience is pricked and he realizes that dangling this sword over people's head is causing great harm and trauma to entire
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households and communities. >> activists and i.c.e. agents are in agreement really about one problem that they point out, something the activists call collateral damage. when the agents show up with a arrangement looking for one individual, they go in the house and find others without documentation, they pick everyone up. that's the problem and if the mayors would cooperate with them, they prefer to pick up individuals in the courthouse and they only get the guy they're after. by not cooperating with the agents, the person who shows up in this country trying to work and staying under the radar, he ends up coming into contact with the i.c.e. agents because of the lack of communication. the other thing i'm getting from i.c.e. contacts here on the ground is that a big part of their job is executing warrants. they're not going to necessarily sit on a warrant ever. so their activity may increase with political pressure on high which sends more warrants in their direction. but from their perspective, it's
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just another day. >> thanks, mike. you know, you listen to that and hear a commentary, president trump is dangling a sword. dangling a sword? he's trying to enforce the law. you got people out there that broke the law once, violated a court order in many cases, some of the people may have criminals, have criminal records. they don't belong here. they've been told you got to leave. they're saying we don't care, we're going to stay anyway. and your expectation that the president of the united states would shrug, i don't care bt our laws either, that is absurd that you would put that stigma on someone who is trying to enforce the laws of this country. that's his job. that's why he exists. he's the president. >> we're going to talk soon with the acting commissioner of the customs and border protection, mark morgan. he's going to talk to us about why interior enforcement is necessary to stop the surge that we have seen in the last year at the border. we'll also be talking
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exclusively with the acting director of i.c.e. he will join us as well. a lot of insight on exactly what these enforcement actions are today and why they're necessary. >> you raised an poornt point earlier why we're doing this. it's deterrence. if we don't stand up for the rule of law we put ourselves in a position where we're going to become an order border society. and you've heard it countless times on this channel, then we don't have a country. that is a concerning thing if you're an american citizen. and i know it doesn't play well to the democrat leftist base but it's the reality of the situation. >> some come out and actively say yeah, we support open borders at this point. that's how far left the skew has gone. you see president trump out there talking about border security, prioritizing the enforcement of the laws and then you see elizabeth warren running for president taking a whole
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different approach saying she'll use the justice department to investigate crimes against immigrants. take a listen. >> to anyone out there who is working in this system, understand, you abuse immigrants, you fail to get them medical care that they need, you break a wall of the united states of america. donald trump may be willing to look the other way, but president elizabeth warren will not. on my first day i will empower a commission in the department of justice to investigate crimes committed by the united states against immigrants. >> now, hold on a second. she's saying immigrants. so my first question to her would be a clarification on that. are you talking about immigrants who came here legally? are you talking about a commission -- are we talking about illegal immigration? this happens all of the time and
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it's used as a talking point to vilify the president and this administration as anti-immigrant. he's not anti-immigrant. he's saying there's a process to follow. and if you don't follow the process and if you violate the laws, you're going to face the consequences as would every other american citizen who did not follow our laws. i would seek clarification from her on that immediately. >> you heard the crowd cheering. that's the annual political convention for the far left progressive folks. you know we already had one debate where everyone raised their hand for free health care for undocumented immigrants nowy ear hearing what elizabeth warren would do as president on day one. 's interesting to see how far the democrats take this argument while today you will have the administration saying that we are simply following the rule of the law. in the midst of it, perhaps, one of the worst parts of the tragedy and the crisis is that law enforcement carrying out the laws, that the lawmakers in
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congress made, they're being vilified in the middle of all of this. >> what this looks like to me, this is really throwing red meat at her twitter base. one point i would like to make for elizabeth warren and the entire democratic party who hops on this bandwagon. we head out into the community. the twitter universe is not the universe when dwoi to go to a . the individuals out there want law and order. they may be democrat, may be republic, it doesn't matter. they want law and order. and this twitter world isn't reality. not once in their entire sound bite that we played did she give any credit to the brave men and women on the border who you speak to on a day-to-day basis who are doing really tough work, parents themselves with kids. the situation is heartbreaking for all involved. >> she's also talking to net roots as you say. that's not her general election
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audience. the general recollection audience is noelection audience. several communities are facing a major flood risk as tropical storm barry moves slowly across the gulf coast. >> barry made landfall as a category 1 hurricane yesterday. >> a brave father and son wading into the elements to rescue several horses stranded in rising water. >> we've seen them from the road and we saw how deep the water was, almost to their necks. we had to get them out of there. >> that's what we do. we're like family down here. we got to look out for each other. if you don't, nobody else will. >> strong winds and heavy rains mark one of the biggest tests of new orleans' levee sinces since katrina more than a decade ago. >> right now meteorologist rick reichmuth is tracking the storm. we're going to head to him in a moment. >> we're going to begin with rob
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schmitt in mandeville, louisiana. >> yeah,swimming here in mandeville. not too much water, a foot to two feet here. if you look down the street here, you can see joust how -- i mean the lake is really kicking up. so much water. and the neighborhood here, you can see the houses here behind me, basically an extension of the lake. you can see this house under construction. nice looking house, they're building ten feet off of the ground. and you can see why. i want to take you to terrebonne parrish to our south about two hours where yesterday we got a phone alert saying 400 people had to be kicked out of their neighborhood. it was mandatory evacuation because a levee they had been working on in the parrish for a number of years now had overtopped and they were worried about it breaching. they had to kick everybody out of the neighborhood.
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the sheriff gave us an interesting story from terrebonne parrish. he said after katrina billions of dollars were sent down to new orleans to fix the levees and a lot of parrishs needed help and didn't get any man any money. they had to put $70 million together to get the levee fixed. he's trying to get help as best he can and he's struggling in the effort trying to get attending on the smaller communities down here that get the same storms that new orleans gets but they don't get the same attention. we're going to give them some of the attention this morning and show they have a problem. 400 people kicked out of their homes and if the levee breaches, you could have 400 homes disappear. barry continue to churn along. it's still raining lightly but the winds are gone and now it is
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just a water story and how much water we'll get. new orleans seems to be fine in the storm but other areas, there is a lot of water to deal with in this storm. back to you. >> all right, rob. thank you. and as we see behind rob, rick, houses on stilts there in mandeville but it's going to continue to rain. >> they built them on stilts because they're here where it is prone to happen. it's going to continue to rain and spots are going to see a lot of flooding. you see the heavy bands cutting across areas of mississippi. probably 300 miles from where the center of the storm is. so very heavy rain here. tornado warnings along with some of these cells. keep that in mind. we'll continue to see that. new orleans will see some bands moving through but the heaviest have been from lafayette. and the band has been persistent. we could see 3 to 6 inches of rain falling in a period of an hour or two.
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a lot of moisture to the south of this. it still has to move on shore and ro state through. take a look on the satellite image how much energy there is. long way to go, guys. >> all right. rick, thank yes very much. heading over to headlines for you now. this is a live look in times square where the bright lights are back on after a massive blackout in new york city. this is how it looked hours ago when power went out for 70,000 customers. the electric company restored power overnight and investigating what caused the outage. it caused major disruptions, knocking out traffic lights, leaving people standed on subways and forcing thousands to evacuate a j. lo concert. >> i like j. lo. big j. lo fan. bob gibson is fighting pancreatic cancer. the 83-year-old agent says he's
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been hospitalized for the past two weeks and will likely start chemotherapy treatments tomorrow. the pitcher won two world series during his 17-year career. and the 50th anniversary of the apollo 11 moon landing is days away and neil armstrong's hometown has big plans one unveiling a statue of the man who took one small step for man later today. the town of 13,000 people is holding several days of festivities to honor the landing, including concerts and the largest moon pie. >> don't you love this looking back in the history books. it's awesome to see what was done. >> absolutely. we're going to look back in the recent history book of the phenomenon of malls and how we spept ouspent our teenage years. the infighting among democrats becoming more bitter every day. we'll ask a democratic
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hey would say "oh we can't beat usaa" we're the webber family. we're the tenney's we're the hayles, and we're usaa members for life. ♪ get your usaa auto insurance quote today. now i have said publicly i don't typically find pelosi to be somebody who disrespects members. i've never felt disrespected as a woman of color by nancy pelosi. i don't think those comments were helpful. to a broader picture of how we build progressive power in the house and what it looks like relative to overall democratic power. >> freshman democrat referring
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to pelosi's recent comments about her progressive colleagues in congress. the washington post out with this headline saying that tin fighting is escalating. what does this mean for the party going forward. here with us, democratic strategist jason. what is going on in your party. there's a lot of ideological duking out going on right now. >> it's not unprecedented. you have it on the republican side. president trump has been cite sized. he criticized paul ryan. we have romney who said things about the president saying he's dishonest. these are things that happen. i wish it wasn't happening publicly. i wish that one who is a great deal maker like speaker pelosi would talk to these people in private and work out their differences. i think they both serve important purposes in the party. i agree with the representative that these are things that need to be handled behind closed doors. but i don't think this is something that's unprecedented for either party.
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>> some would argue that this helps president trump as you head into 2020 because there's so much division on the left that it looks like massive chaos. and we have seen this on the right when it came to the tea party. is this handing president trump a favor as we head to 2020. >> we're making it a little bigger than it is. but i think that the democratic party needs to come together and recognize what direction they're going in. i think that everyone is moving towards a progressive direction and that nancy pelosi is also moving in that direction but she's a deal maker. i think the so-called squad they're uncompromising. and i think you need both in the party and that's one of our strengths. i wish that these disagreements weren't coming out publicly. that's what hurts the party. but i don't think president trump gets any points for this. >> i don't know. i think there's some real infight going on. take a listen to the represents
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representatives and what they had to say. >> you have to be unapologetically you. focus on the things that matter in our districts and to bring them into the space. >> this is the time to shake the table. if you are not repaired to come to that table and to represent that voice, don't come. and if you're worried about being marginalized and stereotyped please don't even show up. >> a lot of the newcomers feel this is good for the party. this needs to happen. and even though there might be short term losses and results in terms of the public image, some feel it's good to shake it up every now and then. if you had to take a side here, do you want to sake the pelosi side, the aoc side? what do you think? >> i am a big fan of representative presley. i think that she's very impressive. i think that if warren wins the presidency we're going to see her become a senator from the state of massachusetts. so i really am more on the progressive wing of the party
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but that doesn't mean that i don't see the function that polocy plays in terms of being a deal maker. and i think she's really important in that role. i think you need people to shake things up open people to be uncompromising and that's the role that they play. but i also think that you don't get anything done if you don't have someone like pelosi who is willing to go in there and deal, wheel and wheel and deal and make things happen. >> one section of the primary is speaking to a primary audience and one is speaking to a general election audience right now. thanks for being here. we all know the mystery sur surrounding area 51. >> my god. why the hell wasn't i told about this? >> two words, mr. president. plausible deniability. >> now the military has a real warning for the half million people planning to storm the base. that's coming up.
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thanks for joining us here on a sunday morning. time for you news by the numbers. first, two that's how many hotel chains are refusing to let i.c.e. use their rooms as backup detention centers as of today's raids. marriott and hilton will not allow it. neither has been contacted about using hotel space to detain individuals. next, a batter steals first base for the first time ever in professional baseball. tony thomas of the southern maryland blue crabs accomplishing the feet. i didn't know you could steal first. a new league rule lets batters still first if the catcher fails
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to catch the catch. 7-eleven, that's the baby's birthday, weight and time of birth. he was born 7/11 at 7:11 weighing 7 pounds and 1 is owntses. the newborn is doing great in. >> dif that baby a slur pea. kirsten gillibrand getting emotional on the campaign trail as he explains her white privilege. >> now as a white woman who had certainly experienced enormous amounts of white privilege, i travel with a staff member who is black. and i've seen how she's been treated differently when we walk into a hotel. i've seen it and it infuriates me. >> here to react, david webb joining us. what is senator gillibrand up
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to? >> i don't know what hotel she's walking into but when i walk into a hotel, they don't look at me say my god there's a black man coming in. what do we do. this is pandering. her campaign is apparently in 19th place out of the 20 or whatever that's left. she's flailing. the political love child of chuck schumer that she is, she was pro-nra before he was against it. this time she needs a black person to be profiled while at net roots competing to your former guest with all of the progressivprogressive caucus up. and this is where she is. it's pure political pandering and it's pathetic. but i think i'm allowed to speak on white privilege. >> i spoke to a radio show saying you're benefiting. >> that's right. i was told i'm white by cnn's legal analyst. this is what's pathetic. are these real issues to be dealt with. yes.
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are they that prevalent in america, no. i have friends who build hotels, own hotels, you know what they care about? customers with green who come in. >> this has come up a lot and i'm wonder fg she feels strategically that this will work. there's a lot of members of the black community that feel that something called white privilege does exist. do you think it will be successful with the voters? >> it will be successful with an ever-dwindling group of people. the immediate assumption is black people need to believe what i tell you that you're somehow always a victim. if you look at the history of this country, what has changed. there are black billionaires, look at bob johnson praising the president on accomplishments that affect and enhance the black community picture.
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look at what's going on with the ballplayers, the businessmen. it's no just ballplayers. it's all of the musicians. look at black community in america. are we supposed to believe, as americans, that blacks are such victims instead of dealing with issues in poor communities where there are whites, blacks, hispanics, asians, you name it. >> let's talk about senator kamala harris running for president now. she had something to say about the whole taking a knee collin kaepernick controversy. let's take a listen to what she had to say. >> the heat that ended up around bend the knee and colin kaepernick. many smart people said it was not a thing. the russian bot started taking that on. >> do you agree? >> so she's back at the breakfast club, folks. here's kamala harris, first every jamaican she refers is a
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pot smoker. i was in jamaica a few weeks ago and when i lapped the at the airport not everybody was smoking a joint. she listened to tupac when she was in college, he was in grammar school. back to pandering, the way she plays this. this is what it is. attacking joe biden is effective. but to the republicans and those on the right, when she attacked him on the segregationist comment, they got it wrong. i would have said, hang on a second, joe, you've been around in d.c. so long work working with segregation nises anists au haven't solved the problem yet. >> if they sense there's division in the country they can get on twitter. but they're not the cause of the problem. >> that's an important point. i'm glad you put it in that term. colin kaepernick didn't take a
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knee because of a russian bot. the russian bots do what they're supposed to do, sow discord. their job for russia is to make america unsure of itself or fight with itself. colin kaepernick took a knee. they didn't push him down. the biggest suckers in this, the nfl. because he became a multimillionaire and i'm talking millions and millions of dollars that he now takes to push his marxist ideas while he lives in his mansion. who is the real sucker here? the nfl. nike. i flu my betsy ross flag last week. it's the american flag. they have all pandered to this in hopes of some greater good. it's a loser for them. >> you want to hear more from david webb, go to his fox nation show. >> reality check.
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>> thanks, david. fox news alert. sanctuary city mayors have a message for the feds during today's i.c.e. raids. >> we do not assist with immigration enforcement. >> we have been and will be and will continue to be a sanctuary city. >> sco what else can we expect with the raids getting under way? acting cbp commissioner mark morgan here to react next. ♪ ♪
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. it's your shot of the morning, a home nearly burns to the ground in las vegas but old glory survives thanks to a brave firefighter. >> the first responder rushing to grab the flag flying outside the home to save it. >> the las vegas frierpt tweeting in part, quote, some people want to burn our flag, we save it. #neverforget. thankfully nobody was hurt. >> that's a beautiful moment. >> it is indeed. >> and some people protest the flag and then you have people out there like him trying to save it. >> people protesting across the country, i.c.e. doing interior enforcement. we want to bring in mark morgan the acting commissioner of the cbp. what is happening this morning with regards to actions across
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the country? >> well, i just want to make sure i'm no longer the director of i.c.e. i want to be cautious talking about specific operations. but griff, we talked about this. this is absolutely needed. and the brave men and women of i.c.e. do this every day. it's overpoliticized what they're doing. but this is about the rule of law, about enforcing and maintaining the integrity of the system, protectin protecting thy and making sure that people here in violation of national immigration law, there are consequences to that. this is about the rule of law. and those individuals who remain here illegally, especially those who have received due process, more than any other nation this world would provide someone that came here illegally, including those with final orders, there will consequences to those that remain here illegally. that's what today is about. >> there's a lot of misinformation out there. as best you can, i understand you have certain qualifications
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that you can't go through specific operation details, but in layman's terms what can you tell us about how today is expected to go down? >> yeah. geb, i really want to stay away from those details. that puts the men and women who are risking their lives at further danger that are there to protect the american people. what i can say though again, the men and women of i.c.e., they do this every day. they enforce the federal immigration law every day. they go out there and prioritize those that are criminal illegal aliens as well. but the american people need to understand that the law needs to be enforced against anyone that is here illegally in this country, including those that have final orders of removal. >> you know, mark, we've seen a lot of protesters a reacting to this, a lot of obstruction, obstructing the streets saying we're going to prevent local law enforcement officials from working and cooperating with i.c.e. but what's more significant to me is you see a lot of mayors, people holding high profile
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political positions saying we're going to stand against i.c.e. and help the people that averted the court, decided they weren't going to obey a court order, who violated our laws initially by coming into this country. take a listen to this. these are what the mayors are saying. >> a tremendous amount of fear in our city. so what we're trying to do is lower the fear by giving them information and the information is empowering them. >> let me be clear. we do not assist with immigration enforcement. >> we have been and will be and will continue to be a sanctuary city. we will continue to stand behind our immigrant communities. >> with anyone who has passion, compassion and concern for human beings. >> what do you think, mark? >> let me be clear, that is unconscionable. you're talking about individuals that are here in violation of federal immigration law.
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people who received due process, have received final orders of removal from the judge and still remain here illegally. this is about going after individuals that are here illegally and have committed additional crimes against american citizens in this country. what is unconscionable and should be clear to the american people, that's what's unacceptable. and any city, any law enforcement agency that resists and does not cooperate with federal law enforcement immigration officials, they're actually putting those cities in higher danger. it's absolutely unconscionable. >> mark, pugh research putting out a number 10.5 million undocumented immigrants have come into this country and yet you see in these cobills, you were on one with vice president pence, you saw one thing but democrat lawmakers go and see an entirely different thing, including alexandria ocasio-cortez in some of the more outspoken democrat members of congress. how do you intend to make me
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progress in this crisis which has absolutely broken your agency? >> so, griff, that's a great question. and that's one reason i'm here today. the get the truth and facts out there. try to separate the emotion, the hyperbole, the lies being told to the american people and set forth the truth. and that's what's important. the truth is that we are in a crisis. the truth is that the resources are overwhelmed right now with respect to this crisis and we need congress to act. congress needs to pass meaningful legislation to address the loopholes in our immigration system eanl laws. if they do that, the majority of the crisis ends the next day. they know it. we've told them that and they refuse to act the end the crisis. >> one of the punching bags of the democratic left is of course the wall, the trump administration asking the supreme court late last week to intervene over border wall construction. in your opinion, how important
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is the wall and is it more important now than ever before? >> that's a great question. we keep addressing again and again and we need to make sure that this is still continues to be part of the narrative. it absolutely is. it's an essential element. but part of the multistrategy of the wall, the infrastructure, personnel and strategic locations. we need congress to act. we need the government of mexico to continue to step up their enforcement actions. we need to continue to do interior enforcement operations to apply the law and enforce the law. we need to do it all including the wall. >> i want to bring your attention to, you know, we don't hear much about it in the media but mexico continuing to cooperate. , releasing numbers gins januar, 19, 911 immigrants seeking asylum in the u.s. had been sent
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back to mexico under the remaining mexico policy. how effective has mexico been? >> right now it's been a game changer. ever since the president of the united states threatened the tariffs we've seen unprecedented assistance from mexico. we've never seen this level before. now i remain a healthy skeptic to see in they can sustain that. but right now everything they've promised they're doing and then some. that stat you just rattled out, that is absolutely a game changer. absolutely a significant relief valve for our resources here. but make no mistake, even though the overall numbers decreased by 28% in the last month we're in a full-blown crisis at the southwest border. >> those numbers are a huge tribute to the administration and what they have been able to accomplish that hea haven't seen in the recent past. as we head into 20 you see an enormous contrast between what the trump administration has done, able to achieve, what
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they're currently doing and you the contrast of people like elizabeth warren coming out saying i want to set up a commission to see if there are any unconscionable actions being done toward these illegal immigrants. this is an enormous contrast here. how does this play out? >> to me that's another false narrative out there and a distraction. the ki customs and border protection, including i.c.e., we have more oversight than any other agency out there. just this year alone we've had up to 60 codells, multiple igs and we continue to see the small narrative out there that immigrants are being forced to drink from toilets. false. that they're not being fedde adequately. false. again and again you hear that and we've been tiebl show that's absolutely not true. >> commissioner morgan thank you very much for taking time. we appreciate it. look guard to seeing what else happens on the crisis across on thon theborder.
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. to a fox news alert. several communities are facing a major flood risk as tropical storm barry moves slowly across the gulf coast. >>.>> president trump tweeting a baying risk of flooding in louisiana and across the gulf coast. please be very carry. >> barry made landfall as a category 1 hurricane before weakening to a tropical storm. we have team coverage. rick reichmuth is tracking the storm right now. >> we begin with casey in new orleans. >> an urgent warning not to give
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up and wave the white flag because the threat is far from over. but as you mentioned, the white house, guys, closely monitoring this situation. the governor of louisiana, jon bell edwards sending out a tweet. i'm quoting with early president trump called to discuss tropical storm barry. he asked me to tell the people of louisiana hello and said he' pulling for us. i thank president trump for his support and approvalling our request for assistance. since barry made landfall as a category 1 hurricane yesterday, look at this video. the u.s. coast guard says it's conducted air and boat rescues, 12 people total and two family pets in some lower lying parrishs. but for the most parts people heeded the warnings, either evacuation orders or warnings to stay out of the water. but it looks bike the big easy
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was spared for the most part but the real threat moves forth which is why the governor and the president are reminding people that barry isn't done here yet. >> may see more of the rescues across southeastern louisiana as rick tells us we have a lot of rain in store. >> a lot of rain still to come on shore. and you can see on the satisfied image all of the activity across the southwestern area of the gulf is moisture that's going to continue to pull north. on the radar image there's a couple of distinct bands of heavy rain falling. one of them across areas of mississippi along interstate 59 up toward meridian. stay off of that road if you can. interstate 20 from jackson east ward is the first heavy band. the second one is lafayette. that line of storms is potentially putting down three to six inches of rain within a couple of hours and will quickly
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cause significant flooding. this is how precipitation is likely to go. we've seen another 10-plus inches across southern louisiana and we'll see that today and tomorrow move across the central mississippi valley, parts of tennessee and arkansas certainly need to watch this very carefully as well. >> thanks, rick. well get ready to save big for prime day. but it's not just amazon bringing the deals. >> we've got the stop steals and deals online, like a radio ba vacuum for nearly $80 off. o yeah. coming up next.
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. amazon prime day 2019 known as black friday in july kicks off tomorrow at 3 a.m. eastern. >> the walmart is getting a jump on the action. launching its own sale event today. >> here too break down the biggest deals is lifestyle expert carey riley. you're getting a deal. >> i'm so excited. thank you. this is really exciting. walmart is getting into the mix. we have target, kohl's, everybody wants a piece of the pie. one tip i will fif you. it can get confusing with the deals. go to the site like slick deals.net. on the home page they'll have all of the deals in real time. thousands of them and you can put a deal alert on that. this is a kitchen aid stand mixer. we love this. i actually baked these cookies. >> she baked us cookies. >> comes in ten colors. this is actually 429.99, a
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special at walmart. walmart is into the mix as i said. so the special walmart deal is 279.95. >> i feel like i'm on "the price is right." >> next up is my charge. i just love these chargers so much. it's going to fall down but don't worry. we'll pick it up. it goes right into the outlet so you don't have to worry about having an extra cord which is great. my charge is having a sale. you can get 20% off most of them on the site with 20 off power. it's 95.99. the deal is 76.79. >> got to move a little faster. >> the i bot roomba. this is 374.99. the deal for prime day is going to be 297.49. if you know this is wi-fi, you
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can connect with our alexa. >> i love. >> this is great for teens and tweens. the special here is -- it's 14 14.99 normally. it's going to be 40% off at 8.99. >> look at that. a good deal. >> finally you're going to see a lot of deals on cameras. this is kodak. polaroid. you can save these. turn it on right there. 17674 and the deal is 30% off at 123.72. >> that's a big savings. >> we took a selfie on this earlier. i don't know if you have it. >> it's a good one. >> coming up, acting ice director and maria bartiromo coming up. we'll take selfies and bring
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>> a fox news alert, the trump administration's crackdown on illegal immigration now underway. >> there will be i.c.e. raids in at least ten cities, but protesters and democrats could make things difficult. jedediah: mike tobin is in chicago with what we can expect today. hey, mike, how you doing? >> reporter: good morning. so far, chicago is largely a quiet city. the streets in little village, pillson, are largely empty. the streets downtown, however, have not been empty over the last few days, they have been packed with thousands and thousands of protesters vowing to increase any increase in isaactivity. like mayors in other sanctuary cities, has been vowing that the city will not share data about
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individuals who are in the city or country illegally. >> i hope that the president and where his conscience is pricked, and he realizes that dangling this sword over people's head is causing great harm and trauma to entire households, entire communities. >> reporter: now, i.c.e. contacts working on the ground here in chicago say from their perspective not a whole lot will change. a big part of their job is executing warrants. but politicians can create a lot of attention to their job, they can even send more warrants in their direction, but from their perspective, this is just another day on the job. guys, back to you in new york. griff: mike, thank you. be interesting to see what happens. jedediah: yeah, very controversial day in the news as you have these raids going on, you have the trump administration taking action. which was promised. remember, donald trump came out and said, congress, i'm giving you two weeks to do your job. you don't do your job in two weeks, these raids are going to
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be put into effect because these are people who initially broke the law by coming into the country illegally and then evaded their court orders in many cases. some of these people are potentially criminals. these are people who were told that they should leave the country and decided they were not going to follow the rule of law, and he does not want this to be a precedent that is set up in this country moving forward. i do not blame him for that, and i appreciate that he followed through on his word, because many politicians don't do that. >> you have been hitting that point all morning long. mark morgan, acting cbd commissioner, we had him on just moments ago. here's what he had to say. >> this is about the rule of law, this is about enforcing and maintaining the integrity of this system, protecting this country and making sure that people who are here in violation of national immigration law, that there are consequences to that. this is about the rule of law. those individuals who remain here illegally, especially those who have received due process more than any other nation in this world would provide someone
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that came here illegally including those with final orders, that there are consequences to those that remain here illegally. that's what today is about. >> what's so upsetting about this response, to me, is the rule of law specifically. a number of the politicians that you see out there, they are lawyers. they have law degrees. they were trained that you are an officer of the court, you are an officer of the law when you take that oath, when you study the for that bar, when you get that degree. and to hear them pleatly disavowing that -- completely disavowing that to score political points so offensive to oath they take and also as an american. griff: sorry, go ahead. we heard from commissioner morgan the real frustration, they are at a fever pitch of frustration in the cbp, the border patrol officials and, of course, or i.c.e. officials out there today because they are enforcing laws that that the congress made. and while congress has refused to heed the officials' call for
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the last 18 months to do anything about changing the legal framework of our federal immigration laws, they have continued to hold hearings on the shelters while a overwhelmed agency tries to deal with a crisis that happens that lawmakers originally said wasn't true. we have the acting director of i.c.e., matt albence, coming on this program at 9:20 a.m. you don't want to miss it, because there's a lot of context that needs to be given. this is 2,000 individuals who were released and pose a threat to society. he will tell us more about why the upwards of a million i'll gruel immigrants in the country -- illegal imm grants in the country who have been deemed for removal, these 2,000 need to be removed today. jedediah: these i.c.e. officials are just trying to do their job. they have to battle not only democratic politicians, they have to battle people who are
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running for president who are vilifying them on the left, mayors across the country who stand with the illegal immigrants and protesters who say we're going to inhibit local law enforcement from working with i.c.e. to simply do their job and protect the rule of law. so, you know, your heart has to go out to these people who are just trying to preserve the laws of the country. that's all they're doing, that's it. they've beenville lied -- vilified for doing just that. >> democrats are battling themselves. check out the headline in "the washington post", it reads: house democrats' racially-charged in-fighting escalates. really we've been talking about this for a while now. it really is this battle between -- i love saying this, i said it all weekend long -- the squattedded. [laughter] it sounds like something you would expect to see on ins glam, it's the four freshmen congresswomen -- oh, wow, that was very nice, nice poster. [laughter] i feel like it's magic.
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who are going up against nancy pelosi implying certain things about pelosi. we talked the about this yesterday, maybe an implication of racism. but this is the battle, and are they divided, and what does this mean going forward. jedediah: nancy pelosi had given an interview in "the new york times" to maureen dowd on july 6th, and this is what she said. all these people have their public whatever and their twitter world, but they didn't have any following. they're four people, and that's how many votes they got. if the left doesn't think i'm left enough, so be it. we have to have a solution, not just a twitter fight. she was talking about the aoc wing, so to speak, as i call it, ilhan omar, who have come in, they have a large social media following, they have, you know, gotten millennials very excited, but they are hard-line progressives. they're not interested in a moderate agenda, and she has had to battle them because she has her eye on 2020. so that is the origin of the in-fighting and how it all
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began. griff: we've had this net rich nation conference going on. this is where the squad and a lot of other like-minded focus are gathering. this is the co-chair of the congressional progressive caucus talking about speaker pelosi. listen. >> now, i have said publicly i don't typically find pelosi to be somebody who disrespects members. i've never felt disrespected as a woman of color by nancy pelosi. i don't think those comments were helpful to a broader picture of how we build progressive power in the house and what it looks like relative to overall democratic power. >> for those of you who golf, that was a 5-iron right down the middle. [laughter] somewhat balanced in a polarizing way. these two individuals, not as balanced. here's some sound from rashid talib and ayanna presley. take a listen. >> you have to be unapologetically you. we focus on the things that
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matter in our districts and to bring them into the space. >> this is the time to shake the table. if you're not prepared to come to that table and to represent that voice, don't come. [applause] and if you're worried about being marginallallized and stereotyped, please don't even show up. >> that was a driver when you're on the green. [laughter] jedediah: yeah. the question is what is the impact going to be on 2020 of this in-fight, on the party, is it good for the party, is it bad for the party? so many questions to ask democrats. i spoke with jason nichol, dem strategist, earlier in the show, and he talked about the impact. take a listen. >> i do think that the democratic party needs to come together and recognize what direction they're going in. i think that everyone's moving towards a progressive direction and that nancy pelosi is also move anything that direction, but she's a dealmaker. i think that the squad, the so-called squad, they're uncompromising, and i think you
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need both in the party, and that's one of our strengths. i just wish these disagreements weren't coming out publicly. that's what hurts the party. jedediah: valid point, actually, and that happened with republicans, griff, you know with the tea party, the division between mcconnell, ryan, the mike lees, and when it happens, it happens publicly, unfortunately. griff: it does. speaker john boehner has been in the exact position that nancy is pelosi has been in, and you called it a 5-iron down the middle, but congresswoman joy ya pole is talking about progressive power over overall democrat power. this in-fighting suggests that the base sees an opportunity to take much as the tea party conservatives did over john boehner, more moderate republicans, an opportunity to take over nancy pelosi. posely being pilaried, no democrat woman has done more for that party historically. she has taken back power twice in history, and they are really taking -- this is even bigger
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than taking on john boehner. if they should succeed in these 2020 democrat candidates out on the trail and at these debates are showing what impact they're having, it is going to be a very significant election if one of the takeaways is a threat that nancy pelosi's power. >> i gotta bring it back quickly to mainstream america. this is what is going on on twitter and facebook, is in the conversation in middle america that's happening at dinner tables. talking to individuals when we go to diners, i just don't think it is. they're worried about the economy. you guys, what else? jedediah: the economy. [laughter] we're going to head to some headlines. power was restored overnight for more than 70,000 customers after a massive blackout in new york city, it left people stranded on subways and forced thousands to evacuate a jlo concert at madison square garden. >> please leave the building. >> i love you, i am so sorry
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that this happened in the middle of our moment. jedediah: the blackout also impacted times square. the electric company is investigating what caused the hours-long outage to begin with. and a teenager is charged with first-degree murder in the shooting of an nfl draft pick. francisco mendez is being held on a $1 million bond. authorities say he shot corey ballentine and duane simmons outside a house party in april hours after ballentine was selected by the new york giants. simmons died and ballentine has since recovered. and the military is warning about half a million people planning to storm area 51 in nevada. an air force spokeswoman telling "the washington post" in part: we would discourage anyone from trying to come into the area where we train armed forces. [laughter] the u.s. air force always stands to protect america. a facebook event page is inviting people to storm area 51 in september.
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>> conspiracy theorists believe it's where the government keeps secrets about aliens and ufo. >> isn't that like a big guy at a bar, sir, i would recommend you not pick a fight with me because i'm 6-5, 250 pounds, you're 5-2. jedediah: not a good idea. griff: i think we should dispatch a fox news correspondent -- >> who? who should it be? should it be you? jedediah: i have a perfect person for the job. griff: let me look at the schedule. i'm busy, sorry. [laughter] interesting place, by the way with, because you've got all the alien gift shops. i've been there. jelled jed really? alien gift shops? >> griff jenkins said there are aliens -- jedediah: if there are aliens, i don't want them to come for me. i believe. it's okay. [laughter] griff: all right. of she's the most infamous white house intern ever, and she's sounding off about the worst career advice she ever got. you won't want to miss it. ♪ ♪
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jedediah: we're back with a fox news aler. tropical storm barry moving slowly across the gulf coast, putting several communities at risk of major flooding. griff: the strong rains and and wind mark one of the big tests to new orleans' levee system. >> pete gaynor, the acting administrator of fema, joining us now with an update. sir, where is fema right now with regard to their response? >> well, you can see behind me we're still engaged with local and state partners making sure we don't take our eye off the storm. there's still life-threaten thing conditions that exist as barry moves north through
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northern louisiana, mississippi, western tennessee and arkansas. flash flooding, rain, 6-12 inches, 20 inches in some locations. again, this is not done. we want to make sure people are aware that a threat still exists when it comes to barry. jedediah: pete, aside from the obvious threat of the flooding and the dangers of that, what has been your biggest challenge in terms of dealing with this current situation? >> well, i think, you know, to make sure people don't put themselves at risk and don't put first responders at risk from making bad choices. you know, we want to make sure people remain safe. our top priority is life safety here, and that is our message, has been our message and will be our message until barry dissipates. griff: pete, you're looking here at flooding in terrebonn parish, rescues going on there already, and you've got this low-lying area. talk to me about the challenge, because we're going to get a lot more rain in the next 24-48
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hours, talk to me about the challenge fema has in terms of the terrain that you've got to really spread out over. >> so, you know, it has been raining, and it was raining before barry, so the ground is saturated. it's going to continue to rain. it's going to rain up the lower mississippi valley. that rain's going to come back down probably early, late next week, so even though barry may be nothing but a memory, we're still going to have flooding conditions that persist in the mississippi valley all the way down to louisiana. so, again, the rain is the threat. not only while it's raining, but, you know, in a couple days when those flood waters come back down the mississippi into the gulf. >> sir, talk about the dangers in water that has been standing for not just 48, 72 hours, but that could potentially be standing for a week or longer. >> yeah. well, first of all, i think our message about water is stay out of it. you know, 90% of all the water-related deaths from weather, you know, weather
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systems like barry are drowning. and 50% of those deaths are people in vehicles that drive their vehicles through water. our message is clear today, turn around, don't drown, don't put yourself at risk, don't put first responders or your family at risk. stay out of the water until you get the all clear from local officials. jedediah: how has the cooperation been with your partners? just quickly. >> fantastic. we've been on the phone with the governor, louisiana governor edwards, yesterday with the governor of mississippi, the white house, the vice president. everyone is engaged and coordinated to make sure that we deliver, you know, respond and recovery efforts to impacted disaster survivors. >> thank you for taking time, we certainly are appreciate it. >> thank you, have a good day. >> outrage growing over anti-i.c.e. protesters pulling down an american flag and raising a mexican one, then vandalizing a blue lives matter
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flag. jed dan bongino calls the liberal protests against law enforcement the most liberal thing ever. he's coming up. ♪ ♪ -excuse me. uh... do you mind...being a mo-tour? -what could be better than being a mo-tour? the real question is... do you mind not being a mo-tour? -i do. for those who were born to ride, there's progressive. for making bucket lists bookers know summer is for booking it like booking a beachside resort, and ordering two more tacos than you need to. check. showing the deep end who's boss!
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>> some quick headlines starting wa fox news alert. a powerful 7.3 earthquake rocks east indonesia sending panicked residents running through the streets. so far no reports of serious injuries or damage, it's the same province that was hit by a 6.9 tremor last week. the decades-long search for a missing vatican teenager, crews uncovered two sets of bones inside a cemetery. the bones had been tested next
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week. jed? jedediah: well, outrage growing as protesters take to streets ahead of today's i.c.e. raids. >> outside of a facility in colorado, the american flag yanked down as activists raise a flag of mexico in its place. >> protesters also remove a blue lives matter flag spray painting abolish i.c.e. on it and raising it back upside down. jedediah: former nypd officer, dan bongino. how you doing, dan? >> i feel good. it's a sunday, a little upset about this story but, yeah, listen, this is -- this story about the immigration raids and the democrats protest oring, as i tweeted yesterday, this is the most liberal thing ever, you know? liberalism is generally devoid of any coherent principles at all. i mean, just a couple of years ago democrats are on tape supporting border enforcement, operations against illegal immigration, not legal immigration, of course. they're on tape, chuck schumer,
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others. and now liberals are in the street protesting what? the deportation of people who broke the law, saw a judge, were ordered deported, got due process and have been asked the leave. and the liberals are -- what are you protesting? what you're protesting is you're protesting a southern border. that's what you're protesting. you're suggesting we should have zero border, get an eraser and wipe the border clean. it's totally incoherent. jedediah: what do you make of these may colors, these -- mayors across the country who are standing with these illegal immigrant, these people who came to country illegally, then had the audacity to say, oh, i'm going to ignore this court order, i'm not going to leave. what do you make of these mayors that are standing with them against i.c.e., against the border patrol? >> you know, i've been involved in these operations as a federal agent and a local police officer with the nypd. so i've seen both sides. and the way it work, jed, is
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you'll have the fbi, i.c.e., whatever come in, and they'll contact the local precinct in that area. hey, guys, ladies, can you help us out? we'll be in the area, we're doing an operation. to have a local mayor, the chief executive of the city, tell his police department stand down while a federal agency's operating against people who have been ordered deported, jed, they have been seen in front of a judge, that's what's going on here. jedediah: right. >> it's not only dangerous, but, i mean, you want to talk about just leaving your responsibilities and flushing them down the toilet bowl, you should resign from office if you're saying that immediately. you've abdicated your respondents to the citizens you allegedly govern. griff: you're a former law enforcement officer. why is it even controversial now that we're debating carrying out the rule of law? >> it's controversial only to insane liberals. it's not controversial to sane, sentient-thinking beings. the reason is democrats have been losing working class voters
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regardless of race, sex, gender, whatever, for decades now. we saw it in the last election where trump won pennsylvania, michigan, wisconsin and elsewhere. the democrats need to replenish their power base. they can't do it any other way. by bringing in people not the legal way -- my wife is a legal immigrant. we've always been an open country to legal immigrants. but they can't do out any other way, by loading the country up with illegal immigrants and hoping later on for an amnesty deal where they can get votes. it's a pure power play. and it's the reason, by the way, they flipped the script and started supporting, basically, illegal immigration openly in the last decade. >> dan, in the time remaining i want to get your opinion on a tweet the president used this weekend, and he's using his creative naming. andy mccabe is a major sleaze bag. among many other things, he took massive amounts of money from crooked hillary reps while hillary was under investigation by the fbi.
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your thoughts. >> yeah. well, the president's right, he is a major sleaze bag, and i'll tell you why, i mean, we can prove it. there are things we now know. he's already said in interviews, i believe one with npr -- one i listened to painfully, by the way -- after jim comey, he was the one out there pushing for this obstruction of justice information which -- investigat, which is ridiculous. that's not what the fbi does. but here's the catch, todd. what does he do? he turns around days later up on capitol hill when forced to put his right hand up and swear to tell the truth and tells senator marco rubio that there was no effort to obstruct this investigation. so let me get this straight. behind closed doors you abuse your power to investigate the president because your buddy who was awful was fired, but when you're forced to go on the record you tell the exact opposite story? that's the very definition of a sleaze bag. the prime minister's absolutely right. -- the president's
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absolutely right. griff: maybe we'll hear more about it if robert mueller testifies on the 24th of july. >> always good to talk to you. griff: fox news alert. flood waters rising as tropical storm barry pummels the area with heavy rain. rob. >> schmidtt is there right now. >> reporter: hey, man, welcome to mandeville, louisiana. this is a really nice neighborhood, lakefront here on lake pontchartrain. you've got really great houses around here. the flooding could be a down side. more on barry coming up, stay tuned. ♪ muck measure i like to recommend biotene. it replenishes the moisture in your mouth. biotene definitely works. [heartbeat]
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and yes, whenever you're ready to get started, we are too. call now at 1-800-aspendental. griff: fox news alert, several communis facing a major flood risk as tropical storm barry moves showily across the gulf coast. todd: president trump tweeting this morning, a big risk of major flooding in large parts of louisiana and all across the gulf coast. please be very careful. jedediah: barry made landfall yesterday, we have team coverage with meteorologist rick reichmuth tracking the storm. griff: but we begin with rob schmidtt in louisiana with several neighborhoods underwater. >> reporter: hey, guys. you're clicking in and out a little bit. yeah, we're here in mandeville, louisiana, just on the other side of pontchartrain from new orleans, and you can see we have a lot of water here. check out just how active the lake is today. i mean, it's still just kicking out there. really, really rough water on in
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the lake as the storm continues to churn to our north now, to our north and west. but it's still just producing those rain bands, and this just continual water is the big concern here. like we said, it's a water event with this storm. the winds have died down, but there is concern about flooding in places like this and also to our west. baton rouge, other places are getting dumped on again today. a really nice neighborhood we've got here in mandeville, beautiful. right on the lake. most of them are up on stilts, and you can see why. you've got to build an elevated house around here. let's take you south a couple of hours here toker the a rah bone parish -- to terrebonn parish, is and we got into a real mess. we inned up walking along this levee with the sheriff right after they had to evacuate about 400 people from their homes after this levee overtopped. it's about 9 feet high, they're trying to build it up to 18 feet so they can protect the people in this parish x the sheriff said the problem they have is
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they just don't have federal dollars to get this job done. it's taken years to get the work they have now, but they're trying to build everybody into a bowl to keep that water out on the other side because the gulf basically spills in ever time they get a big -- every time they get a big storm. as we've seen with this storm, the levees in new orleans faced a pretty big test with this hurricane. it was only a hurricane for about an hour, barry was, but they faced a pretty big test, and they fared pretty well, and that's thanks to the $15 billion in federal money that came down here to secure a lot of these vulnerable spots for southern louisiana and the new orleans area. so right now, guys, as we take a look around here again, still getting some of the storm, a little bit of rain. it's not raining too hard right here, right now, we've got a little bit of a break, but it'll continue to rain in this state for the next couple of days. back to you. griff: rob, thanks. rob there in mandeville on the northern side of lake pontchartrain, new orleans below him and really this rain that's
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coming going to come back down. the fema administrator telling us that's the problem. we check in with rick reichmuth, it's not over yet. rick: yeah. we're in july, this is the very beginning of hurricane season. things really pick up by the time you get into august and september, september the peak of it. but the river is at flood stage, it's been at flood stage for pushing 200 days because of all the moisture over the winter and the spring. now we have this storm here. i will tell you, if we have a storm again, a stronger storm into august or september, we could be talking about this same situation. at least a storm kind of in that same area. you see all that consecutive activity, that's thunderstorm activity, moisture that's still going to get pulled in up across areas of that central, southern area of the gulf and pulling towards the north. three distinct areas of rain right now. one in towards mississippi, this is causing localized flooding, also some tornado warnings with it this morning. especially along interstate 59
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corridor, so watch if you're driving there. then we have another big line of storms moving to east of lafayette now. you're about to get a break. and then we have a new line of storms forming just to east of lake charles. we'll see that one pull off to east, that next one become more dominant and put rain later on back towards the lafayette area. of little bit of a break, but more coming. by tonight and tomorrow heavy rain moving across parts of arkansas and towards the boot hill of missouri, western parts of tennessee and kentucky, maybe a little illinois as well. that confluence of the ohio and mississippi rivers. flooding concerns there and, guys, the levees did do really well along the mississippi ruff, but there's all those other rivers. there's a lot of rivers there that are all going to continue to rise, so we have a long ways to go. todd: rick, you raised a great point, we're at the start, more or less, of hurricane season. and it's not like the mississippi river is sudden hi going to evaporate now between august and september.
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rick: all that water's still got to come down. we're going to be in flood stage for a very long time. jedediah: thanks, rick. we're going to turn to your headlines. police swarm a murder suspect in the middle of a walmart parking lot. [inaudible conversations] jedediah: officers with guns drawn surround the man in connecticut as he puts his hands up and drops to ground. the man is accused of killing his wife, his parents and aunt. and a purple heart found in an arizona goodwill is returned to its soldier's family. the medal belonged to navy if seaman nick demileo jr. who died overseas in world war ii. >> i have always herald stories about -- heard stories about uncle nick and he didn't come home and he was lost. this is almost like my uncle nick is coming home. jedediah: the family suspects his sister had the medal in her
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belongings. a twitter user asked monica lewinsky what's the worst career advice you've ever received? lewinsky responded, quote, an internship at the white house will be amazing on your resumé. [laughter] those are your headlines. todd: for all that she has been through, that response is pretty impressive. you've got to give her credit for that. jedediah: she pops up every now and then, and it's always entertaining, i'll tell you that. tornado todd we all remember what it was like the first time we went to a mall as kids. >> i needed to find sanctuary in a place where i could gather my thoughts and regain my strength. ♪ ♪ todd: tragically, devastatingly many of those malls are going away. so is that robbing teens of their independence? we're talking about it.
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the kids in america coming up next. ♪ ♪ thanks for the ride-along, captain! i've never been in one of these before, even though geico has been- ohhh. ooh ohh here we go, here we go. you got cut off there, what were you saying? oooo. oh no no. maybe that geico has been proudly serving the military for over 75 years? is that what you wanted to say? mhmmm. i have to say, you seemed a lot chattier on tv. geico. proudly serving the military for over 75 years. you ok back there, buddy? if ywhen you brush or floss, you don't have to choose between healthy gums and strong teeth. complete protection from parodontax has 8 designed benefits for healthy gums and strong teeth. complete protection from parodontax.
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♪ ♪ todd: some quick sports headlines for you. in nascar's sibling rivalry, the kentucky speedway. big brother takes down little brother. >> kurt busch with the advantage! kyle busch slides! kurt busch will win! todd: earning a playoff spot, his first win with his new team, chip ganassi racing. and the defending champ no advantage djokovic hopes to deny roger federer his 31st grand -- 21st grand slam title. and we had yesterday a denial of
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serena williams, so we'll see if the underdog or new by gets the win today. griff: it will be interesting. i'm still stuck on what we were talking about teasing going out of the last segment, and that is the death of the mall. a tragedy that has befallen the teenagers of which i am a parent of two in america, and that was going to mall. that sacred place growing up. jedediah: yeah. remember the mall? let's check out this spot. [laughter] >> i felt impotent and out of control, which i really hate. i needed to find sanctuary in a place where i could gather my thoughts and regain my strength. ♪ ♪ >> i love the smell of commerce in the morning! >> star court mall, featuring america's favorite place to cool down. scoops ahoy ice cream shop. >> ahoy. >> ahoy. >> a ahoy. >> star court mall is one of the finest shopping facilities in
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america. jedediah: so one of the scenes you see there is from strange ther things, which i just started watching, and they have a whole bunch of retro references that take me back to '90s and the '80s. i used to hang out at the stat telephone island mall, and let me tell you, i learned how to shop, how to have conversations with other kids face to face, i learned how to be independent. my parents would drop me off, it was like freedom. you go hang out at the mall, and kids aren't doing that anymore because they're sitting home on their cell phones. we need to save the malls. somebody needs to put this on a presidential agenda. griff: well, they did. one of the 2020 candidates has a american mall app. he wants to do something with the empty parking lots. unfortunately, what has happened with many of these malls like the mall of memphis has been turned into things like walmart in the case of memphis or
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amazon. andrew yang was on twitter standing in an empty mall parking lot. here is a little bit of his video. watch. >> 30 percent of malls are scheduled to close in the next four years, and if you've ever been to a ghost mall, it's a very, very eerie thing. i have a proposal for the american mall act that'll put matching grants and property development incentives to try to help communities and private developers repurpose malls. todd: here's the quote that started this whole thing. it's by jennifer wright. she writes -- appropriately named -- malls were a place where you could feel independent but still safe. you could eat junk food that cost a few dollars, you could get your ears pierced at claire's for $20. you could buy cds at sam goodies and loudly, on obnoxiouy discuss their merits to chagrin of older a patrons. it's so sad that malls are now bombing a thing of the past.
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-- becoming a thing to have past. jedediah, as a stranger thing aficionado who went to mall in her teen years -- jedediah: i went a couple of weeks ago with my mom. [laughter] todd: -- did you ever chat with a boy with hair like steve from stranger things? jedediah: i have to confess that i did. there was an auntie ann's, there was a guy that used to work there. i like the mall still. i feel like you go, and it's true, a ghost mall -- if you've ever been to a place where a mall has shut down, there's no cars in the parking lot, i cry for the free market on days like that, and i cry for the young kids that don't have that experience. you'd get your slice of pizza, sometimes there'd be a movie theater in the mall, maybe go on your first date at the mall. i had a date in the sixth grade where i met up with a boy, i was super nervous. it's where you learned those social skills and had to sort of grow up. griff: by the way, we had an ice
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rink in memphis, tennessee. i learned to ice skate so that i could date teenage -- todd: so let me be clear are, you do espouse the virtues of robin sparks when she said, let's go to mall today. jedediah: let's go to mall today. yeah, absolutely. todd: good. [laughter] griff: well, it's happened again. a man dies from a flesh-eating bacteria just 48 hours after leaving the beach. jedediah: dr. nicole saphier has all the tips everyone needs to hear before going into the water. here she comes. todd: that was a fun turn, huh? ♪ ♪ can my side be firm?
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♪ griff: welcome back. a warning all parents need to hear. a 17-year-old violin prodigy the latest to die after an a apparent overdose of a deadly new party drug cocktail known as calvin klein. jedediah: what ises this drug craze, and how can we keep our kids safe? dr. nicole saphier joins us now to explain. so this is a terrifying concoction, this is ketamine and cocaine being combined. how common is this? >> they're calling it calvin klein, and the truth is this isn't brand new, this has been around for a long time. unfortunately, it just has a new trade name, so it's becoming popular again. essentially, what you're doing p is you're combining a stimulant with kind of a downer, and it has a similar effect to ecstasy, molly, whatever you want to call it. it can be a lethal combination because you have this stimulant and a potential hallucinogenic. ketamine began in vietnam, and
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it came for surgery in the field, and we're using it for pain as well as an antidepress santa. but when you get this in the form of a pill in clubs, people don't know how to mix -- they don't know how to mix these drugs. shouldn't mix these drugs at all. but they're just taking random amounts that are lethal, and people are dying. and it sounds like it is rampant in the nightclub seen specifically here in new york city. griff: it's terrifying, i have two teenage daughters, and the threat is -- it sounds like an addiction where you are at risk down the road. you're at risk -- >> in that moment because it can cause a massive increase in your blood pressure, it can cause your heart -- i'm not going to say to explode, but it can give you a fatal heart attack and also cause you to have a seizure. you can aspirate, get pneumonia. all these ways you can potentially die, it's limitless. the hallucinations, you've heard these terrifying stories where people believe their hallucinations, they can commit
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crimes and suicide because of them. terrifying. jedediah: parents need to be having these conversations with your kids. >> the problem is you can get these drugs anywhere, so we need to figure out how to crack down on them. jedediah: we have another terrifying stories. i've read this one. a tennessee man has died just 48 hours after contracting a flesh-eating bacteria from a florida waterway. is this something that people who decide to go on vacation and they ant what to go -- and decide they want to go for a swim in the ocean they need to be worried about? >> freshwater, you know, your lakes and your rivers tend to have a lot more of these flesh-eating bacterias. in this specific case, however, they were in brackish waters which has saltwaters in it as well. it's what you mix your fresh and saltwater together. specifically in the summertime when the water's warmer, you have specific bacterias which thrive in salt watered, and it is one of these flesh-eating
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bacterias. this man, he had a cancer diagnose sis at one point -- diagnosis. he may have been more susceptible, however, you don't need to be immunocompromised to die from flesh-eating bacteria. if you have any open wounds, you should probably avoid water at all costs. i mean, you can cover them, you can clean them -- jedediah: you're saying an open wound, does that that mean if i have a scratch on my finger? >> a blister from walking around all day on vacation. unfortunately, there are some deadly bacterias, and now we have a lot of bacterial resistance from overuse of antibiotic as, so we're having a harder time treating these infections. you have to be very careful going into water. and now in louisiana the flood waters, you have very warm, brackish waters that are flooding the streets. and so these bacteria thrive in here, and that's why we say you stay out of the flood waters because anyone can get infected with these bacteria.
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griff: but even from flood waters, in this case we're talking about -- i grew up there, and right there in florida is this bay brackish area, that's where we had water skiing and jet skiing, because there wasn't the big waves, so it was calmer waters. should people be cognizant of the waters they're getting into? >> yes. it doesn't mean you have to avoid, i mean, you don't want to take away all our best summer pastimes because the majority of people are not going to get these inning -- infections, and they're not going to have these severe consequences. however, maybe there should be a sign posted, if you have any sort of open wound, you should avoid these waters. no, i don't think the majority of people need to avoid going into the water. jedediah: people need to be informed because a lot of people don't know and a lot of doctors don't even know. the fact that he went to doctor -- >> it's very hard to identify and then -- griff: thank you very much for being here.
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jedediah: i.c.e. raids now underway across the country. griff: we're live in one of the cities with what to expect, coming up next. let's get down to business. the business of road trips... ...adventure... ...and reconnecting. modernized comfort inn's and suites have been refreshed because our business is you. get the lowest price guaranteed on all choice hotels when you book direct at choicehotels.com. ::: ::
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fox news alert, the trump administration's crackdown on illegal immigration now underway on one administration official telling fox news the raids began last night. >> there will be i.c.e. raids in at least nine cities. the protesters and democrats could make things difficult for i.c.e. agents. >> mike tobin is in chicago with what we can expect today. mike? >> good morning, gang. this is one of the predominantly hispanic neighborhoods in the city of chicago. what we're looking at right now is quiet streets. if there has been an increase in i.c.e. activity, it's not been overt. one place didn't have quiet streets over the weekend is the downtown area. that was packed with thousands and thousands of demonstrators, people vowing to resist an increase in i.c.e. activity. also vowing to resist an increase in i.c.e. activity is
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chicago's new my mayor who promises the city will not cooperate and not share information as the president has been promising a big round up. >> i hope that the president in somewhere his conscience is bothered and he realizes that dangling this sword over people's head is causing great harm and trauma to entire households, entire communities. >> now, activists in the neighborhoods have been complaining about what they call collateral damage, that agents show up at a house one person's name on a warrant, they will get into the house and find several undocumented people and pick them all up. i.c.e. agents agree that that's a problem. that's why they want to communicate with the local agents. they want to make these transfers in the courthouse, less risk to the agents and the civilia civilians. that way they only pick up the one guy they are looking for. back to you in new york. >> mike, thank you very much. we will keep an eye on it. also may see some protesters out there across the country.
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we saw the mexican flag being raised. the blue lives matter flag upside down spray-painted with abolish i.c.e., this argument against the rule of law. this is why so important for context to understand it is not just donald trump who is trying to do this. you have jeh johnson, the dhs secretary under president obama who talked about the raids saying what's happening today is in no way unique. listen. >> deportations occur all the time. of those who have been ordered to deported by an immigration judge hopefully after they have exhausted their appeal rights, after they have had an opportunity to have their asylum case heard, we simply have to enforce the law, particularly if someone has been ordered deported. in other words, they have exhausted all their appeal rights, and so it is important for migrants to know they have rights, but enforcement actions themselves are not extraordinary. >> so this is how quickly the party has changed.
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that is an obama era official saying something terribly sane, i might add, look at that in contrast to that clip we just saw where mike tobin presented the chicago mayor coming out and saying yeah, listen, we're not going to cooperate with the feds. we're not going to cooperate with i.c.e. or the administration. what are you talking about? i want to know when it became optional, when it became optional for a mayor to say hey we're going to decide not to cooperate and not enforce these laws, that's too bad. your job is to help enforce the law. not to obstruct the law. >> everybody is doing this. all these mayors that we have listened to all morning long, they are doing it just to score political points with a base that is ravenous for this. at the end of the day, we are a country built on the rule of law. marc morgan spoke about that, the acting cbp commissioner and he said today is not about anything other than enforcing that rule of law. take a listen. >> this is about the rule of law. there is about enforcing and
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maintaining the integrity of the system, protecting this country, and making sure that people that are here in violation of national immigration law, that there are consequences to that. this is about the rule of law, and those individuals who remain here legally, especially those who have received due process more than any other nation this world would provide someone that came here illegally to include in those final orders that there are consequences to those that remain here illegally. that's what today is about >> about the rule of law in just about 15 minutes, we are going to have the acting director of i.c.e., on this show. we have exclusively some information the i.c.e. officials releasing, a detainer report going back to last year. you will learn more about who it is that they are seeking to apprehend today and ultimately remove from the u.s. >> you know, in the midst of this conversation, we have a lot of unhinged politicians -- i'm sorry to use that word, but it is true. you have a lot of unhinged celebrity activists.
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alyssa milano -- milano is one of those celebrities. she calls herself a political activist. she comes out on this issue of border security and puts a tweet out comparing vice president pence to a nazi leader. look at those two photos she decides to put side by side. this is what people talk about when they talk about trump derangement syndrome, because i don't recall alyssa milano putting out photos like this when obama administration officials are trying to enforce the law, when you had democrats for years talking about the importance of border security and prioritizing border security when they stepped on those primary debate stages. suddenly she's outraged and saying this kind of thing about mike pence. why? because you don't like president trump? if you sit back and think about it, this is trump derangement syndrome at its best. >> derangement is the right word to use. i thought by now, maybe i'm naive, i thought by now the references to nazis, the holocaust, hitler, if you are going to try to hit that point, you better stick it exactly
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100%, and you better be right from a historical context, otherwise you are going to have a lot of jewish groups which we have seen so far, back up, that's not right. the holocaust was a horrific, horrific time in our world history. your comparisons to mike pence, to president trump, to others in the republican party, to what's going on at the border is ridiculous, offensive to so many people who died and so many others who lost family members in that horrific time in hur history. -- our history. >> if you are trying to make a point to anyone with a reasonably moderate stance, somebody who isn't a fan of president trump, who might be seeing what you are saying, when you tweet something like that, you are speaking to such a small minority that is going to take that favorably. the vast majority of people in this country look at that and say this woman has lost her mind. >> to be fair, under president obama, on the right, you had some hollywood stars speaking out in this fashion, under president george w. bush, you had hollywood going against him, what is new, though, is this
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kind of rhetoric inside the democratic party under speaker pelosi's leadership. the washington post headline shows house democrats racially charged infighting escalates. that's a mere understatement because what you're seeing now with this this is taking on speaker pelosi really starting to threaten her power after having returned power to democrats for the second time. >> we have talked all morning long. we have talked this whole week about this fissure. some people taking sides. some people trying to play it down the middle. we will give you a sampling of that. here's co chair of the congressional caucus taking what i would view as a little bit down the road position. take a listen to what she had to say at what is rather a progressi progressi progressive --
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>> i don't think those comments by pelosi were helpful. to a broader picture of how we build progressive power in the house and what it looks like relative to overall democratic power -- >> that is a very lawyer thought out answer, very balanced. take a listen to this. >> you have to be unapologetically you. you focus on things that matter in our district. to bring them into the space. >> this is the time to shake -- if you are not prepared to come there and to represent that voice, don't come. if you're worried about being marginalized or stereotyped, ploez don't even show up -- please don't even show up >> this was a very progressive gathering of people. they are preaching to the hard core left wing base there. these newly elected congressmen and women, often times women in these cases are coming out and
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saying listen we were elected to buck the system. we were elected to step in and shake up the establishment because they feel that democrats have not been fulfilling a progressive enough agenda and they feel that voters want to hear from them. so they are standing firm, and i think that nancy pelosi is going to have a hard time contending with a lot of these women who have very very strong and very very principled and not backing down. >> president trump noticing tweeting this morning this, so interesting to see progressive democrat congresswomen who originally came from countries whose governments are a complete and total catastrophe, the worst, most corrupt, inept anywhere in the world if they even have a functioning government at all, now loudly and viciously telling the people of the united states the greatest and most powerful nation on earth, how our government is to be run. why don't they go back and help fix the totally broken and crime-infested places from which they came and then come back and show us how it is done. these places need your help
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badly. can't leave fast enough. i'm sure nancy pelosi would be happy to work out travel arrangements. this tweet that you are seeing now is going to get a lot of discussion. >> someone is feeling very comedic today. >> i call the squad the instagram group, hashtag squad goals. the number of things they say are the memes on instagram. the defiant and inspirational memes. this is real life. this isn't social media, just having fun, trying to you know rile people up. this is real life. the words you say have real life consequences. i think that needs to be taken into consideration. >> i think president trump is making an important point. he's trying to say that the values that built this country, everything from securing the border and being a nation of laws to, you know, freedom of speech on college campuses, whatever issues you are talking about, a lot of times these are the issues that the left is trying to obstruct. he is drawing attention to that saying if you don't like what this country stands for, you are not going to change it what
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america values. if you don't like it, leave and set up camp somewhere else. fox news alert. defense department identifies a servicemember killed in afghanistan yesterday. the sergeant died in enemy small arms fire during a combat operation. the circumstances surrounding his death are under investigation. but the taliban has claimed responsibility. the fallen american hero has been awarded a posthumous purple heart and bronze star. the texas native is the tenth u.s. servicemember killed in action in afghanistan this year. and power is restored overnight for more than 70,000 customers after a massive blackout in new york city. the outage left people stranded on subways, knocked out traffic lights, and even forced thousands to evacuate a j-lo concert at madison square garden. >> no. >> oh, yes. >> i love you. i'm so sorry this happened in
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the middle of our moment >> are they waiting for tonight? >> well played. i don't know if everybody got that. that's a j-lo song. the blackout also impacted times square. the electric company is investigating what caused the hour's long outage. the crowd goes wild as a very special guest joins paul mccartney on stage during a concert in los angeles. >> ladies and gentlemen, the one and only -- [cheers and applause] >> former beatles bandmate ringo star joined mccartney for a few songs, before ringo threw his drumsticks into the crowd. that's pretty awesome. >> that's the coolest thing i have seen all day. >> you go to a concert and you get two superstars. that's a win. >> and the beatles; right? >> i know, that's true. >> and catch those drumsticks. >> and sell them on ebay.
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>> we both said ebay. [laughter] you heard 2020 democrats push for the big $15 minimum wage. >> $15 federal minimum wage. >> we need to raise the minimum wage to at least $15 an hour. >> we need to raise the minimum wage to $10 an hour -- $15 an hour. >> if it's so great, why are amazon workers protesting it on prime day? maria bartiromo is on deck. here we go. ♪ when you're not able to smile, you become closed off.
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for $15 minimum wage. >> but not everyone likes it. amazon workers striking on prime day. >> sunday morning futures host maria bartiromo is joining us to weigh in. great to see you. >> how is everybody this morning? >> very well what's going on here? >> look, there's one store, one facility that you are seeing strikers ahead of this prime day. we spoke with amazon, and they gave us a statement, and basically saying that we pay excellent pay raging from 16.25 to 20.80 an hour and they have healthcare benefits, 20 weeks parental leave, paid vacation, promotional opportunities. there's the statement that you guys are putting on. we provide great employment opportunities with excellent pay, comprehensive benefits including healthcare up to 20 weeks parental leave. this is a he said/she said. not seeing it across the country but seeing it at one facility. when do you strike?
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you strike when the iron is hot. it is prime day. this is when everybody is focused on amazon. they feel like this is when they get heard. >> what else, this is pretty comprehensive that they are offering employees. -- what else could they offer? >> it really is, jed. they want their temporary workers to be transitioned into full time workers. you know, in retail, it depends on when you see big shopping days; right? in retail why do we have so many temporary workers around christmas? makes sense, so that's basically what all retailers do, they have a lot of temp workers, but this particular facility wants fewer temps, more full time. >> maria, i want to get to your show today, "sunday morning futures". you have the chairman of the judiciary committee, lindsay graham, he was with vice president pence down in texas. we have the raids presumably underway, the i.c.e. raids across the country what are you going to talk -- >> we're going to come back and speak with the chairman, senator graham about what he saw when he
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went down to see the detention centers as well as the border, with the vice president. but importantly, senator graham is going to break news in the next hour because he's going to tell us exactly when he's going to bring his plan, his bill down to the floor for a vote. remember months ago senator graham said look, if you change these loopholes, the fact that you have got the flores agreement, asylum standards, you change those, you can cut some of these people by 90% of the flood of people coming to the border, so we will talk to him about that. we will also talk to him about iran. he will break news on the border bill. i know that. we're going to talk about iran. there's mueller. you know, the judiciary committee is doing a deep dive on the ig report, once the ig report is out, we will talk about that as well. i have a really interesting guest named jimmy lie coming on. this is a chinese dissident, and he left china when he was 9 years old, started his own business, has been in hong kong, has been on the front alliance,
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the -- on the front lines of the 2 million people hitting the streets in hong kong . he says if this extradition bill goes forward, that is the end of hong kong and the world should focus on this. we think of hong kong as the international hub of the city, like new york, etc. his story is interesting. i'm looking forward to talking to him this morning. we have the chairman of homeland security committee, and that is of course congressman mccall, michael mccall. he is also going to talk about the fact that that committee oversees sales of foreign equipment to -- i'm sorry, military equipment to foreigners. we are in the middle of selling all this equipment to taiwan. the president to taiwan was in new york last night. we will talk about that as well. >> huge show. >> i'm very excited about this show. >> tune in, 40 minutes, can't wait to see you. >> thank you very much. i will see you then. fox news alert, i.c.e. raids now underway nationwide many sanctuary city mayors are trying to protect illegals from getting
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arrested. >> we do not assist with immigration enforcement. >> we have been and will be and will continue to be a sanctuary city. >> acting i.c.e. director reacts and joins us with an exclusive look at who the trump administration is going after. with all that usaa offers why go with anybody else? we know their rates are good, we know that they're always going to take care of us. it was an instant savings and i should have changed a long time ago. we're the tenney's and we're usaa members for life. call usaa to start saving on insurance today.
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fox news alert. the trump administration's crackdown on illegal immigration now underway. there will be i.c.e. raids in nine cities, but protesters and ae elected officials could make things difficult for i.c.e. agents. joining us now, the acting i.c.e. director matt albins. mr. director, what is happening this morning at this moment? >> well, i won't speak to specifically anything that's going on in operational perspective. the overarching concern when we conduct any sort of enforcement operation is the safety and security of both our officers that are conducting the operation as well as the public.
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but i will say that i think using the term raid does everybody a disservice. we are doing targeted enforcement actions against specific individuals who have had their day in immigration court and been ordered to be removed by a judge. we are executing the judge's orders. >> that's an important point. these individuals have had their day in court. they have been deemed appropriate for removal. we understand there is somewhere around 2,000 -- i know you can't speak to specifics. try and give us some indication of who these individuals are. >> these are individuals who have come to this country illegally. had the opportunity to make an asylum claim in front of an immigration judge. most of them chose not to avail themselves of the opportunity and didn't even show up for their first hearing. we went above and beyond in this circumstance and gave these individuals back in february an opportunity to turn themselves in to arrange for an orderly process to be removed from the country. only 3% actually responded to
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those letters and came in and arranged for those processes to go through. the rest of them ignored not only the judge's orders but also our request for them to come in. at this point, we have no choice but to go out and execute the lawful issued removal orders from an immigration judge. >> mayors across the country are actually encouraging people to resist these enforcement operations. i want you to take a listen. i would like your reaction. >> tremendous amount of fear in our city what we're trying to do is lower the fear by giving them information and the information is empowering them. >> let me be clear. we do not assist with immigration enforcement. >> we have been and will be and will continue to be a sanctuary city. we will continue to stand behind our immigrant communities >> there's anxiety that's being created not just in our immigrant community, but with anyone who has passion, compassion and concern for human beings. >> director, your reaction? >> well, look, i think the entire public is safer when law
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enforcement works together. there are those occasions in which we don't ask law enforcement to enforce immigration laws on our behalf. most of it is simply information sharing or most times it is trying to get access to individuals that those agencies have already arrested and sitting in their custody and their jails, we have access to to make sure we know who is in those facilities, are they here legally and if they are not here legally, then we remove them from the country. it is incredulous that they enforce the law they are sworn to uphold but when we come in to uphold the law, then it is a problem. >> a declined detainer quarterly report you are going to begin today and do so forth every quarter, what is this? >> so this is a report that was mandated by the president's executive order back in 2017. what we're doing right now is highlighting the dangers caused by some of these sanctuary
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cities' poll sis. -- policiepolicies. an example, an individual was arrested in january of last year for possession of controlled substance. we lodged a detainer so we could take custody of him when he was released by the county. they chose not to honor that. next month he was arrested for murder. we have another individual arrested ten crimes over a year. he was a one man crime spree. every time he was arrested, we tried to get custody of him, and san francisco chose not to do this. the sad thing the law enforcement wants to cooperate with us, but it is the politicians don't want them to do so. the law enforcement wants to enforce the law, want to assist us, but sometimes are prohibited by state laws or executive order. >> i want to ask you about protesters in colorado taking down an american flag, raising a mexican flag. they also raised a blue lives matter flag upside down, the
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sign for distress and wrote abolish i.c.e. on it. >> well, i think it's disgraceful. these are individuals both ones that work in our correctional facilities or detention facilities or contractors or officers in there, these individuals are enforcing the laws that congress has passed. if the individuals don't like the law that congress passed, they shouldn't be picketing our buildings. they should be picketing congress. >> director, are you concerned that congress is not going to give you the support, bipartisan support to do the interior enforcement that we have heard from so many officials over the last year that you need to do going forward from here on these enforcement actions today and then going forward? >> i'm absolutely concerned. as we have seen time and again, we've failed to get the support that we need, whether it's in terms of fixing loopholes in the law, which are creating this crisis at the border, whether it is in terms of funding so that one, we can detain the individuals that we have in custody or that have been arrested by the border patrol or i.c.e. officers and two so we actually have the resources to
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do it. i will tell you this, griff, there is no way you will ever have border security without a strong interior enforcement component. if anybody says that they can, they don't know what they are talking about. >> director, we wish you and all of your agents safety today as you carry out the rule of law. thank you for taking time and we look forward to hearing more as this debate clearly continues and certainly sadly so does the crisis. thank you, director. >> thanks for your time, appreciate it >> thank you. president trump slamming robert mueller after house lawmakers postpone his testimony by a week. congressman nunes says if he were mueller, he wouldn't show up in the hearing at all. the congressman joins us coming up next. ♪ most people think a button is just a button. ♪
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♪ ♪ the heat is on >> a live look at your nation's capitol and that is now we want to bring in g.o.p. congressman devin nunes ranking member of the house intelligence committee. good morning, congressman. how are you? >> i'm doing well. this is my first time on fox & friends on the weekend where ed henry is not going to be the one interviewing me. but i hear he is doing well. i want to wish him and his
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sister the very best. what a great story. >> thank you. >> thanks. >> he is doing great. we heard from him yesterday. he's eating peanut butter and banana. he will be interviewing you soon. we must try and live up to the task and ask you first about the mueller testimony being pushed back now. we understand possibly on the 24th. what can you tell us? >> well, i didn't think that -- i think mueller would be crazy to testify. i don't think it's wise for him to testify, but saying that, i want him to testify. i think there's a lot of questions that he needs to answer. so you already saw this week it got postponed -- it was supposed to be wednesday. now it is kicked to a week from wednesday. my guess is, it could slip again or not happen at all. we'll see. but we'll be prepared now -- ten days from now. >> do you think we will get anymore information from him? mueller has come out and said many times i have said all i have to say? it's almost sounds like he said his piece. i don't know how much more information there is here that he is going to reveal. what do you think?
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>> well, i think that's the key point is what is he going to reveal? if he's only going to say what he said in the report, there's no real point of him coming to testify. now, there's plenty of underlying issues in that report that i would expect as an american taxpayer that spent -- just spent 35 to 40 million dollars producing what i call -- they call it the mueller report. i call it the mueller dossier. i think it is an embarrassment. it is the embarrassment that the public spent that much money. if you went to the house republican report from the intelligence committee, a year ago, it is a far better and far superior product. there's so many unanswered questions that i think mueller has a responsibility to answer. >> representative nunes, i want to switch gears a little bit. the president is up -- yesterday at least and tweeting about andrew mccabe. andy mccabe is a major sleeze bag among many other things he took massive amounts of money
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from crooked hillary reps for campaign. do you know what is in those communications, and if so, what is? >> i don't know what in these communications but the house intelligence committee, we asked for those records. we subpoenaed for those records, and we never received those records. then you had mccabe go and write a book. okay? we have also asked, well wait a second, what about all the information when you were writing this book. what process did you go through to write this book? look, this is a guy who tried to kick me out of a meeting, a gang of eight meeting, during this whole -- when this investigation was kicked off, way back in may of 2017. so i think he's a bad dude. i think he obstructed a congressional investigation, our investigation and just on that
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alone, he ought to be prosecuted for the things he did to ruin our investigation into the house of representatives, not to mention everything else he did. >> congressman, here in new york, there are reports that district of new york prosecutors are unlikely to charge members of the trump organization. what do you know about that? is it indicative perhaps that perhaps some of the president's critic will give up their fight against him? >> well, i don't know that they will ever give up their fight. that's why it's come to the point -- i mean almost every time i come on the show, when ed's interviewing me, i mean, i do nothing but almost laugh but it's so serious and so wrong it is hard to do that. but this is just another example of, you know, they put more bait on the hook and they throw it out. i will tell you, when they're bringing robert mueller in, they're running out of bait. i mean, they don't have much left. so, you know, the conspiracy theorists who talked about collusion. they knew there was never any collusion. robert mueller knew the first day he walked in the door there
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was no collusion. the lead investigator, peter strzok who has his own problems knew there was no collusion. we know that from the text messages. so with all that said, what have we really been looking at? what did mueller really do? and i want the american people to understand this was not an investigation into collusion or what was happening with russians. they weren't trying to figure out what the russians had done. we already knew what the russians did. this was nothing more and nothing less than an obstruction of justice trap. okay? it was not an obstruction of justice investigation. it was a trap that they left open for the better part of two years to try to get the president to fire somebody or do something so that they could then move to impeachment. it never happened because we got a real attorney general and a real grown-up who walked in the door and said okay, where are the russians? and, you know, mueller and his team hadn't seen any russians except for the democrats, russians that they were working with to get the dirt on trump. >> representative nunes speaking of the origin of the
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investigation and what was the cause, the christopher steele saga persists and continues. you have former british ambassador to the u.s., he vouched for british spy ex christopher steele who put together this unverified dossier on trump. and he told officials he was absolutely legit. what do you think? >> well, steele is anything but legit. i think when you actually go through the steele dossier, people will find in the future that the steele dossier was probably not written by christopher steele himself. it was probably win by fusion gps and the sources i think are even more important. i think the sources came from other bad actors. so there's a lot of people in the u.k. that have a lot to answer for. i mean, they are our -- one of our longest allies and best allies and hopefully when there's a new government in place over in the u.k., some of these questions can be answered. but, you know, you had a guy who hadn't -- let's just --
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specifically on steele, the dude hadn't been in moscow for 20 years. he was supposedly relying on second and third hand reporting from russians. and like i said, just a little bit ago, most of these russians were either fake or phony russians or had ties to the democratic party. >> quickly, does the deep state extend across the pond? >> well, i don't believe that -- there's a question mark between was it the british government actually involved in this or were they a private contractor's firms -- remember, christopher steele was a private contractor. he was probably working with other private contractors, like he was working with the fusion gps, which was the dirty operations arm for the clinton campaign of the democratic party. those are all questions that still need to be answered is what did our british allies know and when did they know it? >> thank you very much, congressman. we will do our best to get ed back on this couch to interview you next. a new iranian tv show
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glorifies the capture of an american journalist. the series aims to justify the detention trial and imprisonment of washington post reporter. iran freed the reporter in a prisoner swap with the u.s. in 2016 after holding him for more than a year. and washington democratic governor jay inslee says if he's elected president, he wants a u.s. soccer player to serve in his cabinet. >> my first act will be to ask megan rapinoe to be my secretary of state. i haven't asked her yet. this could be a surprise to her. >> inslee says the world cup champion has been an inspiration who would embrace unity. yesterday we showed you these patriotic sneakers a country music legend is selling to help military families. today we just learned just three minutes of his fox & friends appearance, those sneakers sold out. he says he wants to serve his
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country any way he can. >> what i regret most is i never served my country in the military. our marine father, 92 years old, he instilled in us a love for this country, duty and service to this country. >> the gatlin brothers are teaming up with newton running to sell those sneakers. those are fine looking sneakers. now that they are sold out, i have to wait. a fox news alert, entire neighborhoods now under water as tropical storm barry moves inland. rob schmidt live for us in the flood zone. good morning. >> hey, guys, barry ended up being a big test for new orleans and their new levee system. they fared pretty well in the big easy, but as you can see, not everybody was so lucky. we have more on the storm, coming up after the break, stay tuned. i can't believe it. that karl brought his karaoke machine? ♪ ain't nothing but a heartache... ♪ no, i can't believe how easy it was to save hundreds of
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back with a fox news alert, several communities are facing a major flood risk as tropical storm barry moves across the
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gulf coast. >> president trump tweeting this morning a big risk of major flooding in large parts of louisiana and all across the gulf coast. please be very careful. >> barry made landfall as a category 1 hurricane yesterday before weakening to a tropical storm. we have team coverage with meteorologist tracking the storm. >> we begin with rob schmidt in louisiana where several neighborhoods are under water. looks like it is up above your knees. rob? >> here in mandeville, louisiana, a beautiful neighborhood here, right here on very active and churning lake. the back end of this thing is still kicking up all these waves and flooding this neighborhood. really great neighborhood here, beautiful houses along here. they say they are used to this. when the big storms come in, this is what happens to them. another neighborhood also got hit. this storm barry which was only a hurricane, category 1 for
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maybe an hour, maybe a bit more, was a big test for new orleans and at this point, it looks like their new levee system and all the work that's been done down there, billions of dollars spent fared pretty well, but in other parts of the state, southern louisiana, there are problems like this. we have high water. we're going to go investigate after this hit, we're going out to other areas, closer to where the eye came in and see what kind of flooding damage we have over there, places where they have gotten a lot more rain and water. this storm was a test for new orleans specifically, not a big test because it hit about 150 miles to the west of new orleans, but it was a water test. and the levee system did fare pretty well. we will see how the rest of the state held up as we move to the west later on today. we will have some of that for you tomorrow morning. guys, back to you. >> thanks, rob. we're now going to head to our meteorologist for the latest weather updates. rick? >> this is a big water story. we have so much water in the mississippi river as it's trying to exit. we have so much water still upstream in the mississippi river. now, we're adding a lot more
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water here. the story is, there will be high water levels in the mississippi river probably going on all summer long. so any storms that come after this, we will watch closely as well. this is where the storm is, just kind of towards the shreveport area, the center of it, to the south of it. you notice all the thunderstorm activity across parts of the western gulf now. we will watch that closely because all of that energy will have to move off towards the north, and that's why we will see the rainfall totals continue to pile up in addition to all the rain we have seen. you will also notice we have one tornado warning just across parts of north louisiana going in towards mississippi. very heavy rainfall, falling across areas of mississippi this morning. that will continue all day long. new orleans you will be on and off with the rain, but i think the rainfall totals will be lower and probably enough that the pumps can handle that, but that one big line of storms, about to move towards baton rouge area. we will see another one move in after that. we probably have about 10 inches of rain to go across southern louisiana before this is all said and done. a few isolated locations around
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20 inches by the time this is done. >> wow. >> thanks, rick. >> rick, this is the most complete opposite 180 i have ever done in my career. up next, we're about to get cheesy. it's national mac and cheese day. and we are learning how to make buffalo mac and cheese. i don't know about you, griffy, i say we get into a mac and cheese making competition, all three of us. >> oh, boy. >> are you ready? >> i'm ready. >> let's do it. ♪ fact is, every insurance company hopes you drive safely. but allstate actually helps you drive safely... with drivewise. it lets you know when you go too fast... ...and brake too hard. with feedback to help you drive safer. giving you the power to actually lower your cost. unfortunately, it can't do anything about that.
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now that you know the truth... are you in good hands?
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welcome back. well everyone loves mac and cheese so of course it gets its own holiday. >> yeah, we are celebrating national mac and cheese day,
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learning how to make buffalo mac and cheese. >> owner of s mac joins us now to show us how it's done. i nailed the name. let's nail some mac and cheese >> yes, thank you. >> it has a really cool name. >> well, thank you. >> how do we do it? >> we're making one of our most popular dishes which is the buffalo chicken mac and cheese. >> yum! >> we have all of our ingredients here. we're going to start with our most important ingredient right now which is -- do you want to help me out here? >> sure. >> i'm going to do the mixing. >> this is the most important ingredient. this is actually whole milk, flour, butter, salt and pepper, but if you don't take patience with this, you will never have a good mac and cheese. >> really? >> make it creamy. then whatever else you put in now is bonus. >> okay good. >> this is american cheese. classic very melty american
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cheese. >> very melty. can you put too much cheese in here? >> never. >> what a question to ask. >> yeah. then we have an extra sharp cheddar. >> oh, wow, it keeps coming. >> when do we add the blue cheese? >> it's at the very end. so that's why it is over here. you can do that. >> i'm in on the pasta. >> let's dump the pasta. twisted elbow macaroni. >> this is looking good. >> look at that. >> looks like your arms are getting a workout. >> we are. this is my fitness for the day. i work out and then i get to eat the mac and cheese. >> this is sauteed chicken breast. >> buffalo time. >> this is the sauce. this is spicy. >> without further adieu -- >> no, no, not yet. >> come on! >> you have to be patient. >> i want to add the blue cheese. >> so now we're going to put this into our cast iron skillet. >> okay.
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>> you're really good at this. >> rick is cheating. rick is cheating over here. >> because i'm getting a time -- that we need to start >> now you can sprinkle this on. >> yes! >> you are going to bake this now. if you are not a blue cheese fan, you wouldn't put as much in. i love blue cheese. this goes right into the oven. you want to boil it at the end >> this is the finished version? >> yes, that is the finished version. find us at 197, 1st avenue in the east village. >> thank you. more fox & friends moments away. ♪ my experience with usaa
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>> we want to thank our guests. it is national mac and cheese day. live it up. don't hold back. finish your portions. >> bye guys see you next week. ♪ maria: good sunday morning. thank you very much for joining us. i'm maria bartiromo. joining me straight ahead on "sunday morning futures" the chairman of the senate judiciary committee lindsay graham here in an interview with new reaction to the escalating border crisis after his recent visit to a border facility with vice president mike pence. and as millions in hong kong continue to protest a controversial extradition bill, backed by china, i will speak to one of the men leading the charge to preserve the freedom of hong kong. hong kong entrepreneur jimmy li is here, founder of next digital. he will join me. then texas congressman mccall on why the u.s. is green lighting

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