tv FOX Friends FOX News August 6, 2019 3:00am-6:00am PDT
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a knife in it. finding the blade hiding between the stems passenger's carry on bag. that passenger will face a civil penalty. jillian: have a good day everyone. "fox & friends" starts right now. >> this is a fox news alert. you are looking live at the white house 1600 pennsylvania avenue where it was announced yesterday that the president tomorrow will be heading to dayton and el paso, the cit site of those mass shootings. ainsley: yesterday he was there in the diplomat being reception room and he spoke for 10 minutes condemning racism. he had a pretty powerful speech talking about the red flag laws which would identify people who are likely to commit violence. >> in one voice, our nation must condemn racism, bigotry, and white supremacy. these sin niszster identifiedologies must be defeated. hate has no place in america. we must stop the glorification of violence in
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our society. cultural change is hard but each of us can choose to build a culture that celebrates the inherent worth and dig any of every human life. we must reform our mental health laws to better identify mentally disturbed individuals who may comment acts of violence. mental illness and hatred pulls the trigger, not the gun. now is the time to set destructive partisanship aside. our future is in our control. america will rise to the challenge. we will always have and we always will win. the choice is ours and ours alone. it is not up to mentally ill monsters. it is up to us. brian: so in the president's time there has been 17 mass shootings with president obama's 8 years it was 32. but you get the idea sometimes that they started with president trump by listening to some of the rhetoric out there.
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the president yesterday so far over the last two days which have been horrific has stayed above the fray and he has not engaged with the myriad of attacks coming his direction. in fact the front page of the "new york times" yes he assails hate but didn't take it out on guns. ainsley: changed the headline because some people complained about the first headline. steve: it was interesting because yesterday by the way brian, welcome back. brian: thanks. steve: after a couple days off. yesterday he did tweet out about he was going to say something about background checks which he specifically did not do. also he linked it with immigration. that did not come up. the important thing, i think, that would have been helpful in the case particularly in dayton, was the president called for red flag laws which would allow judges rapid due process to bar troubled people from getting their hands on guns. the more you learn about the dayton shooter, remember we were talking yesterday about how a guy put out a hit list of people that he would like to kill, had a rape list.
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one of the girls on the rape list, apparently, acowarding to the daily mail, he told her, the shooter told her you are on my rape list. and then he texted it to her. she took it to the police and showed the police. she was talking on -- that's the aftermath of the dayton shooting. she told the police she says on facebook they did nothing. when he put out that hit list, where he scrolled the names of people he wanted to kill on the wall it became a police matter. he was 17 years old at the time. brian: that's the problem. steve: he was 17 at the time. the police came in. there was a investigation. the third of the school didn't show up the next day because they were terrified. what happened? the guy was obviously known to people in his community this guy is a problem. brian: yeah. the whole problem is he is not 18. they protect him for some reason. there has got to be some audibles that you care there. if he has a kill list and rape list and writing it on the walls and schools are adjusting. ainsley: on lockdown.
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brian: just because you turn 18 you shouldn't expunge that. ainsley: he shouldn't have been able to get a gun. a hit list, a rape list. this guy kills his sister. he is evil. steve: the police are not really saying much about it. we are learning a little more about what happened in texas. ainsley: that's exactly right. ainsley: we are learning more about what happened in the hours before the walmart shooting as the number of dead individuals rises now to 22. steve: jonathan serrie is live in el paso this morning with brand new details. jonathan, it sounds like he wound up at that walmart because he was hungry. >> yeah. that's something investigators are looking at as authorities investigate this case as a possible hate crime. they are trying to determine the motive. city officials believe the gunman targeted el paso because it is a border town that prides itself on buy
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cultural location. the location he struck in this town may have been random. >> he took about 10 to 11 hours traveling from allen, texas to el paso. as soon as he got here, he was lost in a neighborhood. after that he found his way to the walmart because we understand he was hungry. >> police have released the names of the 22 people who died. they range in age from 15 to 0. at least seven were mexican citizens. mexican authorities are considering requesting the accused gunman be extradited to face trial in their country. >> act of terror in u.s. territory but i amex can citizen. so we will be sharing all the details. >> organizers say 1500 people attended a memorial vigil for the youngest victim who would have
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started his sophomore year in high school. friends say he was a good student and enjoyed soccer. carpenter greg zanes who honors with crosses overlooking the crime scene. it has become a place of prayer and hope. >> if you look around, there is so many people that have come down to support us from so many different places. i just talked to few of them that have come from everywhere. regardless of color they are here and they are supporting us. it's not about race thing for me. >> police say 17 survivors or 27 survivors suffered injuries inside of today's attack. 15 of them remain hospitalized with two in critical condition. back to you. steve: all right, jonathan serrie live in el paso, thank you very much. brian: so much mystery has to be unfolded there i give the president a lot of credit, too. evidently obviously the mayor in el paso negative things to say. beto o'rourke the former congressman there couldn't be more knowing negative.
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the president says i'm going anyway. i will see threw wednesday. hopefully they will understand that this is america and he is america's president. ainsley: there is a congresswoman there and there is beto who has said negative things. the mayor actually said we have not agreed on all of our politics. he called me. he offered help. he said i didn't give him any specific requests because we are trying to see how this all plays out but we are going to work together. he said it is my honor and duty to welcome the president to el paso. steve: the president is going to el paso and also to the city of dayton, tomorrow. in the meantime, we have heard from a couple of the very prominent democrats. in particular, barack obama, the former president. he came out with a statement yesterday. it was sharp. he said. this. we should soundly reject language coming out of the mouths of any of our leaders that feeds a climate of fear and hatred or normalizes racist sentiments. leaders to demonize us that don't look like us or
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immigrants threaten our way of life or refer to people as subhuman or america belongs to one certain type of people it halls no place in our politics and our public life. and it's time for the overwhelming majority of americans of goodwill, of every race and faith and political party to say as much clear and unequivocally. brian: i guess he is talking about the president trump. steve: do you think? brian: i think so. i'm just wondering did george bush ever condemn president obama after sandy hook? did president bush ever come at -- he had 32 shootings of mass shootings during his rain. nobody has said president obama is out of control. 17 so far president trump way too high. i have news for you mass shootings were happening before president trump ever thought about running for president of the united states. ainsley: it's a political season and elections are around the corner. brian: he is not running anymore. ainsley: the president is. they want to continue to
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push that racist narrative. steve: hillary clinton had an observation. she tweeted this out. brian: can't wait. steve: regarding the president and everybody else has been talking about mental health issues regarding this and she wrote: people suffer from mental health illness in every other country on earth. people play video games in virtually every other country on earth. the difference is the guns. talk about the size of the guns. ainsley: mike huckabee was asked about it and to your point, brian, he had very similar comments. >> i don't remember anybody blaming bill clinton her husband or barack obama. we had mass shootings when they were president. it's not a president's fault. it's not a president's fault whether it's trump, obama, clinton, or george w. bush. it's our cultural fault and part of what we have done, we have created a culture in which we have said there is no god. human life isn't really worth that much. and life is expendable and there are lives that are disposable. and when a young man believes his life is
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disposable and expendable he thinks the lives around him are, too. why should would he be shocked that he would be taking mass killings a as his avenue of expressing his rage? brian: the dayton shooter we don't know a lot about him. he was tweeting anti-ice tweets and a supporter of elizabeth warren and left wing causes. i don't think people are blaming bernie sanders for what happened on that baseball field or elizabeth warren for what her rhetoric might have led to in dayton. because it had nothing to do with either one of these individuals. ainsley: she's shooters were totally different. the one in el paso thought he was. the guy in ohio supported antifa. he supported bernie, elizabeth warren. he supported satan. and he was a socialist or supported socialism. there are two different shooters. you cannot blame a president. it is the shooter's fault. these people were crazy. they are evil. brian: srches you blame people, you are guaranteed nothing will get done. people go to their corners
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and they get defensive instead of working toward a solution which mitch mcconnell has republican leaders in the senate. nancy pelosi is thinking about calling back the thousand try to solve this problem. ainsley: there have been evil people in every single government. this is what happens when you have someone who doesn't fear the lord, who doesn't fear god, who doesn't as mike huckabee was saying who doesn't value human life. steve: well, as always happens in times of tragedy like this, people look for answers. and they look for people to blame. here is ben shapiro. watch. >> white supremacy should be taken seriously it. is a form of terrorism. we should discuss the ways to solve mass shootings. we are not going to discuss any of them. political pandering galore and blame in all the wrong reasons. the attempt to blame him for every act of evil that happens in the united states as we will see is really not about trump. it's really about something broader. if it were really about trump then presumably when trump starts ripping into white supremacy you would
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say good i'm glad he is doing that. that's not what the left is doing. they are attempting to link what he says with policies they don't like. and then say anybody who supports those policies is now responsible for white supremacy. ainsley: so no politician is to blame for any shooting. steve: listen, there are a lot of people angry at mitch mcconnell. people gathered outside his house in suburban, louisville, 20 or 30 protesters hurling death threats at him while broadcasting live on facebook live. they mock his -- he has a nickname. it's been turtle. and you can hear them quite clearly talk about myrtle murder turtle. listen. >> at mcconnell's house this [bleep] he is about to get some rest? not if it kills the children that you are kidnapping cannot get any rest. not if the families who are murdered can't get any rest. [bleep] mitch. >> is he in there nursing his broken wrong he should have broke his little [bleep] neck.
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>> if we can't get any rest because of you. you won't get no rest because of us. steve: well, the louisville police say the group was peaceful and were apparently unaware. ainsley: peaceful? steve: at one point a woman can be heard about stabbing mcconnell in the heart. two hours on facebook. ainsley: peaceful? brian: mitch mcconnell on a positive front. he said in a statement after trump's speech yesterday that he asked lamar loornsd lindsey graham as well as roger to get together to look at some action they could do on red flag laws and a few other things in terms of mental illness. i don't see anything negative about a deeper background check that would give gun store owners an ability to go deeper on people's background. because they don't want to live with that guilt that they might feel if one of the people purchasing their guns ends up killing other people. ainsley: correct. steve: pat toomey and joe
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manchin poted tuesday on expanded background check and lindsey graham has a bill that would have states look at more red flag laws. all right. 6:14 now in new york city. ainsley: hand it over to jillian who has headlines for us. ainsley: talk about what's going on today. ohio governor mike dewine is expected you to unveil new gun and mental health measures after nine people were shot and killed in dayton. the republican has been talking to senate leaders about piecing red flag laws. they would remove guns under court order from a person found to be dangerous. of the dayton shooter fired at least 41 rounds with an ar-15 rifle in just 30 seconds before being shot and killed by police. north korea firing two more missiles. the fourth launch in less than two weeks. the move comes as the u.s. and south korea start new joint military drills. the rogue nation calling that a, quote: flagrant violation of peace talks. national security advisor john bolton will join us in the 8:00 hour with his
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reaction. a fox business alert now. in just hours, the stock market will open after taking its biggest plunge this year. stock futures rebounding overnight after the dow lost nearly 800 points. wall street weary after china devalued its currency that u.s. calling that a that nippive move during the trade war. last week president trump announced new tariffs on chinese goods. and this is pretty incredible. a rookie hits it out of the park as his parents are being interviewed on live tv. watch this. >> is this an emotional day for you? >> very, very emotional. >> oh, oh! oh! jillian: look at that excitement. diaz hitting a home run for the miami marlins in his first major league game. you can see and hear a very proud mom and dad.
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that's awesome. ainsley: what makes you think that. jillian: a little bit. isn't that great? steve: that is awesome. congratulations. brian: good to see excitement out of a marlins game. jillian: true. steve: thank you, jillian. this is something democrats didn't expect last week's debate between the 2020 hopefuls. a lot of criticism of barack obama. >> you can't have it both ways. you invoke president obama more than anybody in this campaign. you can't do it when it's convenient and dodge it when it's not. brian: all right. so why are they ditching him instead of embracing him like republicans did with ronald reagan? a history lesson coming your way with doug wead. ♪ ♪ are excited about the potential of once-weekly ozempic®. in a study with ozempic®, a majority of adults lowered their blood sugar and reached an a1c of less than 7 and maintained it.
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you have our number programmed in? ya i don't even know your phone anymore... excuse me?! what? i don't know your phone number. aw well. he doesn't know our phone number! you have our fax number, obviously... today's xfinity service. simple. easy. awesome. i'll pass. >> vice president biden i didn't hear your response when the issue came up with deportations. vice president of the united states. i didn't hear whether you tried to stop them or not using your power and influence in the white house. >> mr. vice president it looks like one of us has learned the lessons of the past and one of us hasn't. >> mr. vice president you can't have it both ways. you invehicle president obama more than anybody in this campaign. you can't do it when it's convenient and dodge it when
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it's not. steve: former president barack obama wasn't on the debate stage last week and, yet, criticizing him was one of the main focal point for a number of the 2020 democrats. why are they ditching president obama's legacy rather than embracing it like republicans did, for instance, with ronald reagan the tale of two legacies. here to way in is presidential historian doug wead. good morning to you. >> good morning, steve. steve: what did you make of you who, you know, how stridently the attacks came on the obama legacy? >> yeah. this isn't about what the american people want or democratic party want it's what a very tiny group of democrat activists want. they are more socialist. and they don't want to go back to obama. that's who the democrat nominees need. they need to plug into those activists. they will help raise the money. they will organize the early caucus states like iowa, the early primary states, new hampshire, nevada, the majority of the voters in the south carolina early
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primary will be african-american. they are driven by this activist, socialist base. and so that's who they are going after. steve: well, go ahead and you've got a unique world view of history. go ahead and compare the way the republicans have embraced ronald reagan through the years as opposed to how these democrats have -- well at least at that particular debate gone after his legacy? >> yeah, very, very different. we like barack obama. we elected him. and we felt better about ourselves. and rereelected him. but we elected ronald reagan. he changed the world. when he was first elected, no one expected him to win the cold war, but he did. and we just thought he would fight a better fight. i mean, stop and think in the soviet union it was against the law to listen to
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bach. we need to accept the fact we are headed toward the soviet era. no one wants to go back to barack obama 16% unemployment for african-americans but they like the legacy of ronald reagan and turning the world upside down. steve: well, you cited some statistics there. barack obama's approval rating, according to gallup is 60% here in the united states. was 90% among democrats. so you would think that it would fly in the face of conventional wisdom that you attack a guy who is so popular. >> yep. but it's the activist base that will help those democrat nominees get the nomination. they need the people who will work, who will get on the phones, get online, and so that's the finite group they are going after right now. and no one wants to go balk to obama. we love obama. we love the fact that he won that election. we reeffected will him as president. there are 3.6 million people
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off of food stamps according to the associated press. and the trump economy, no one wants to reverse that and go back to where we were. steve: doug, i don't know that there would have been the attack on the legacy of barack obama if joe biden, his vice president wasn't on the ticket. because, you know, out there in the primary. because right now joe biden is way ahead and everybody else on that stage would like to knock him down a peg or two. and to do that you have to go after the legacy of the obama-biden administration. >> you are right. but he is ahead in these -- oops, sorry. he is ahead in these national polls. it's not who is ahead in these polls. it's who is ahead with these activists that will win the nomination. receive steve doug, thank you very much. sorry you lost the mic right there. doug wead. >> thank you, sir. steve: what do you think about that foxnews.com. can illinois be split in two? chicago and the rest of the
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state? some republicans in illinois are trying to make that happen. a discussion coming up next. ♪ go your own way ♪ the problem is big insurance companies want a one-size-fits-all approach that lets them decide what they'll pay doctors for yocare. letting insurance companies decide means it could be harder for you to see the best doctors when you need them the most. tell congress, "end surprise billing, and don't let insurance companies put profits over patients. paid for by physicians for fair coverage.
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ainsley: quick headlines for you two united airlines pilots being accused too drunk to fly are expected in court. both arrested in scott land after allegedly failing breathalyzer tests. the flight was ultimately cancelled. yes, we are watching you. hong kong airline cafe specific admits surveying passengers were w. on board cameras. monitoring how people use in-flight entertainment. cameras are for security purposes. brian? brian: fox news alert now as we mourn the horrors of el paso and dayton, another city reigle from mostly bloody weekend of gun violence this year in chicago. at least 59 people shot.
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seven fatally. our next guest says is part of the violence chicago sees every single day but we seem to just absorb. chicago native and fox news analyst gianno caldwell writes about it in his book but wants to talk about it now. as much as you are horrified by two city shootings what do you think about chicago and what they experienced almost every weekend? >> you know what, brian, it's completely and totally heart breaking that the people of chicago seem to be plagued by the violence that occurs on the almost daily basis. i think back to 2017 when there was such violence over the course of a weekend and families went to the hospital to mourn the violence and the hospital parking lot somebody drove by and shot people in the hospital parking lot. this should never, never happen in american city. and it's something that we continue to see occur on a day-to-day basis in the city of chicago. this is my call to the residents of chicago, it's time for us to speak up. brian: absolutely. >> no longer should we have
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a code of silence. we need to talk to the police. get rid of this idea of no snitching. we need to talk to the police. we need to work with the police. oftentimes people know who the shooters are. they know who the folks who are committing these violent acts and people must talk to the police and work with them in order for us to solve this crisis. brian: whether foraminally or informally as police have backed out of places like chicago and baltimore. all hell has broken loose. 8 of the 118 state lawmakers in illinois are backing a move -- legislation that would pull chicago out of the state interestingly enough not the first attempt at this. this is the things have come worse since have you had a state ran by democrats who really ran it into the ground. you talk about chicago, a
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hub, it should be a hub of success. but you see the more the elected officials oftentimes push there. you see the financial ruinings by way of pensions that continue underfunded and the unions that take advantage of it. and you see the corruption that continues in chicago and reverberates itself throughout the state of illinois. this is problematic on many levels. this is one in which republicans really have a strong opportunity to present a case to the people of illinois to change the dynamic there. because the people there feel that they have been taken for granted. brian: right. so this would make chicago the 51st state. they say the city is more powerful than the state. the mayor more powerful than the governor. and that would change all of that, especially with the raft of killings that aring harassment rahm emanuel with all his political savvy and power fell flat on his face. and now you have somebody else coming in and things seem to be getting worse. i think it's also important that republicans have backed out. i mean, they haven't tried
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to get back in. hillary clinton gets 55% of the vote there this is what happens when one party rule. >> absolutely agree. i talk about that in my book "taken for granted how conservatism can win back the americans that liberalism failed." it's so important for the republican party to go into areas that people don't want them there. we talk about president trump going into places like dayton and el paso, where some folks don't want him to go. but the truth be told, we need leadership and we need bit more leadership we need president trump to go into chicago because we need to solve the violence issue. work with the leaders across whether it be the state of illinois or in the united states of america where we have a president who is willing to go out and do the work. so i think that's when the change of dynamic needs to happen and needs to happen now. brian: one thing happen with john mccain, too. have these town halls and half the place would be angry at him and he would take incoming. >> he would.
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brian: all these politicians just want friendly people asking them friendly questions. by the way, in illinois, not such a great feeling, 67% think things in the state are off track and moving in the wrong direction. they need some hope. republicans have an opportunity and that's what you write about. gianno, thanks so much. >> thank you for having me. brian: you got it. coming up straight ahead, senator lindsey graham unveiling his push for red flag gun laws after this weekend's deadly shootings. >> the government has to prove by clear and convincing evidence that the person is disturbed, a danger to themselves or others. if that test is met, they can seize the guns and get the person the help they need. brian: is he the only senator who does work? will this work in the judge is on the case next. that's napolitano. so, can it help us fall asleep faster? yes, by gently warming your feet. but can it help keep me asleep? absolutely, it intelligently senses your movements and automatically adjusts to
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♪ ♪ >> our nation has watched, with rising horror, and dread, as one mass shooting has followed another. we cannot allow ourselves to feel powe powerless. we can and will stop this evil contagion and that task we must honor the sacred memory of those we have lost by acting as one people. we must seek real, bipartisan solutions. we have to do that in a bipartisan manner. that will truly make america safer and better for all.
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steve: all right. so that was the president yesterday about 10:10 in the morning. judge napolitano joins us right now. judge, as you heard the president speaking from the white house, and he had some suggestions on red flag laws, see if we can do anything with social media companies to try to figure out. brian: video games. steve: any of that possibly going to become the law of the land? >> i think a lot of it will not become the law of the land. let me say this about the president. he is the most faithfully pro-second amendment president in my memory, even more so than donald trump. and i think. ainsley: donald trump. >> ronald reagan forgive me. i think what he was trying to do yesterday was address the issue at its fringes without interfering with the core right of law abiding people to keep and bear arms. brian: which you agree with. >> which i agree with. a person who lawfully possesses the type of weapon that these creeps use should
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not lose their right to carry that weapon because somebody else misused it. that is at least a theory of the second amendment. the theory of the constitution -- and here is where i commend senator graham for his efforts to try and address this but i don't think it's constitutional. the theory of the constitution is we don't punish people. we don't take their rights away from them because of what they might do, because of what they could do. because of what we will fear they will do but only because of what they have done. we just don't live in a society where judges and juries predict behavior and punishment, punish it before it happens. ainsley: when there is a rape list and kill list in high school that is something that he did do. brian: that should be red flagged. >> that is a red flag. it doesn't show up on the data bases. the strictist data base in the country is new jersey's because they combine their own plus the federal. both of these creeps would
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have passed a background check applying the strictist data base because this type of thing that they saw in the high school doesn't make its way to the database. steve: the local police department investigated the guy. >> without a charge -- and this is a defect in the reporting system. without the filing of a charge it doesn't make its way into the data base. so the data bases are only as good as the information that's in there. they are only as valuable and up to date as is that information. brian: here is what lindsey graham proposed last night. as usual every time there is a major issue it seems like he is the only one who does any work. listen. >> there has to be an imminent threat of harm to oneself or to others before the police and it can only be the place. it can go to the judge. you have a hearing. have you got to have more likely than not standard. there is an imminent threat of bodily injury. seven days later you have a full blown hearing. clear and convincing evidence where the gun owner can come in and defend themselves and the
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government has to prove by clear and convincing evidence that the person is disturbed, a danger to themselves or others. and if that test is met, they can seize the guns and get person the help they need. what i want to do is encourage these laws with robust due process and i think that's the president's goal also. >> that is the president's goal. that's all the federal government can do is encourage these laws and pay the states to do it. the feds can't order the states to do these things. there are half a dozen states that have these laws now. the neighbor complains. you are using a gun in the backyard and you are angry as you are using it. that is not a basis to take the gun away. that is not a basis to deprive somebody of their rights. brian: would you think an effective tool from this experience would be to make public these records of high school kids with kill lists and i know minors, everything gets buried once you become -- >> i have a problem with the word public. the database is not public. they could put this stuff in
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the data base without elm embracing and humiliating the person whose information is put in there. brian: at 25 he goes to buy a gun or she but it's always a he. can we change that to have that pop up or maybe push the age down to 15? >> the answer is yes, it can be changed constitutionally. it would require a lot of changes. you go to a hospitals with a broken finger, and they can't report that even if you broke the finger by improperly using a gun. steve: what about, this judge. political ipolitico has reportet the attorney general has spoken with bill barr about executive action on guns. >> i don't know what executive action he would take. again, is he in a real bind because is he pro-second amendment but he sees the people -- ainsley: judge, this is just common sense. we all knew someone in high school you thought gosh, they have potential to be someone great but they are
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probably going to blow it. there are these people -- this guy, that's a red flag. >> red flags are apparent only with hindsight. no one would have said this about this guy. ainsley: really? if my kid had a rape list? , i would a get that kid a lot of help, a lot of prayer. and i would not want a gun in that child's hand. that's just common sense. >> this is an adult. not a child. this is a child when he wrote the list. his behavior is reprehensible. but, honest, decent, law abiding people should not lose their rights because some judge thinks they might do something in the future. that's the soviet union model not the american. brian: body armor? some legislation when it comes to body armor purchases? >> anything they can do to deter people from committing a crime is probably a good thing. as long as they don't violate constitutional rights. brian: should i get my own
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iron man suit in the mail. >> probably not. ainsley: this kid if he wrote a rape list at 18. i'm sure there is a lot of things he did at 19, 20. brian: it was 17. he was high school. steve: apparently also arrested for a dui. that was on there but that would not disqualify him. >> no. steve: judge, thank you very much. check him out, liberty file is on fox nation. if you don't two have fox nation go foxnation.com. >> all about the right to keep and bear arms. brian: fox nation pops up on your tv. >> thanks to you. brian: the smart people who work here. 16 minutes before the top of the hour. hey, jillian. jillian: following a number of stories starting with this. a story out of texas. a grandmother stops historic live potential shooting by turning in her own grandson. con scwinsing william patrick williams to get treatment at the hospital after he revealed his plans to shoot up a hotel and commit suicide by cop. police on the gun along with loaded magazine, knives and tactical clothing inside his
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hotel room. disturbing and embarrassing. new york governor andrew cuomo slamming mayor de blasio and the nypd for the way officers responded to the recent water attacks. listen to. this it's one of the most disturbing, embarrassing situations that i have seen. i don't know how we are training police officers how when you are basically assaulted, and that's an assault, you retreat. jillian: officers were attacked with water at least four separate times last month. mayor de blasio will join hannity tomorrow night at 9:00 eastern. you are going to want to watch that adventure seekers and conspiracy theorists doubling down search of aliens. remain storming area 51 despite facebook for removing the event page for stright community starpsdz. 200 people have said they would attend the sham event after it went viral last
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month. washed against raiding the military base in las vegas. patriotism on full display at one minnesota home. take a look at this. brian johnson putting up 25 flags in his front yard in moorehead each one honoring a veteran who served our country. >> my father's flag. my wife's flag. most of his family. close friends, neighbors. >> takes individuals to do it. when you put them all together like this, it's very impressive. jillian: brian says he talked to local veterans groups about finding a permanent home for his display. a look at your headlines, send it back to you. steve: looks good. thank you very much. ainsley: thanks, jillian. steve: let's go out on the streets of new york city and find out from janice dean what kind of a day it looks like today. janice: i will tell you cloudy skies and rain offshore that weekend see later on today. look at these happy faces that came to see me. what are your names. >> jessica and neil. >> where are from you. >> michigan. >> jennifer?
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>> from. >> florida. janice: sharon and diane from. janice: take a look at the new york forecast. 66 in minneapolis. portions of the northern plains. keep that in mind. there is your forecast today. so hot, hot, hot across the southern plains and the southwest. and what did you come for today, my dear? >> to see you. janice: to see me and what else? >> shop. janice: for shopping, yes. and what about some. >> hugs. janice: hugs. so get over here. come on. oh my group hug right here. yea. come to new york city for some free hugs and a weather report. steve: there you go. steve, ainsley, brian, back to you. ainsley: catching on. everyone wants your hugs now janice. steve: thanks j.d. ainsley: what's it like to live in cities like
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baltimore. next group grew up on welfare and has truths about liberal policy. ♪ at visionworks, we guarantee you'll see great and look great. "guarantee". we uh... we say that too. you gotta use "these" because we don't mean it. buy any pair at regular price, get one free. really. visionworks. see the difference. that's why united rentals is combining equipment, data, safety and expertise to help your worksite perform better. united rentals. when didwhen i needed ton? jumpstart sales. build attendance for an event. help people find their way. fastsigns designed new directional signage. ...and got them back on track.
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jillian: welcome back, quick headlines now. today medical marijuana will be easy to any louisiana after four years of blowing smoke. lawmakers voted to legalize it in 2015. legislative and regulatory changes delayed it. nine pharmacies across the state are licensed to dispense pot to those with a doctor's note. medical marijuana is now legal in 33 states and d.c. and recreational marijuana use keeps getting higher. a new study shows pot smoking is up 47% in states where it's legal. and there is a 33% spike in states that don't allow the drug. researchers at the rockefeller institute say americans don't consider marijuana to be as risky as they once did. brian? brian: the most unsurprising poll ever. meanwhile, president trump calling out conditions in baltimore. >> the most unsafe city in the country, in our country, is baltimore. it receives top of the line, billions of dollars. all of this money goes there and take a lock at it.
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ainsley: our next guest says trump is shining light on baltimore's undeniable truths in a new op-ed saying "i grew up on welfare. here's what i know." steve: that author, president of the heritage foundation kay kohl james joins us now. >> good morning. steve: why did you want to write the op-ed. what did you want to tell america about your childhood framed around the whole baltimore conversation that america seems to be having right now? >> you know, i wrote it because even with the controversy that was going on surrounding, you know, elijah cummings and the president, take the light off of that controversy for a moment and look at the people who live in those communities. and i'm just grateful that we have the opportunity to have this conversation. the people who are living in those deplorable conditions need our help. and so thankfully this put a
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bright light on it and we are able to address these issues. brian: here's the challenge. it's not just money. people say give them money. not really. baltimore has received about $2 billion to compensate 30,000 public employees. and we know that the cops have been told to basically stay out because of the controversy that happened a few years ago. deadly combination. >> you know, that is so sad. people believe that more money equates to better conditions. ask the people who live in those communities and they will tell you that's not the case. there are certain things that the president of the united states can do. there are certain things that a governor can do, a mayor can do, a member of congress. but at the top of the list, and this is my message, i tell people, you know, we have got to have some solutions in case the cavalry doesn't come. what happens if none of that support that we have been yearning for for years comes through? so what is it that we can do today? what are the institutions in
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any civil society that hold it all together? we need to support families. we need to support churches. we need to support community institutions. and then demand of our government, demand of them at the federal, state and local level that they come in and support those institutions. ainsley: kay, i want folks at home to hear your story because it is so powerful you write in this op-ed i'm not a search in spite of the fact that i came out of poverty. i'm a conservative because of it. how did you become a conservative and tell us your story growing up in richmond on welfare. >> i did, i grew up in richmond, virginia. i came out of public housing project there creighton court. i will tell that you one of the solutions is family because when i was 4 years old my mother's sisters stepped in, surrounded her, helped her raise those children. and i was raised by an incredible aunt and uncle. my definition incidentally of a conservative is someone
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who has the audacity to believe what their grandmother taught them. it's not weird. it's not deep. it's not complicated. it's common sense conservative principles. and in my earlier life, i was actually, you know, embedded in the democrat party. but i decided i wanted solutions that worked. and i was angry enough, i was sad enough, i was determined enough that i wanted to know what did the data, the research, and the analysis tell us? and we know that entitlement programs as they are currently configured are not helping the individuals that they were designed to help. brian: right, elijah cummings has an opportunity to help and let's see if he will take it. he has the spotlight on a city that needs it. you know that very well. kay, thank you so much. >> thank you. steve: read her op-ed at friends@foxnews.com. ainsley: it is great. steve: it is great.
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brian: here we go right to a fox news alert. we now know what happened in the hours before the walmart shooting as we learn more about the 22 victims. ainsley: jonathan serrie is in el paso with details. jonathan. >> good morning, ainsley, steve and brian. a light rain has just moved across this makeshift memorial overlooking the crime scene as authorities investigate this as a possible hate crime. they are trying to determine a motive. city officials believe the gunman targeted el paso because it is a border town that prides itself on its bicultural location. the location the gunman struck in this town may have been random. >> took about 10 to 11 hours
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traveling from allen texas to el paso. as soon as he got here, he was lost in the neighborhood. after that he found his way to the walmart because we understand he was hungry. >> carpenter greg zanes who honors victims of mass shootings with wooden memorials delivered wooden crosses overlooking the crime scene. it has become a place of prayer and hope. >> if you look around, there are so many people that have come down and support us from so many different places. i have just talked to a few of them that come from everywhere. and regardless of color, they are here. and they are supporting us, so it's not about a race thing for me. >> two victims with serious injuries died in the hospital, which increases the death toll to 22. police have released the names of all of the victims. they range in age from 15 to 90. from the white house president trump offered the sympathies of a grieving nation. >> our hearts are shattered for every family whose
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parents, children, hovers and wives were ripped from their arms and their lives. america weeps for the fallen. we are a loving nation. and our children are entitled to grow up in a just, peaceful and loving society. >> organizers say 1500 people attended a memorial individual for the youngest victim javier rodriguez who would have started his sophomore year in high school this fall. friends say he was a good student and enjoyed soccer. steve, ainsley, and brian, authorities say that in addition to the people who lost their lives, 27 people were injured, 15 of them remain hospitalized with two in critical condition. back to you. steve: that's right. jonathan, just a point of clarification, i know the police chief came out and talked a little bit about how he wound up at walmart. he may have been hungry and went in and sounds like he was casing the joint. it sounds like he was lost
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in the neighborhood. do we know what his destination was initially? >> if authorities know that they haven't revealed it yet. city officials believe he wanted to conduct some sort of attack in el paso because of its proximity to the mexican border for the demographics of its population but perhaps he had not picked out the target until he arrived in town. but police say he apparently got lost before going to that walmart. apparently to pick up some food and then it's speculation whether he just saw what he thought was a good target at that shopping center. steve: he is cooperating with the police. >> he is from the get-go. and he continues to talk with investigators. they say much of the evident that they have obtained against him is through their conversations with him. brian: the president will be going over there. some democrats said he
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shouldn't. beto o'rourke wish he wouldn't, but the president says i'm going anyway and i'm going to go wednesday and probably looks like -- they will announce it formally shortly maybe with kellyanne conway in 30 minutes that he is going to go right over to dayton after that. the president is frustrated according to politico. he says he is not convinced congress will do anything. so he and william barr are looking at executive action they could take. ainsley: he talked to the mayor of el paso. the mayor said the president called me. he was very gracious. he offered support. he said i'm going to welcome the president. it's my formal duty and together we will rise out of this tragedy despite congresswoman escabar who represents that district and tim ryan in ohio doesn't want the president in dayton. beto o'rourke doesn't want the president in el paso. steve: you listen to a number of democrats, and they blame this president for the shootings over the weekend. >> we found the ideology that can inspire some to mass murder is taking inspiration from the president. >> do you tie any of the
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president's rhetoric to these tragedies? >> it's the refusal of the president of the united states when you see charlottesville happen to condemn it. >> will the president take any responsibility for his rhetoric? >> do you believe the president is responsible? >> i think the president has to bear some responsibility. >> do you blame the president in part for what happened in el paso? >> well, what i do is his rhetoric contributes to this notion. >> he is responsible for the hatred and the violence that we are seeing right now. brian: tim ryan and beto o'rourke acting so emotionally in times we need a leader. how are they going to act under pressure. rudy giuliani walked the streets with pressure you couldn't believe and even though maybe he was semi popular in new york by the time he was done people appreciated the leadership. then when you see beto o'rourke cursing like a drunken sailor. ainsley: did you read that article? >> brian: going off calling the president a racist. and totally losing control. not even be able to listen to a question on sunday and then tim ryan yesterday totally out of control with
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neil cavuto acting inappropriately. ainsley: these things do not help in a situation like this. people just died. and already they are blaming, blaming, blaming. it's the shooter's fault. it's not the president's fault. every president, every administration in my lifetime since can i remember has had a mass shooting. so we don't blame the president for that these are evil doers. evil people. steve: on the pages of the "wall street journal" today lead editorial politics and the shooters. starts by saying they hope nobody blames elizabeth warren for what happened because heavy.com says the dayton shooter tweeted he would vote for her in november. he said vote blue for god's sake. and it goes on to say the media and democratic politicians have drawn a straight line between the el paso shooter's anti-immigrant manifesto and donald trump and the republican party. after so many recent mass shootings, it is disheartening to see how quickly the issue of these two highly disturbed shooters was overwhelmed by the urge to assign political
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causation. the answer to how he or the el paso shooter found their way from fantasy to murder won't be found in pointless spitting matches between the left and the right over whose politics bears the blame. ainsley: exactly. can we just bury the dead and then focus on fixing the problem instead of blaming everyone? brian: what the president has during his two and a half years is a major problem at the border, which was not his doing. unless you want to blame president obama for the unaccompanied minor minors. when you have over 110,000 people coming a month over a million last year. and then well over a million this year. if you use the term an invasion, that is not anti-hispanic. it's a fact. if the russians were coming through alaska, through canada, the president would be using the same language. but it's the fact it's happening at the border. if you talk to people who are apolitical at the border, people want to look at the words infested or
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look at what the president is saying and then they would say how could he use this rhetoric when it turns out elijah cummings is using the same exact rhetoric 10 years before the president was even hosting the apprentice. steve: if there was plenty of rhetoric outside of mitch mcconnell senate majority leader's house last night in louisville. a lot of it was captured on facebook live. there is a two hour video floating around. you know, this is what mr. and mrs. mcconnell were listening to through the windows last night. >> this [bleep] about to get some rest. not if the children that you are kidnapping can't get any rest. not if families are getting murdered go can't get any rest. [bleep] mitch. he is in there nursing his little broken arm. he should have broke his little wrinkled neck. if we can't get any rest because of you, you won't get no rest because of us. ainsley: i don't know why
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those folks were not arrested. i get it's public property. they are probably stacking on the street. you can't just stand in front of someone's front yard and yell like that when everyone is trying to go to sleep in the neighborhood. steve: louisville police say the group was peaceful. ainsley: peaceful? that lady is not peaceful. steve: no, absolutely. it's certainly noisy. apparently they were unaware of the threats on facebook live one woman can be heard talking about stabbing mcconnell in his heart. his nickname is turtle. there also is some chanting about murder turtle, murder turtle over and over and over. the cops said it was peaceful. brian: getting into politics mitch mcconnell in a statement was released even though he is healing from a fractured shoulder, i think. he has asked lindsey graham and lamar alexander and roger wicker to get involved and come up with some way to address these issues. nancy pelosi says i'm thinking about bringing the house back to handle mass
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shootings and gun violence. that's what we are looking at. last week one of the big stories when it comes to law enforcement and you can't say enough about the law enforcement, by the way they acted in dayton and el paso. especially in dayton to neutralize that killer before he killed more. ainsley: 20 seconds. brian: the way you see our nypd was humiliated by being hit with buckets of water and kept walking five separate incident not only were you ticked off but so was the governor. steve: of new york. he blames mayor de blasio and the new york city police department for once these guys got splashed with water, not doing anything. just quietly walking to their car. here is the governor on the radio yesterday wamc. >> the video of the cops getting doused with water and walking away was one of the most disturbing, embarrassing situations that i have seen i don't blame
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those officers. i look to the training and the policies of the police department that would have instructed them to react that way. i don't know how we're training police officers when you are basically assaulted, and that's an assault, you retreat. steve: the head of new york city police department union said governor cuomo is right. the new york city police department is frozen don't blame the cops blame the complete lack of leadership from city hall. ainsley: he didn't blame the cops. he said i don't blame the police officers i blame the training. we have police officers on asking why didn't they turn around and arrest these guys immediately? they said well, the guy down in brooklyn, the first video that -- not this one, the one up in the harlem. but the one down in block lynn, he said that guy had just gotten out of the academy and you have to mind your p's and q's when you first get out because you are taught if you make an arrest or do something you
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are not supposed to do you will be pulled off the force. brian: there is overall feeling the mayor does not have their back. therefore the police chief will not be able to have their back so they have to play relatively defensive because not only do you lose your job, but you get sued, sometimes you go to jail if things are blown out of proportion. things happen. steve: none of these police officers want to be part of a viral moment where, you know, somebody has a camera. ainsley: right. steve: splash them with water and cop turns around and arrests them. you are going to arrest me for water, really? ainsley: maybe he did call for backup. maybe he didn't feel like he was safe enough to man all of those people by himself. steve: mayor de blasio has a lot of splaining to do. i do believe is he going to be on with sean hannity tomorrow night. ainsley: i hope he is ready. steve: that should be great. ainsley: i hope he is ready. brian: how is he doing in the polls? steve: he is surging at 1%. brian: this could be the end of him. if he doesn't qualify for september, the debates.
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steve: good, then he will just devote full time to new york city. that's terrific. brian: we were told to whisper he doesn't get up until 10:00. then he goes and works out 90 minutes in separate burrow from where his office is and then goes and sleeps on the couch with the paper over his head and door open. steve: sounds like a great job. brian: fantastic. brian. ainsley: uses government money to move his daughter out of brooklyn of the mansion. steve: 7:30 in new york city. jillian a beautiful morning. jillian: story out of ohio now today the governor there mike dewine is expected to unveil a new gun and mental health measures after nine people were shot and killed in dayton. the republican has been talking to senate leaders about passing red flag laws. they would remove guns under court order from a person found to be dangerous. the dayton shooter fired off at least 41 rounds with his ar-15 rifle in just 30 seconds before being shot and killed by police. new charges for r. kelly. this time in minnesota. the singer is accused of
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soliciting an underaged girl 18 years ago. kelly's attorney sphight back. steve greeneberg tweeting, quote: give me a break. this is beyond absurd. the singer faces multiple sex crime charges in chicago, illinois and new york. that's where he is currently in custody awaiting trial. a bipartisan group of taxpayers are going after california for targeting the president's taxes. judicial watch leading a lawsuit over what's called an unconstitutional attempt to keep president trump offer the state ballot. the new law forces candidates to release five years of tax returns to be listed on the ballot. former california governor jerry brown vetoed a similar measure in 2017. envelope star jj watt makes a kid's day but then breaks his bike. look at this. >> pretty awesome until i
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broke the bike. the bike i was using was not equipped for 290-pound man. >> defensive end for taking part in green bay packers tradition during a joint practice. watt bought the boy a new bike. brian: just needs to fix the seat. i think he overreacted. ainsley: it popped all the way back. steve: an adjustment. jillian: the kid got a new bike so there. brian: kellyanne conway is going to be here live, and then john bolton, boy does he have a lot on his plate. so does she. they will be joining us shortly. ♪ ♪ there's a company that's talked to even more real people than me: jd power. 448,134 to be exact. they answered 410 questions in 8 categories about vehicle quality. and when they were done, chevy earned more j.d. power quality awards across
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cars, trucks and suvs than any other brand over the last four years. so on behalf of chevrolet, i want to say "thank you, real people." you're welcome. we're gonna need a bigger room. with moderate to severe ulcerative colitis or crohn's, your plans can change in minutes. your head wants to do one thing, but your gut says, "not today." if your current treatment isn't working, ask your doctor about entyvio. entyvio acts specifically in the gi tract to prevent an excess of white blood cells from entering and causing damaging inflammation. entyvio has helped many patients achieve long-term relief and remission. infusion and serious allergic reactions can happen during or after treatment. entyvio may increase risk of infection, which can be serious. pml, a rare, serious, potentially fatal brain infection caused by a virus may be possible. tell your doctor if you have an infection, experience frequent infections or have flu-like symptoms or sores.
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this is us. to the 6am sleepers. and the hope this trip never end-ers everyone uses their phone differently and in different places. that's why xfinity mobile created a different kind of wireless network one that's designed to save you money. by auto connecting to millions of secure wifi hot spots. and the best lte everywhere else. xfinity mobile. it's wireless reimagined. simple. easy. awesome. >> we must recognize that the internet has provided a dangerous avenue to radicalized disturbed minds and perform demented acts. we must shine light on the dark recesses of the internet and stop mass murders before they start. ainsley: president trump pointing out the problems with the internet after deadly shootings in el paso and dayton, ohio.
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steve: the website been offline host of extremist messages from attackers as well. should the site be shut down as well as many critics claim. ainsley: here joining us is cia analyst dr. kohl. good morning. >> good morning. ainsley: tell us what 8 chan is and what happened on that site. >> 8 chan if you take the 8 and turn it sideways infinity symbol goes by infinity chain. a chain of infinite information and the website was set up to allow people to anonymously post information on any topic that they choose. steve: started out as free speech site but now it's become this repository of all sorts of hate. if the internet pro-virds take it down in the united states it's going to come back as something else, isn't it? >> exactly. logically it makes sense to shut it down and i agree
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that these companies are saying we are not going to host it. but the problem is this content isn't going to go away it's going to be out there. 8 cran will be up in russia or dark web makes it harder for law enforcement to take action and prosecute. ainsley: even the founder is telling the owners do the world a favor and shut it off which it has as of monday. as a cia analyst would you go on these sites and give you information about people and go make an arrest and prevent something like this from happening? >> >> absolutely, the bad part is that these people are putting all this content out on the internet. the good news is we can actually use it to our advantage. we can do a better job of writing correlation tools that analyze all of this data and almost get to the point where we can predict who is most likely to commit these crimes and take
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proactive action against them. steve: right. final question for you, doctor. yesterday the president from the white house ordered the department of justice and social media companies to develop tools to detect mass shooters before they strike. is that possible? >> yes, it is because that information is out there now. the analytics and correlation that is needed is not available today. but it could easily be built. and what we need to start doing is instead of letting technology be used against us to hurt us, we need to use the technology for greater good for society. steve: amen to that all right, dr. eric kohl, we thank you for joining us today from san jose, california. ainsley: thank you so much. >> thank you. ainsley: you are welcome. 22 after the hour. what's coming up, steve. steve: kids are setting on the sidelines. less than 40% of our children arelying sports these days thanks to the high price of playing. is that costing kids in the long run?
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ainsley: former nfl star eric coleman is here to tack kelt issue coming up next ♪ ♪ how do you gauge the greatness of an suv? is it to carry cargo or to carry on a legacy? its show of strength or its sign of intelligence? in crossing harsh terrain or breaking new ground? this is the time to get an exceptional offer on the mercedes of your midsummer dreams at the mercedes-benz summer event, going on now. lease the gla 250 suv for just $329 a month
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♪ ♪ steve: all right. now it's time for news by the numbers. first $4.3 million. that's how much the california teacher's association spent lobbying this year to try slow down charter schools. that's reportedly the most of any lobbying group in the state. next, 23,000 bucks. that's how much a man -- how much money a man accidentally threw out with his recycling oh, man, workers at a california waste plant 200 miles away found the cash stuffed in a shoebox and sent it back to the owner. good for them.
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finally 3.5 seconds. that's how fast the new 2020 ford mustang. when it goes on sale this fall the most powerful street-legal mustang at nearly $70,000. that's amazing. brian? brian: 27 minutes now after the hour. we got a new report showing kids' participation in sports is dropping. in 201838% of children took part in sports. that's down from 45% just 10 years ago. and now a new campaign is fighting back featuring big athletes kobe bryant and wayne gretzky retired they're able to get kids back on the field. >> i'm here to announce my retirement from sports. baseball, basketball, all of them. i feel like it's time. the pressure that it takes to play at my age is just too much. i thought i would play this game as long as i was having fun and now it's time to call it quits. brian: wow, here with his
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take on that great spot is former nfl star and safety for the new york jets obviously let himself go later in life. detroit lyons eric coleman. great to see you. >> great to see you as well. brian: were you surprised by this statistic. >> there is a lot of different aspects of kids not wanting to play sports anymore. you know there is a lot of pressure from their parents to get scholarships. coaches are obsessed with winning and they are not worried about teaching kids. they just want to win. it makes it not fun for kids. and then you have the safety aspect. parents are scared i know with football to have their kids playing the game of football. brian: a couple things are going on. number one it costs more money than it used to because you are traveling. number two is i think that the cost more money and you have kids playing it seems like the better kids are getting all the attention. the so-called good player is basically told by ninth grade you don't get as much attention, you don't get the better coaching and get in better league so why bother? >> exactly. i understand that and as a kid, you know, growing up
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myself, it was all about having fun. learning of the values that come with playing sports. because there are some things that apply to the real world when you talk about how to work with others, team work, accountability. hard work. you know, there is some great things that translate into life that these kids are missing out on. brian: also how do you handle adversity. i don't get enough play time. i didn't make that team. people think that's a disaster. no, that's an important life lesson. here is what kobe bryant said about this whole thing. >> the most important thing for parents is establishing element of fun and imagination. i think that's really key. at an early age it's important for kids to have freedom and flexibility to create and to imagine and for the game to be fun while teaching fundamentals of the sport. i think it's hard to find that blend but it's extremely important. brian: do you know what he is saying? >> yeah. i understand it. that's what the game is about. you are supposed to be having fun. a lot of these times the parents are living their
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dreams through their kids. maybe they didn't make it to the pros or college level as an athlete and they think their child has that opportunity so they pressure them. brian: right now parents watching maybe they have 6 or 8-year-old. grandparents watching they want to get across, how do you begin to change this cycle. >> just be engaged with your kids. make sure they are having a good time playing the sports. i think playing multiple sports is key. brian: how many sports did you play. >> i played three sports, football, basketball, baseball. it was always new. there was always something new around the corner. you don't get complacent or bored playing one sport. brian: not so much the parents tell you one sport. parents. excuse me you are going where, to basketball practice? no you should be at football practice. lacrosse that doesn't stop or soccer the original sport that never stops. indoor and summer. >> the coaches are getting ultra competitive. they are focused more on winning rather than teaching the kids the fundamentals of the game and having a good time playing the sport. also, you know, there is a safety component.
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that's why, you know, you look at football, there is the football helmets that are getting better technology. football pads that are getting better technology. have you groups like football teaching kids the techniques to keep healthy as well there is a lot of different aspects why they are not playing sports. hope fiscal cliff they can get that thing fixed up. brian: last thing is there is options indoors. you have iphone and video games and people say i'm being entertained by myself interacting with some stranger in maybe in japan playing some type of video game why do i go outside and kick a ball around. >> exactly. it's like parents are letting the technology baby-sit their children instead of forcing them to go outside and go play sports. i know as a youth in the summertime we would go to the community center and play sports. that's how i learned how to play all the different things i did. brian: on this note erik comey it's easy for him to say that because he made a living playing sports if you
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didn't is it worth your time. >> absolutely. some of my best memories are from playing high school football. the camaraderie you have with your teammates. i'm still friends and text testimony with my high school teammates more than i do my nfl teammates. a lot of life lessons that you learn playing sports. i think they really apply to helping me be the man that i am today. brian: all right, erik thank you so much. hopefully you will push back on this by joining that campaign. we have the counselor to the president kellyanne conway here live talking about the president's speech yesterday and where we go today. ♪ ♪ my experience with usaa
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♪ ♪ ♪ the song that we're singing ♪ come on get happy ♪ a whole lot of loving is what. ainsley: i was born in the wrong era. isn't that a great song? brian: how many partridge family members were actually musicians? shirley jones. ainsley: what show was that from? steve: from the partridge family. brian. steve: i think it was in the '70s where shirley jones drove the bus for the family singing group and on the back there was a sign that said nervous mother driving. brian: right. other thing is you had a drummer who was 7. separate drummer. i think the first drummer died. and then he had another kid replace him.
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no one even acknowledged it on the series. just like the two darrons no one acknowledged that one darron had a contract problem. the drummer was clearly faking it. shirley jones was a real musician and david cassidy ended up -- ainsley: they were all part of the same family. brian: only on television. steve: those lyrics come on get happy. your story just depressed me. brian: it did? what we bought that a drummer after the 8 years old could travel with his family and not go to school. steve: come on, get happy. jillian: my mind is spinning right now, brian. thank you for that let's talk about this for a second. fireballs light up the sky as a military warehouse explodes for hours. at least one person is dead and several others wounded from the blast in siberia. evacuations are underway in the 12 miles surrounding the russian military depot which houses gunpowder for artillery shells.
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no word on what cause the fire that sparked the explosion. this is a bizarre story. a bus driver accused of locking a passenger in the luggage compartment on purpose. the woman described the disturbing discovery. >> people in the front could hear her banging for help. >> my brain didn't know how to react. >> connecticut police arrested wendy after the passenger called 911 from the compartment. she allegedly locked the woman inside while getting items out of her bag. no word on why. the peter pan bus company is investigating. a little boy's rescue from a manhole is caught on camera in china. you have to look at this as the curious 3-year-old steps on the manhole's broken cover dropping into the sewer. his parents looking down. they don't know what to do. so his dad considered going in before reaching down and pulling his son out. the toddler is okay. but, wow, frightening moment for that family. and two florida police officers just found out they are more than just brothers
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in blue. they are actual brothers. orange county sheriff sergeant david stahl seen here on the right was adopted as a baby. he took a d.n.a. test to learn more about his family history. that's when he found out boynton beach officer eric reynolds is his half-brother. >> my wife is just always like are you texting your brother again? and of course because we have 50 years to make up for. >> for me it's really cool i have a big brother now. i never had a big brother. >> brothers are planning a family reunion soon. isn't that great? ainsley: and they are both officers? jillian: um-huh. steve: wonderful. ainsley: thank you, jillian. brian: let's bring in kellyanne conway counselor to the president the united states. with so much going on the president is about to amend the schedule because of the shootings over the weekend. where is he -- is he locked in to el paso and dayton on wednesday? >> well, good morning. this is something the president has done when americans who face tragedy in the past he has gone to meet the hurricane
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devastated areas. he certainly went to parkland, florida, las vegas, nevada after mass shootings there. and it has been his desire and his intention since he learned of these tragedies over the weekend to get on the ground and visit the people there, to thank the first responders and the medical professionals, to meet those who are healing from their wounds to talk to law enforcement and federal fbi agents and others who are still on the ground offering resources and support. so this is what he has done. and i think you saw a preview of that yesterday here in the white house when despite the politicization of his his political opponents the president is trying to bring the country together, heal a nation but also offer concrete proposals on how to move forward as a nation. let me tell you something i'm hopping mad this morning because i see very little scant coverage of the fact that the dayton shooter has been confirmed as having a twitter feed that was supportive of antifa, that was supportive of elizabeth warren, bernie sanders,
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obviously 9, 10 years ago in high school he had a kill list for boys, a rape list for girls and there is scant attention being paid to this. people are allowing nonstop punditry by at least two of the presidential democratic presidential hopeful was who are mired 0% or low single digits. brian: talking about tim ryan and beto o'rourke. >> you mentioned them beto o'rourke from the van if i fair vanity fair project candidacy. out there screaming about president trump. that doesn't heal a single soul or prevent another mass shooting. elizabeth warren was raising money for senate candidate doug jones and tina smith. she is raising money in email appeal talking about the mass shooting. this is a disgrace and if nobody else is going to talk about it i'm going to talk about it. the respond did not respond in kind. they politicized this over the weekend. they all blamed him. and i want to name and shame them now.
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because he did not respond in kind. they want to be president. he is the president. and is he trying to bring the president together and have concrete bipartisan, buy cameral steps. the red flag laws he is the guy who signed the fix nics acted into law. did he away with bump stocks after the las vegas shooting where law enforcement said they never found a motive for that monster. and he is denouncing whited supremacy and they are out there denouncing him. america, take a look at it and don't forget it. ainsley: it's not going to bring these individuals back by placing blame. we need to do something about it. even the dad of one of the parkland victims said these victims aren't even in the ground yet. they aren't even buried and he was credit siding the politicians playing the blame game. >> no. it's really terrible. i wanted people to know that when bernie sanders supporter, somebody admitted that he watched a different cable network for his political news shot up steve scalise who was within inches of his life and others on that baseball field two years ago.
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we didn't run out and say oh, he was hunting down republicans and bernie sanders supporter. we were worried about steve scalise's life being saved. that was absolutely the darkest day in this white house in the first year in my opinion. the president and the first lady, the vice president, second lady and others went to visit mr. scalise in the hospital. we didn't run around saying that for months on end. when more recently, when some evil, twist you had depraved lunatic was trying to shoot up an ice detention center in washington state quoting the exact language that ocasio-cortez had just used we didn't blame her. so this has to stop. let's stop pretending. brian: were you surprised president obama weighed in. >> no i wasn't surprised at all. again, dimension in his presidency there were about 24 mass shootings three times the number or much higher than the number of the three administrations previous to him combined? again, nobody blames him for new town, connecticut.
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and he had his opportunity to go and try to heal the nation. steve: right. and they should not. >> and nobody should. steve: no. of course. because it is so political and washington really at the other end of pennsylvania avenue not much gets done. and so -- >> -- they are not even here. they are on recess. the president is here right behind me working today. steve: he. >> they are welcome to couple back. steve: because there is such a toxic environment right now and congress can't get anything done. there is a story is that true president has spoken to the attorney general bill barr about using regulatory power or executive action to try to do something just like he did with bump stocks regarding this. is that on the table? >> it is on the table. and he was in close contact with the attorney general and the fbi director over the weekend. and let me say something about fbi director chris wray. on july 23rd, he testified to congress about domestic terrorism, about the increase in arrests as goes to terrorism. he testified there were
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about 100 arrests for domestic terrorism the last three quarters and 100 arrests for international terrorism. why is this relevant? after 9/11 the focus is on international terrorism. see something say something was about packages. director wray and the fbi are saying see something, say something is not just about packages it's about people. this guy in dayton, ohio, had a kill list and rape list, the authorities could not have that information about his high school record for his -- when he went to procure firearms legally and got them legally. they had some traffic stop in his. steve: that's got to be changed. the police came in. they filed a report apparently. but because he was a minor he was only 17, even though the next day after this became public, you know, in this particular town, one third of the school didn't show up because they -- >> -- they didn't show up they were afraid. >> >> this wasn't yesterday or last week it was a decade. this has to stop. everybody needs to stop
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preening in front of the camera and stop raising money elizabeth warren i'm talking to you. start working with us to stop that i want to talk about director wray. he testified about the -- that. brian: domestic terror. >> domestic terror. he testified on july 23rd. >> do you know why it got very little attention because the next day bob mueller was going to testify. all these made-for-tv lawyers. telling what you bob mueller would say next day and ignoring the testimony of the fbi director on the very issues that the president was talking about yesterday. he denounced white supremacy, racism, bigotry, evil unequivocally and specifically. nobody paid attention to what director wray said. the other thing i just wanted to mention is there was one democratic candidate running for president his name is eric swalwell. what ways his major plot form? guns. he dropped out of the race before everybody else. the democrats had an opportunity to talk about this. they didn't. they were talking about donald trump. he is not talking to them he
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is talking to the nation. huge difference on display between running your mouth and being the president and trying to bring together a nation. ainsley: what was the president age. most kids get in trouble from high school for maybe drinking under age or i don't know taking their parents' car out after. he had a kill list or rape list but too young to put that on his record. would the president lower the age? if you do something that extreme that needs to be on your record even if you are 17. >> ainsley, as we know there are kids, 16, 17, maybe even younger prosecute you had as adults for murder as it did by this monstrous murderrier. he killed his own sister. that may have happened for sure. there is also a hippa law consideration here. the privacy laws, of course, protect us. and there are many exceptions to hippa that have, i think that have been carved out over time. i know we have had one for the opioid crisis. we got one from hhs office
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of civil rice almost two years ago now. we have met way too many grieving families whose 18 or 19-year-old son or daughter was chemically dependent, was addict you had, which is a disease and not a moral failing, and they had no idea until the child was gone because -- dead because of the hip part of there are exceptions that can be carved out. that is absolutely something that's on the table for us to look at. there is a way to protect our privacy and our constitutional rights but still protect the citizenry as well. brian: can i ask you this? is presidenting senator lindsey graham and senator blumenthal's push to adopt red flag protection orders? does he fully back that lindsey graham call ahead of time and say this is what i am proposing. >> chairman gram in close contact about that. we were very heartened to see that immediate bipartisan reaction by blumenthal. chairman graham of south carolina yesterday. the chairman mentioned red flag in his specific remarks yesterday to the nation. thank you for mentioning that basically it's an
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emergency order where we're trying to keep guns out of violent criminals out of people who shouldn't have the firearms. at the same time, respecting the rights of law abiding citizens and their right to carry firearms. again, this person in dayton, ohio, got these firearms legally. the monster in new town, connecticut, whose own mother was afraid of him used the mother's legally procured firearms to kill her and dozens of other innocent people in that school. so, folks, instead of just screaming and raising money on this, let's think through specific examples that can be ameliorated for the next time. the president specifically wanted to include in his remarks yesterday red flag. he also talked yesterday to senators separately senators manchin, democrat of west virginia, toomey republican of pennsylvania. looking at their legislation about background checks. everything is on the table. but we need people to get
quote
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off tv, get back to washington or at least come to the white house and try to work together. brian: kellyanne conway, thanks so much. ainsley: thanks, kellyanne. >> steve: all right. now you know. email us at friends@foxnews.com. the undercover billionaire. who is it well under cover until the next segment. stay with us. do you have concerns about mild memory loss related to aging? prevagen is the number one pharmacist-recommended memory support brand. you can find it in the vitamin aisle in stores everywhere.
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ainsley: a self-made billionaire out to prove in a new series that anyone can be successful with the right knowledge. here now with the star of discovery's undercover billionaire glen stecious. glen, thanks for being with us. >> how are you doing? ainsley: i'm great. tell us about the show it starts tonight. >> starts tonight at 10:00 p.m. you know, my whole life i have had people, my friends, everybody say glenn, you are the luckiest guy. how in the world have you been able to do the things. ainsley: become a billionaire. >> i started out the wrong side of the tracks. my parents struggled with alcoholism and whatnot. i failed fourth grade. i was dyslexic. as a childed i i had a child ine 8th grade. i was 14. i didn't get off to the best start: talk about adversities and what makes you stronger. we are part of a
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organization wonderful group that promotes people that have been through severe adversity. that was kind of the theme in my life. and so as i went through my friends would say, you know, you could never do that again in a million years. i said you know what? i think we live in this country that has given us so much opportunity. i bet you if you stripped me of everything, i could redo it. ainsley: you are doing that on the show. tell us the premise of the show. what happens? >> well, i put that out there in the universe, discovery picked that up and said all right, come with us. and took away my credentials, you know my name, my money and just said we are going to drop you off in a city you have never been to which was eary, pennsylvania. the lake was frozen. ainsley: they gave you 100 bucks and you had to go out and do what? >> go out and start a business. and get people to believe in me. and thin try to do it from really from the ground up. ainsley: you have 90 days. >> 90 days to make.
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ainsley: make a company and make a million dollars. >> if i couldn't i had to put my money where my mouth was and put a million in. ainsley: did you do it? >> let's just say it was the hardest thing i have ever done. i have been through the financial crisis and a lot of crazy things. this was full of a lot of crazy twists and turns. ainsley: i can't wait to watch it. tonight, discovery channel. you said 10:00 p.m.; is that right? >> 10:00 p.m. ainsley: it's an 8 week series. >> it is. ainsley: we wish you all the best. self-made billionaire through the financial services industry. >> thank you. ainsley: he served our country in iraq. now this army captain wants to serve our nation in congress. we are going to meet him coming up next. ♪ going to rock this city ♪ going to rock this town ♪ we going to rock ♪ this town ♪ h for so long was extremely depressing.
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ainsley: straight to a fox news alert. we're learning more about what happened in the hours before the shooting down in el paso with the walmart as the number of dead individuals has gone up, two more have died in the hospital. now the number is 22. steve: jonathan serrie is live if el paso. we heard from the police. looks like the shooter got lost in one neighborhood, wept into a walmart to get something to eat. reporter: indeed. they're still pieces all of that together. they're trying to determine a motive as they investigate this as a hate crime, piecing together the moments that led to this gunman traveling from his home in suburban dallas, making the 10 to 11-hour trip to this walmart parking lot behind me where he opened fire in the walmart parking lot and inside of the store. they say that the gunman got lost in the neighborhood and wound up at the store because he was hungry. so it is unclear whether the walmart was his original target,
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or he just wanted to go into the general area, case it out and find a target. nevertheless city officials believe he targeted their city because it's a border town, that prides itself on its bicultural population. >> this was an act of domestic terrorism fueled by hate. an evil individual. reporter: with the death toll now at 22, police have released the names of all victims who range in the age of 15 to 90. in the white house president trump had this reaction to last weekend's mass shootings in texas and ohio. >> these barbaric slaughters are an assault on our communities, an attack upon our nation, a crime against all of humanity. reporter: organizers say 1500 people attended a memorial vigil for the youngest victim, javier
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rodriguez, it was held at the high school where he was about to begin his sophomore year. he enjoyed soccer. they delivered wooden crosses to a public gathering place overlooking the crime scene. it has become a place for prayer and hope. >> we are strong, we'll always be strong. we will show the world that we will overcome this. >> this is an attack on all of us. all we have to do is love and be human. that is what we need to be. reporter: police say 27 survivors suffered injuries. 15 remain hospitalized. two of them in critical condition. steve, ainsley, brian. back to you. ainsley: jonathan i saw the report during the 5:00 a.m. hour. you delivered the man who brought the crosses. he drove across the country to bring crosses for every victim. that is now a memorial for everyone has candles?
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reporter: he has been doing this for virtually every high-profile shooting across america. works on a shoestring budget. worked tireless hours. he came with crosses for each and every victim to this memorial site. ainsley: should do a gofundme page. i'm sure people would like to contribute to that unfortunately two more passed away at the hospital. will he put crosses up for them? reporter: i'm sure he will. as well as for the victims in ohio. he seems to work tirelessly, showing up to all the high-profile events. even some lesser events you don't necessarily hear about in the national headlines but he cares about nonetheless. brian: thanks so much, jonathan. we'll look forward to finding out what's going on out there. we'll see when the president is supposed to arrive at some point. the schedule will be confirmed i imagine. maybe before our show is over. but he is supposed to go to el paso, then over to dayton.
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i find statingerring only two days, but even over the weekend people were taking a short course to criticizing the president and his presidency for setting the groundwork for these shootings, which we've been witnessing, which is stunning especially considering in dayton this, is follower of somebody who seems to support elizabeth warren, hates i.c.e. and is a fan of antifa. steve: we're learning more about them day by day. yesterday the president, you saw it right here on the fox news channel at about 10:10 in the morning. he addressed the nation regarding the mass shootings, he condemned racism, bigotry and white supremacy. here is the president. >> in one voice our nation must condemn racism, bigotry, and white supremacy. these sinister ideologies must be defeated hate has no place in
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america. we must stop of glorification of violence in our society. cultural change is hard but each of us can choose to build a culture that celebrates the inherent worth and dignity of every human life. we must reform our mental health laws to better identify mentally-disturbed individuals who may commit acts of violence. mental illness and hatred pulls the trigger, not the gun. now is the time to set destructive partisanship aside. our future is in our control. america will rise to the challenge. we will always have and always will win. the choice is ours and ours alone. it is not up to mentally ill monsters. it is up to us. steve: in addition the president yesterday ordered the department of justice and social media companies to try to figure out a way to use technology to detect
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mass shooters before they strike. he called for red flag laws which would allow judges, rapid due process to par troubled people from getting their hands on guns and he asked for reform of mental health laws to i.d. mentally-disturbed people who may commit acts of violence when necessary, perhaps involuntarily have them sent to some sort of facility to keep an eye on them. kellyanne, said that the president is open to some sort of regulatory, you know, action. executive action. she was not specific. brian: social media world which is always condemning people like prageru for some reason this chat site a message board site, effectively kicked off-line monday, evidently one of these shooters was thriving there and
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evidently that community, has some really disturbing things. just amazing they will see certain phrases knock you have if you have a political point of view, they wouldn't knock this off until a tragedy. ainsley: yesterday i'm turning on tv, watching the president, the left always criticizes him for this, this, about racism. he is speaking against racism. he says hate has no place in america. mate warps the mind, ravages the heart, devours the soul. he come up with a plan. he wants to enact these red flag laws. he is delivered a powerful message. he is getting criticized. president obama criticized him on twitter. hillary clinton criticized him on twitter. here is what kellyanne conway says about that. >> beto o'rourke screaming and cursings about president trump. that doesn't heal a single soul or prevent another mass shooting. that raising their profile. elizabeth warren was raising
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money for senate candidates doug jones and tina smith. this is disgrace. if nobody else is going to talk about. the president did not respond in kind. they politicized this over the weekend. they all blamed him. i want to name and shame them now because he did not respond in kind. they want to be president. he is the president. he is trying to bring the country together, to have concrete, bipartisan, bicameral test. brian: a lot of -- go ahead. ainsley: they're not even buried yet. they're not even buried. these families are in mourning. they lost their loved once. we as a country need to come together to prevent something like this and unify here instead of putting blame. this president didn't stand up blame the last administration for the shootings that happened unhis watch. steve: kellyanne said she was upset about the fact there were red flags regarding the dayton shooter. we told you yesterday how there was a kill list scrawled on the bathroom wall. ainsley: he was a bad guy. steve: there was a rape list he
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apparently told a woman in one of his classes, in high school, you're on my rape list. texted it to her. ainsley: killed his sister. >> he took the text to the police. the police saw it. theres with a report. an investigation. apparently it was not adjudicated. they let drop according to the woman who was on the list. she said the police and the school let her down. she is venting on facebook. ainsley: he was 17. a minor. brian: talked about shooting people that didn't leave him big tips? how do you know that? he obviously talking to other people. at some point, i know the question are you going to start, there is a fear, i will report and screw somebody's life up, make up stories that they're threatening people, you have to wonder, if you are working on the wait staff with somebody that says i want to shoot people who don't give you good tips, at one point it is your responsiblity to come forward, that could be the next mass shooter. steve: the police went to the school, did an investigation, and yet, for whatever reason, apparently he was not prosecuted
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as a minor. and so there was no record. ainsley: he was suspended. steve: ohio law bars anyone convicted of felony as an adult or convicted after juvenile charge would have been a felony 18 years old or older. had he been convicted as a minor of something that would have been considered a felony as an adult, it would have been on the record. ainsley: maybe america will learn something from this. we will wake up. when we see teenagers, they should be tried as an adult, even if they're 16 or 17, when they have a rape list and kill list, cause a school lockdown. he got suspended. i'm not sure why he didn't get expelled. brian: mitch mcconnell is at home on recess. he has he has fractured shoulded is healing. this is the protest. they're blaming my mitch and current gun laws for the shootings. >> i'm at mcconnell house,
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this [bleep], about to get rest. not the children you're kidnapping can't get any arrest. families are are getting murdered. can't get any rest. mitch. nursing his little broken arm. he should have have broken his raggedly little [bleep] neck. if we can't get rest because of you, you won't get no rest because of us! steve: you're looking part of two hour facebook live they put together and broadcast. according to fox news.com a male protester is heard in the clips, hopefully somebody out there has a voodoo doll, a woman protester appears to agree, just stab the m something, in the heart, please. the #, massacre moscow mitch was dominating on social media last night, when this was happening. brian: they said they're on it. >> they didn't arrest the people because they're being peaceful?
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that lady did not sound peaceful. the whole neighborhood can't get any sleep. i can't believe they did that. brian: 11 minutes after the hour. jillian you're in my neighborhood in the office. jillian: i guess i am. steve: we're all in the same neighborhood. brian: you are peaceful and quiet. very few protests. jillian: good morning. let's talk about what is going on in ohio. today, ohio governor mike dewine is expected to unveil new gun and mental health measures after nine people were shot and killed in dayton. the republican has been talking to senate leaders about passing red flag laws that would remove guns under court order for a person found to be dangerous. the dayton shooter fired off at least 41 rounds with his ar-15 in 30 seconds before being shot and killed by police. "fox business alert." in just over an hour the stock market will open after taking the biggest plunge. the dow futures are trending up after dropping 800 points.
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after klein dropped its currency the u.s. is calling that a manipulative move during the trade war. two united airlines pilots accused of being two drunk to fly are expected in court. both were arrested in scotland after allegedly failing breathalyzer tests before they were supposed to fly from glascow to newark, new jersey at 9:00 in the morning. the flight was canceled. recommendations were made for passengers later. a dog's life is pretty tough, right? [laughter]. sorry. this stubborn pooch filmed on streets of new york city going viral for dramatic refusal to get up. the video is viewed over 3 million times. sometimes you just don't feel like getting up. steve: why do you say stubborn? maybe just lazy. jillian: tired.
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he wants a belly rub. ainsley: dogs are best. thanks, jillian. steve: some 2020 democrats pushing for $15 an hour. >> 15-dollar federal minimum wage. >> we need to raise the minimum wage to at least $15 an hour. >> we have to raise that minimum wage to $15 an hour. >> new york city already has has a 15-dollar minimal wage. stuart varney says it is costing businesses big time. the numbers coming up next. ♪ allergies with sinus congestion and pressure?
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♪ >> it is long past time we have a 15-dollar federal minimum wage. >> we need to raise the minimum wage to at least $15 an hour. >> we have to raise that minimum wage to $15 an hour. >> a minimum wage that is a living wayne, winning that fight for 15. ainsley: 2020 democrats still pushing the fight for 15 to raise the minimum wage. more than six months after it went into effect in new york city, owners are saying increased labor costs are forcing them to cut staff, and
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shifts. steve: one owner telling "the wall street journal" it forces you to do make sure nobody works more than 40 hours. you can only cut back so many people before the service starts to suffer, which is something i think we predicted. brian: stuart varney here from "varney & company" from 9:00 to noon on fbn. stuart this does not surprise you. now they have numbers to go on. >> there is no surprise here whatsoever. we saw this coming and it has happened. i will lay down a couple ruse here. first of all do not legislate wages. the law of unintended consequences kicks in real fast. second, it's terrible for youngsters. how do you climb up the ladder if you can't get on the bottom rung? thirdly, not all jobs should pay $30,000 a year right from the get-go. what about entry level jobs? you can't entry at $30,000 a year. we will never know the names of the youngsters who failed to get
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on that lower rung of the ladder because there is no jobs available for them that are at the right price. brian: doesn't it show you, these people who are doing this are not business people? >> of course. brian: if you have a franchise, you know, you have budgets. there is only certain amount of labor you can pay for. >> just four, three or four-weeks ago bernie sanders campaign team complained publicly that they were working on starvation wages. they wanted $15 an hour. bernie sanders says, whoa, okay, okay, we'll have to cut hours for everybody. that is exactly what's happened in the fast-food industry in new york city. ainsley: one of my best friends lives down in florida. she has a chicken salad restaurant. they sell chicken salad. i asked her if you can survive if you increase to $15 an hour? she said absolutely not t would take us for granted. granted employees work really hard and do wonderful job, get
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paid a little bit more, an she gives pay raises but you have to earn that. >> don't let politicians set wage levels. they're buying votes. you vote for me, look what you get, you will get a raise, $15 an hour. brian: yesterday stunning news in the afternoon, china retaliation for thursday's additional tariffs hit the market hard it was rising. then got hit by 700 points. we all felt that they devalued their currency. we have filed to say you are now manipulating your currency. they have a year to do this. where is this heading? >> it's a full-scale trade war, currency war. that is what we're in the middle of right now. i can't see any quick fix. i can't see a quick resolution. brian: there will be a quick reaction? what is a quick reaction from businesses? >> my reaction is this, xi xinping china's leader is in a much worse position, than our president, president trump. xi xinping faces what is called capital flight. money flowing out of the country, very bad news.
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a lot of businesses in china have to repay debt in dollars. more expensive now. i can see some bankruptcies coming. thirdly, he has got real trouble in hong kong. there is a revolt in progress there. if that spreads to the rest of the country or any other part of the country he has a huge problem. the man's in a corner. i'm not sure how he gets out. steve: the hard-liners in china don't want him to give this president, our president, what he is requesting with the deal but ultimately when you look at, for instance, the tweets the president puts out, he always talks about what a good relationship he has with the president of china. >> yes. steve: but at the same time, what is the president of china doing to help us? >> that is standard negotiating tactic, isn't it? you praise the leader of your opposition at the same time undermining him and what he is doing in his own country. i'll say this, if this trade fight drags on, and i think it will, it will hurt our economy. so the president has to think of
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this -- steve: higher costs? >> higher costs, maybe higher prices, less world trade that will hurt us a little bit. it will reduce our growth rate. are american voters prepared to sacrifice a little of our prosperity to win against china? steve: yes. >> the vote comes in 2020. we'll find out. brian: what is interesting and heartening senator schumer has been calling for us to crack down on china, the democrats. so the president communicate this effectively, maybe give a speech on it. however nothing can heal the farmers. the farmers have to settle product to china. now those agricultural purchases have stopped. >> that was a deliberate move on the part of the chinese. they knew perfectly well that our farmers were looking for big exports to china, soybeans and corn, what have you. when they said, we're not buying any, that was a deliberate move to hurt president trump and his political prospects in the farm belt and in the electoral college for 2020. steve: oh, that's right. there is a caucus in iowa.
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>> you come from iowa a few months away. steve: indeed. stuart, thank you very much. brian: catch stuart on fox business from 9:00 to noon. catch him on "fox nation." your take with stuart varney on "fox nation." which is netflix for conservatives. steve: meanwhile, he is a former captain in the u.s. army. now he is running for u.s. congress. ainsley: republican wesley hunt says he thinks more veterans like him should be in washington. he will tell us why next. ♪ so i only pay for what i need. then i won the lottery, got hair plugs, and started working out. and so can you! only pay for what you need.
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this is what people saw on the website for the city of murfreesboro tennessee this weekend. the city claims no information was taken. no word on who is really behind the hacked attack. yes, we are watching you. hong kong airlines said it admits surveilling passenger with onboard cameras. why? the company says they're collecting images to monitor how people use in-flight entertainment. they say the cameras are for security purposes. that's it. brian? brian: republican congressman will hurd is retiring. he plants on focusing diversifying the party. >> i'm interested in helping other candidates like me. i think i want to see a republican party that has more folks that look and found and operate like i do. i think it is an opportunity for me to help phenomenal candidate
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like wesley hunt down in houston, texas. he cares about his country. served his country in the military. brian: you hear that name, wesley hunt, republican, military combat veteran, running to take back a houston seat that went to the democrat in 2018. congressional candidate wesley hunt joins us right now. wesley, will hurd is in your corner. that must be a good feeling? >> it's a good feeling. i want to thank will personally for his 10 years in the cia, his six years in congress. i can guarranty you, this is not the last we're going to hear from him. his service has been unbelievable. we need more guys like him. so his support for me has really made this a better ride if you can imagine. brian: he wants to diversify the party. you have served in the military. now you want to serve in congress. with makes you a republican? >> i grew up in a very
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conservative home. my dad did 23 years in the united states army. my sister went to west point first in my family. she spent 23 years in the army, retired as a military intelligence officer. i went to west point. i graduated in the class of 2004. my brother went to west point as well. he graduated class of 2005. so there is almost 60 years of military service in our family. one fun fact about our family, that 2006, we were actually all deployed in the middle east at the same time. i was flying combat missions in an apache. my sister was stationed in baghdad and my brother was in the arabian gulf because he served in the navy. what my family gets is the sacrifice needed to preserve our values and our way of life. and so you don't get three west point graduates without growing up in a pretty conservative home that believes in those values. brian: as you know the republican party has been hit pretty hard with retirements. 11 have said i'm going to
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retire. three of the four retiring gopers in texas are in competitive districts. you're in a r plus 7 district, but a hard fight to get that seat back. in the big picture what is your message that didn't resonate in 18 that you think will resonate in 2020? >> living in houston, texas, i mean this is the energy capital of the world, right? we must protect those energy jobs and we have the energy corridor there as well. and so, doing away with fossil fuels by 2030 is just unacceptable for our community. also the jobs that it provides and health care that these jobs provide for our citizens must also be preservedded. i think that the messages we have to do is make sure that we are actually acting within the best interests of our constituents. and actually preserving those values and preserving those ways of life. and, to me, that is the argument that we have to contrast with
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the other side. brian: i knew you grew up in a household that stands on its own merits, i get it, but when people look at the african-american community, most vote for democrats and most run as democrats. what do you see the rest of the african-american community doesn't? >> you know, what i see is, we need to have good candidates and i think that's actually the reason why i'm sitting here today. we need to provide examples for people to see so they can say, you know in the african-american home it is actually pretty conservative. it is just that our message isn't resonating because we don't have the candidates to get that message back to our homes. so, that is actually part of the reason why i'm sitting here as well. you know, it is not an identity politics thing. it is more of a values thing and how do we take that to my community is something i will also work hard to do. brian: have you gotten pushback from people who say, hey, you should be running as a democrat in the black community?
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>> you know i've heard that but i'm not a democrat. i'm a republican. i've been one for my entire life and our values do resonate very well in our community. brian: gotcha. good luck the rest of the way. i know it will be an exciting run. republicans have a lot of big hopes for you, wesley hunt, former u.s. army captain, republican candidate for congress. appreciate you joining us, wesley. >> thank you very much. have a great day. brian: thank you for your service. fox news alert, president trump taking executive action on venezuela, declaring a total economic embargo. what is the real message to venezuela. national security advisor john bolton here next. nce companies t a one-size-fits-all approach that lets them decide what they'll pay doctors for yocare. letting insurance companies decide means it could be harder
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brian: all right. straight to a fox news alert. president trump expands sanctions on venezuela freezing all government assets. >> the white house banning disputed president nicolas maduro from doing business with united states entities and our foreign partners. steve: this move comes after united states recognized opposition leader juan guaido as the legitimate leader back in january. let's bring in john bolton, the white house national security advisor who is on the road. i believe he is in lima, peru. he is in peru right now. mr. bolton, good morning to you. >> glad to be with you.
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steve: tell us about the sanctions the united states is slapping on venezuela. >> well, president trump has taken a very strong move here in posing these sweeping sanctions, putting a full block, full freeze on all assets on every part of the government of venezuela in the u.s. an i'm posing sanctions or setting up the situation to impose sanctions on any person or business that does significant business with the government of venezuela. this goes well beyond anything we've done before and really is a very strong move by the president. brian: so, john, in particular, you do this move but to a degree you have to be frustrated. how is maduro lasts? the answer has to be cuba, iran and russia. how have we pushed back on them? >> well these sanctions that the president announced yesterday
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and i will elaborate down here in lima, peru today are part of that. i'm meeting with officials from the lima group, western governments that oppose the maduro regime. they're all strongly supportive of this move. there is renewed sense of confidence and determination that we have to see maduro removed out of power. i think the regime's isolation is increasing. the people of venezuela need the regime to be removed and legitimate national assembly government to take power and hold new elections and that's really the new impetus i think we're going to get from the conference here today. ainsley: what do you make of north korea launching these two short-range ballistic missiles? this is the fourth missile test in two weeks? >> it looks like it is testing series that they want to get this missile fully operational. the, they appear to be ballistic missiles. the president and kim jong-un have an understanding that
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kim jong-un is not going to launch longer range intercontinental range ba list i can it missiles. i think the president is watching this very, very carefully. brian: the fact he does not want south korea and the u.s. to go through our military exercises. he is trying to intimidate us not to do that and what is your reaction? >> well, there are joint exercises that are going on right now. they are what are called command post exercises. they are largely computer driven. we think this is something that's consistent with the partnership we have with south korea. north korea has continued its exercises unabated. so they don't really have a lot to complain about. steve: let's talk about china. the yesterday the impact what is going on with their currency sent our stock market off a cliff yesterday, mr. bolton, as you know. we have since designated china
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as a currency manipulator. explain to us what happens next? do we go to the imf, the international monetary fund and complain about them, and they do what? >> well, there are a variety of steps that denominating a country as a currency manipulator allows to us do, going to the imf is certainly one of them. i think the real issue here, what president trump has confronted going back months now with the tariffs that he imposed on china is decades of chinese misbehavior, decades of china not living up to its commitment. fundamentally, stealing our intellectual property, engaging in forced technology transfers, discriminating against american and other foreign companies. this behavior was accepted by the united states for far too long. the president has said i'm not going to accept it any longer. i think he has got broad support in europe, japan, the other countries that trade with china.
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this goes to a very basic question. it is not just about trade balances. it is about whether china will act in a responsible fashion. the theft of our intellectual property, which gives them an enormous competitive advantage, is something that simply has to stop. if they're willing to stop it, i'm sure we can find ways to bring them more fully into the international system. if they're willing, if they're not willing to stop it, if they keep stealing from us and others they're going to have to face the penalty. that is what president trump has made clear. brian: right. there is also a sense that if the u.s. deploys missiles in the region, they said they will do likewise, will start a bit of an arms race there but lastly on iran, seems like foreign minister zarif is obsessed with you. he calls all actions the b-team action, meaning after you. you guys have a long history of nothing but friction. the brits have joined us now guarding ships in the strait of hormuz. what else can you tell us is the next step as the iranians have
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now taken a third commercial tanker? >> yeah. look i couldn't care less about javid sharif. let's get to the basic on that. the british move shows we're determined to prevent iran from disrupting the global flow of oil. let me come back to china for a second. you're referring to secretary of defense mark esper's comment the other day we would be willing to consider deploying intermediate range missiles in the far east. that is because china already has got thousands of such missiles deployed. they were not part of the intermediate range nuclear forces treaty. they were free to do what they wanted. that is one reason president trump withdrew from the treaty. we're talking only about defending our deployed forces, our allies in south korea, japan and elsewhere. it is china built up its military forces and posed a threat. it is part of the larger debate i think we need to have about what direction china is going in
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in terms of deploying military forces, its economic policies, a range of other issues including how they behave domestically. steve: we have a big speech down there in peru in about an hour 1/2. thank you very much, mr. bolton, for making us part of your day. >> thank you so much. >> glad to be with you long distance. steve: thank you, sir. ainsley: we'll hand it over to jillian who has headlines for us. jillian: that's right. let's give you an update this morning. mom of savannah spurlock is speaking out about her daughter's death. >> i wouldn't wish anybody the pain of losing somebody you love to murder. ainsley: spurlock's body was found buried six months after vanishing from a kentucky bar. >> initial call it was savannah. initial finding was devastating. but when i found out the next day that they had found her remains, it was, like a knife
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through my heart. ainsley: david sparks was arrested in connection to spurlock's death. he is expected in court next month. a terrifying experience on a commercial flight. take a look at this. a british airways plane makes an emergency landing after the cabin fills with smoke, a lot of smoke. passengers said they struggled to breathe while crewmembers gave no explanation of what was happening. all 175 passengers were eventually evacuated. three were taken to a hospital as a precaution, have since been released. british airways only said that the plane had a technical issue. a woman's memo slamming google for pregnancy discrimination is going viral. the former employee alleged her managers retaliated against her and another woman due to their pregnancies. google telling fox news, quote, we prohibit retaliation in the work place. the memo has been seen by over 10,000 google employees. it comes after thousands of employees staged a nationwide
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walk out to protest gender discrimination last year. those are the headlines. brian: talking about the "partridge family" before. then i brought up "bewitched" because i rotated drummer. i was told by a tv expert that the darren switch because the first darren was addicted to painkillers. he had a back injury. so the new darren came in, had no chemistry with elizabeth montgomery, causing premature cancellation of the show. i would like to give people some closure. steve: goo to know. brian: there is reasons why they rotated darrens, janice dean. janice: what were you saying brian kilmeade? was it very important? brian: very important. steve: janice on the scare with our college associate who has been with us. today we say good-bye. janice: not so fast though. you guys having fun so far? >> yes! janice: we have anniversary, what is your name? >> randy, die an.
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janice: what is the secret? >> patience. >> compromise. janice: love it. look at this young lady. where are you from, my love? >> illinois. janice: what is your name? >> patty. janice: patty thank you. look for the good people that came to see marina. are you ready? >> i am ready. janice: take it away. >> thousand and thunderstorms are possible across parts of the midwest and plain states. we could see some rain in the northeast and florida. summertime heat happenings on across the southern plains and the southwest. and that's your forecast. back to you steve, ainsley and brian. [cheering] janice: that was fantastic. can you come tomorrow? >> i guess if you guys want me. janice: i think i will be calling out sick. brian: summer is hardest season to call the weather. a lot going on. steve: thank you very much. ainsley: she is so cute. he is a country music legend
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devoted to helping our nation's military families. brian: larry gatlin is here live. he is wearing sneakers. how those sneakers help our heroes. let's check in with sandra smith. she has for mat ad entire three-hour show. >> 40 minutes from now the opening bell will be ringing on wall street, following that big selloff yesterday on fears of an escalating trade war with china. maria bartiromo will join us live on set when the markets open at 9:30 a.m. eastern. what we're learning about both shootings over the weekend as president plans to head down to el paso and dayton. the ohio attorney general will join us at the top of the hour. does google have a political agenda for 2020? we have peter navarro, bill bennett.t join us live for
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music legend larry gatlin has thoughts on that. larry, are you a fragile patriot? >> i really am. i have been much put upon. brian: i don't mean to trigger you. >> good lord, for anybody in the world, you can't say anything to anybody. someone from the left will complain about those of us on the right. for instance, justice kavanaugh, was he supposed to sit there and let them in front of his two daughters and his wife and the world call him everything but a human being? accuse him of being a criminal for something that allegedly happened when he was a sophomore in high school, there is no collaboration? was he just supposed to sit there? i mean the people, first of all i don't know who this guy his. i don't have any of his records. ainsley: rosa? >> he is not on my must-read list. you know, every time something happens, the first ones to crow as he said loudly are, he wanted healthy speech. he said, you can't speak about
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it in healthy -- is calling the president of the united states, whether you like him or not hitler, a nazi, is that calling everyone of us who kind of think you might ought to read that bible? i don't read it as much as i used to, called us bible thumping, gun-toting. i don't really care what this guy says. he hasn't been on the "grand ole opry." i never heard of him. steve: a lot of people know the gatlin brothers. a lot of years since you had the big hit single. >> all the gold in california. steve: gatlin brothers are helping military families through the sale of these shoes. >> i did a thing on saturday sunday, july were off on the weekend, griff was hosting. i was in dallas. some folks in colorado, we did a concert for them. the gentleman says, i love those shoes. it wasn't these particular shoes. i own this newton running shoe company. get together with the gatlin brothers because he knew that
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we, sometimes didn't speak in healthy tone. so you can walk on the gatlin boys. we have the name there. three weeks ago, got on saturday or sunday like i say with griff, told them about the shoes. i run three marathons. i always run in newton shoes. they have this little foam thing, spring up. by the time i did the hit on the sunday show, and got down the elevator back out to our touring bus and took off again, 64 seconds, they had sold 1000 pair of these shoes. newton running shoe donates 50 bucks per pair. steve: too dollars? >> $50. those wonderful people. they take the kids who survive, put them in little circles have, i can't talk to a 10-year-old kid about his dad. what can we say to them? they put other kids there. counselor and they call them grief camps. when i went, it will move you
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when you see it. so these people, professionals who know how to do that. brian: buy the shoes. go to newtonrunning.com, know that $50 -- steve: how much are the shoes? >> 150 bucks. brian: $50,. >> go to taps. they ran out in 64 seconds. tragedy assistance program for survivors. what size are those, miss ainsley? ainsley: these are 10. >> red sox are a nice -- steve: larry, take a time out. we'll put on the shoes. if you would like more information. be on our website, foxandfriends.com. >> god bless you. ainsley: god bless you. more "fox & friends" just moments away. ♪ science papers. >> tech vo: this teacher always puts her students first. >> student: i did mine on volcanoes. >> teacher: you did?! oh, i can't wait to read it.
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>> do you want to get shoes for a great cause? go to newrunning.com. >> i'm unprepared. >> sandra: breaking at this hour, firing back at democrats for continuing to slam the president in the wake of those two horrific shootings over the weekend. good morning, everyone. i'm sandra smith. speak out and i'm rick leventhal and for bill hemmer. he will be heading down, the 2020 democrats refusing to back away from their tax, saying about the president has not done enough on gun control, suggesting his rhetoric is to blame. >> sandra: it will never be enough for democrats, says kellyanne conway. >> people are allowing nonstop punditry by at
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