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tv   FOX and Friends  FOX News  September 8, 2020 3:00am-6:00am PDT

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race. sow division and divide people in order to destroy this country and that's exactly what's happening right before our eyes. todd: lara, we appreciate your time. we have to give it off to "fox & friends" now. thank you so much. watch lara logan, has no agenda on fox nation. jillian: "fox & friends" starts right now. ♪ ♪ we are currently witnessing the fastest recovery from an economic crisis in country. >> we know it's been great for his rich friends but hasn't been great for the rest of us. millions of people out of work. >> protesters demanding justice for sixth straight night following the death of daniel prude. >> watching a lot of these beautiful cities being destroyed. anyone arrested and rioting not from that city should be arrested and get federal crime. >> now i will pass it back over to you and take questions before you get out of here. >> we're all set. thank you. >> trump boat parade craze
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reaching questions. >> there is energy and enthusiasm for this president. something we haven't seen before through this boat parade. [cheers] ♪ ♪ ♪ steve: good morning, everybody. this is your 6:00 a.m. eastern time wake-up call. september 8th. tuesday that will feel like a monday. yesterday was labor day. unofficial end of summer and today is the unofficial start of the campaign seasonal. and look who is back after a week away. ainsley: hey, everyone, it's sod so good to be back. i enjoyed a little bit of time off i'm grateful for this job and grateful to be waking you up this morning. thanks so much for getting up with us. steve: missed yfrmt a.
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ainsley: thanks. brian: back together for the sprint to the finish. we know there is going to be just over 20 days to the first debate. we know we have 56 days until election day, which would bleed over because of this mail-in voting. but it seems. like a normal campaign season as donald trump will be going to florida and north carolina. joe biden is going to be fans out along with his running mate through the midwest and separate states talking about jobs. the economy. china and everything else. here's their message to us. >> we're currently witnessing the fastest labor market recovery from an economic crisis in history, world history. by contrast, biden presided over the worst, the weakest, and the slowest economic recovery since the great depression. biden and his very liberal running mate. the most liberal person in congress by the way. not a competent person in my opinion, would destroy this country and would destroy this
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economy. >> president trump keeps talking about how great the economy is. how great the stock market is. but it hasn't been so great for the rest of us. millions of people out of work. evictions on the rise. 20 million people worrying about what weather they are going to lose their homes. what in god's name else could this guy do. >> let's look at one simple fact. this president is on track to be the only president in modern history to end up with fewer jobs at the end of his term than existed in america when he began his term. brian: one thing that's totally insincere everyone knows it's a worldwide pandemic given to the world by china, thanks a lot. not many people with a clear mind think the president is responsible for what happened to the economy. you can look back and then look forward. how it's recovered, what we are experiencing right now you could also look around and say if the president is going to redirect in the debate, take a look at these cities run by democratic
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mayor's and governors and ask why they won't open up and other republican cities can. the question is, steve, joe biden rah liewive target. is he now a law and order guy ignoring all the chaos in the cities. he was for china. they can't eat our lunch. pushing nafta and everything else. now china is our number one enemy. he wants to bring manufacturing back when the last thing he was doing was pushes. ppp. and when it comes to small business owner i don't think they see are democrat and republican. i think they see one party keeping them from indoor dining and working out in gyms and another party who wants to reopen. steve: what we just saw in that sound bite montage right there was essentially what we are going to see over the next, you know, the next 21 days before the debate and pass that the president is going to be pushing how the economy son fire and you look at the friday's job report. we added 1.4 million jobs in the last month. the unemployment rates is at 8.4%. the president is big behind that
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plus, is he pushing public safety. you look at the chaos in the streets. and it's like is that really what you want in the suburbs? that's going to be his message. joe biden is going to be all about the failed response, he feels, to the pandemic by the administration. and also he is going to talk a little bit about the economy as well because we still have not dug ourselves out from the big hole. meanwhile today, the president is going to be down at the jupiterejupiter inlet white hou. keep in mind it was his administration who asked congress for something like a quarter of a billion dollars to help with the infrastructure around the everglades. what they have done is tried to redirect, essentially the discharges from lake okeechobee because down in florida the red tide and the blue allege guy, ainsley, are very big issues
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jill biden is going to be talking about schools reopening. biden said if things get bad again i will be happy to shut down the government again. a lot of voters are upset about that. steve: he had to do some backtracking yesterday. he said i would have a nationwide music mandate yesterday he essentially said, you know what? , that's probably unconstitutional. oops? >> i was ains they are all out now because labor day is the unofficial start of the campaign system and the campaigns are in full swing. awferlt candidates, nominees were out including the vice presidential nominee kamala harris. and she is, you know, we talked about how joe biden has dodged questions. watch this. we all thought she was going to take questions and then she dodges the questions. watch. >> we are very honored, proud, lucky to have senator and soon to be vice president here with us today. and i will pass it back over to
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you. you want to take some questions before you get out of here. >> we are all done. >> thank you, pool. we are all set. jillian: no. ainsley: no. we are all set. we are all set. i'm not taking questions, brian. brian: unbelievable. remember kamala harris the candidate. she was almost totally unprepared for every major issue. she was winging it. we are going to get rid of private insurance and decriminalize border crossings. yesterday she showed again how she came out and said i would not trust a vaccine from the president as if he is wearing a smock with two beakers making a vac senile. how irresponsible was that not to trust the fda and cdc. incredible. fox news alert. unrest turning unruly. protesters facing off in several major cities nationwide. steve: jackie ibañez joins us with the developments and there are plenty. >> there are. protesters demanding justice for a sixth straight night in rochester, new york, following
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the death of daniel prude. >> shouting] >> say his name. >> daniel prude. >> say his name. >> daniel prude. >> say his name. >> daniel prude. ing. >> can you hear them chanting right there. prude's brother joining demonstrators telling he was assassinated by cold blooded killers. protesters also reiterating demands for the mayor and police chief to design. naked protesters wearing hoods seen sitting in front of the building to protest his death. shows him naked and handcuffed wearing a spit hood after officers responded to a wellness check. and in los angeles, police setting up barriers overnight to deter protesters after reportedly dispersing crowds with rubber bullets. tear gas and flash bang grenades. [explosions] telling protests erupting there since last week over the deputy shooting death of dijon kize.
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in the portland area right wing group proud boys holding a labor day rally to honor aaron danielson. tackling a counter protester to the ground. in seattle, police seen breaking down a barricade set up by protesters. police sharing this image on twitter showing a molotov cocktail made with beer bottles, liquid and bandannas. 22 people were arrested in the city's demonstrations. back to you guys. steve: all right, thank you thank you very much. in addition to the chaos general lawlessness. i saw this morning one of the headlines, 51 people. 51 were shot in chicago over the holiday weekend. ainsley: i saw an 8-year-old little girl steve. steve: 12 people shot in baltimore. yesterday this morning a guy sitting over in brooklyn, 62-year-old man was walking his
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dog and he was shot and killed when he was doing that. brian: only 20%, steve, of these shootings have been investigated and somebody has been actually prosecuted. steve: right. well, this speaks to the lawlessness. but then again, herschel walker is talking about the chaos and the protests. and he had a twitter message that he put out to his many twitter followers yesterday. talking about how a lot of protests have descended into chaos and those people who break the law and destroy people's lives, should be held accountable with federal time. here, herschel walker. >> i watch a lot of these beautiful cities be destroyed by rioting. i saw all of these local leaders that won't step to the plate to protect their citizens or their citizen business. so i'm going to step to the plate and become a local leader. i want to say -- i want to put
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in a mandate that anyone arrested during a riot and they are not from that city, they don't have a resident if there that city or that town, should be arrested and get federal time because i pay state and federal taxes so my federal taxes i want them to get federal time for the crime they committed. so local leaders it's time for you all to step to the plate and take control. this has got to stop. steve: yeah. is he appealing to local leaders and so far they have not been, you know, on the law and order side. this just speaks to a headline probably a lot of you saw over the weekend. close to 1,000 people a day are moving to florida. they are leaving new york and boston. they are leaving chicago as well. because they want to go some place this they feel is safer and taxes are lower, and there seems to be a law and order message. ainsley: jacking up the property value in the state of florida. wish i had bought some property down there a long time ago. people are upset about all of
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this. they are wondering if this is all going to change after the election. is this political? are businesses being shut down because they don't want the economy to come back. there are so many different opinions about that. and you have got people in san francisco, you know, we saw nancy pelosi getting her hair done. yet, she is saying that salons need to be closed and then you see the video of her and gyms are closed in san francisco. ainsley: no mavericks, there is the video right there. gyms in san francisco pretty much they are closed except in government building. gym owners who own those private gyms are furious because they're saying that's not fair, brian. brian: here is dave, owner of mmm fitness. demonstrate that there seems to be some kind of double standard between what city employees are allowed to do and what the residents of san francisco are allowed to do. what the city is unwillingly done is created this great case study that says that working out indoors is actually safe.
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so at this point we just demand they allow us to have the same workout privileges for the citizens of san francisco that the employees of san francisco have. it's just sickening to think how many gym owners and gyms are going down. one out of every six small businesses in this country are going to go out of business because politicians are, they claim, playing it safe or are they playing it politics? and i think more and more every day that it's flat out politics. for example, even in my town. there is one county that is playing sports. one mile away they aren't allowed to play sports. in certain sports play sports with masks. some sports no masks. some schools you go back to school and other schools not going to test. other schools going to test but everyone goes back full time. we have got to get on the same page and stop using politics for school and business and while every politician makes these rules up gets paid. meanwhile, mitt romney pointed
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this out, often a critic of the president. now a critic of nancy pelosi with a simple hair cut and shorts. getting cleaned up for resumption of the senate better salon than pelosi's that's, of course, his wife cutting his hair. that's almost what everyone else is doing. i guess in utah, you can i believe, go to a so loan though. steve: maybe. nonetheless, is he making a point. look, if you can't go, just have either do what i did, you buy the $12 scissors on amazon or get out a loved one and trim you-give you a nice trim and hair cut and stuff like that, there are solutions other than, and, ainsley, this is to your earlier point, how there seems to be a double standard. certain people in positions of authority say one thing in public, but do something else in. ainsley: look at nocialtion. all these restaurants are saying you can't open for indoor dining. now you have politicians and have all these restaurant owners saying it's going to get really cold here in the fall.
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we're not going to be able to accommodate people outside. 75% of our businesses are going to close for good, they are anticipating here in new york. you know, you just have these restaurant owners their livelihood. that's their life. brian: you mean middle class and upper class people? that's according to the mayor. indoor dining is for middle and upper class. you know that $3 hamburger you get in the morning after working 16 hours you witch elitists? how dare you go indoors for that. that's unbelievable. this someone thing that could change about this election that is not going to appear in the polls. do you care if your mayor is democrat or republican. if you know that politician decided for your business to end. after that you are going to know who is response sin for your future and the fact that you have no business and have nothing to show for your years in business. steve: as it turns oout. a lot of new york city waiters have gone to the hamptons. brian: not enough. steve: what is happening in the hamptons is no one is coming back to new york city. it looks like the harpootlians
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suddenly going to be a great place to be for christmas. anyway, lots to talk about you can sees on this tuesday that feels like a monday. jillian has all sorts of headlines for us. >> an 8-year-old girl is killed and three others injured after someone opened fire into their car. police say they were stopped at a light in chicago when the gunman's car pulled up behind them targeting someone inside. two adults shot in the back are in critical condition. witnesses say the gunman took off in a black dodge charger while people nearby tried to save the little girl's life. we have another fox news alert. unprecedented disaster. that's what california officials are calling the massive creek fire exploding to more than 135,000 acres. that's nearly double the size it was one day ago. this morning, crew will attempt to rescue more than 50 people trapped by the flames. the national guard could not reach them overnight because of heavy smoke. no word on their condition. the senate is set to return to capitol hill today as
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republicans and democrats are locked in a stalemate over coronavirus relief. president trump says democrats don't want to agree on a bill because it will boost his re-election chances. >> they don't want to make a deal because they know that's good for the economy. if they make a deal that's good for the economy and, therefore, it's good for me for the election for november 3rd. therefore, they are not going to make a deal. jillian: senate majority leader mitch mcconnell says he wants another deal but adds it will be hard to get done as the election gets closer. firefighters in one town are rocking some new shoes thanks to dwayne johnson the star donating 100 pairs of signature sneaker tots ridgeville, new jersey fire department. johnson sharing the moment on instagram saying it's a small way to say thank you. the donation is part of his partnership with underarmor and the first responders children's foundation. that's a look at your headlines. send it back to you. ainsley: seems like such a nice
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guy. that's wonderful. thanks, jillian. vice president mike pence and kamala harris campaigning in wisconsin. what do the voters think of their messages. we will ask the state's former lt. governor coming up next. ♪ ♪ we're letting that freedom ring ♪ chasing these small town dreams ♪ lways have been. -and always will be. ♪ or voice in my head. and certainly not arthritis. new voltaren provides powerful arthritis pain relief to help me keep moving. and it can help you too. feel the joy of movement with voltaren. did you know liberty mutual customizes your car insurance ta-da! feel the joy of movement so you only pay for what you need? given my unique lifestyle, that'd be perfect!
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at no additional cost. no strings attached. under this president, i promise you, we will have law and order in every city in this country for every american. we're going to keep fighting for tax relief for working americans every day. >> we see the benefit to the entire country to invest in our small businesses. and our small business leaders. we see you.
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we understand the significance of what you are in terms of the health and well well-being of communities. ainsley: vice president mike pence and senator kamala harris visiting with wisconsin voters on labor day. how were their messages received? let's ask former lieutenant governor of wisconsin rebecca kleefisch. good morning to you. >> good morning to you, ainsley, how are you? >> i'm good. thank you so much. >> how do you think their messages were received? >> i think they were received well. they each played it safe, labor day is a holiday. which means you want to make news without making too much news. stuck to the heart of city centers in southeastern wisconsin and the vice president decided to go over the mississippi river in the lacrosse area and he talked about something that wisconsi wisconsinites which hold deer usmca. mexico and canada are our two biggest trait partners. when you talk about agri culture and manufacturing you are
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speaking to the heart of wisconsinites those are our two main industries. kamala harris spoke to small business ownership. that's one that republicans are stronger on. so i don't know that she chose her very best message for her labor day stop in wisconsin because republicans are great owners of not only the maul business economy but also the dairy and the manufacturing economy and usmca both of those. ainsley: mike pence is talking to the dairy farmers yesterday his message was usmca will create 600,000 new jobs including manufacturing jobs. he said to the dairy farmers you need to know that kamala harris is only one of 10 senators to vote against usmca. what's your reaction to that? >> well, my reaction to that is, you know, great message for wisconsin in general. because obviously dairy is $23 billion industry for us. we are known as the dairy state. we put cow and corn on our quarter for a goodness sakes.
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people care deeply about agriculture jobs. green new deal which is what joe biden and kamala harris are pushing on measure right now would be really detrimental for a state like ours. cost the average wisconsin family about 40,000 bucks a year. the average wisconsin family in the middle of this covid-19 crisis where we don't even know where our manufacturing and our agriculture economy are going are very hopeful, if we see a return of the president for four more years but we're still very, very concerned, you know, we don't know what would happen if we had $40,000 extra per year that we are going to have to come up with in order to pay for someone's environmental hopes and dreams. we need reliable all of the above energy strategy and that's what's being offered wit four me years with the president and vice president. ainsley: okay rebecca kleefisch a lot going on out there
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supporting the republican party. thanks so much for your help. thanks for being on. >> my pleasure. ainsley: you are welcome. it's a troubling new trend, black lives matter protesters harassing diners this time in pittsburgh after a similar scene in rochester. our next guest says the real message of the movement is getting lost in all the noise.
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brian: back with quick headlines, virginia courses facing backlash for offering classes on anarchy. sign up for the class called how to overthrow the state they can get nightly video from portland. write persuasive essays on rewriting and confronting history. fantastic. the school's president says the course has been sensationalized by the media by, what reading quotes from it. and charles darwin next on the historical figures getting canceled. british museum viewing exhibits on the british for offensive content. work on the origin of species. steve: i remember that new video released 6 black lives matter protesters harassing diners in the city of pittsburgh. watch. [bleep] [bleep] shouting. steve: later, protesters said they were antagonized by
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somebody yelling blue lives matter and swinging at them. they also claim the woman invited one of the protesters for a drink. this follows similar confrontations in rochester and washington, d.c. as well. so how did we get to the point, this point and is the original message of the protesters getting lost? many say yes. here to discuss author of always a soldier and host of the podcast called rob smith is problematic rob space smith. you are not problematic, are you. >> i am deeply, deeply problematic. steve: rob, as you look at the video people are going out and trying to have a nice night out during a pandemic i know a lot of people are horrified by this kind of video who is saying hey, that's a really good way to do it?
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who are those people. >> people saying like aoc ayanna pressley and kamala harris. stay out in the streets. kamala harris said this all of these videos seeing blasting that there is not a single leader on the left that has the moral courage and authority to call this out for what it is. this is not behavior that should be normalize when you had see the videos on twitter and all over social media. they are mortified. i'm mortified for the diners and mort fifd by the people assaulting them. just the whole thing is crazy. there are a lot of people on the left from the leaders like ayanna pressley and kamala harris who even the mayors that will not empower their local police departments to handle these situations in the way that they should. that are not clamping down on this stuff in the way that they should be. it started a really good conversation and i think a lot
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of people policing. i think that just went a little crazy. it continues to go down there road. rob, ultimately you would think the wisdom would be that you are trying to get president of the united states ultimately to get rid of donald trump. but, at the same time, with each new city, the people who are living out in the suburbs who had thought oh it's only happening in washington. it's only happening in certain big towns it, will never come to the suburbs. recall. >> he has had the most condemnation. this stuff is coming and people are starting to realize. this make no mistake these people out on the streets assaulting people that are trying to dine and have a good
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time. these are biden voters and this is what basically they are being driven to do. i don't think it's going to work out in the way they want it to work out. because, if it did. then the polling wouldn't have read otherwise. i i don't think this is going to work out well for them in the end. i think a lot of people are willing to have this conversation, but this is not the way to go. my entire podcast today that dropped today problematic is all about black lives matter. i encourage you guys to listen to it because i go a little bit in depth of what i think about the movement and i think there are a lot of problems and we definitely need to clamp up on this stuff going on right now. i don't think it's right. >> right there. are a lot of people who share your opinion but others who think this is a good way to do it. rob, thank you very much. we will download your podcast because you are very problematic. >> thank you so much. steve: we telling you about new york city restaurants suing democratic leaders over the ban on indoor dining. well now they're getting support from republican politicians in the state. do they have a case?
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the judge is going to rule on that next. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪
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steve: welcome back. some new york city restaurant owners are suing unfair dining restrictions in new york lawmakers from. >> that is zero justification. do they have a case? let's ask fox news senior judicial analyst judge andrew napolitano. judge, when they brought this to court on gyms, a few days before it was going to go to court. they ended up opening up the
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gyms on long island in west chester do you think that's a similar pattern here? >> i certainly hope it's the same pattern here. i mean, initially, governors of new york and new jersey new jersey restaurants are open for 25% of capacity. basically making their decisions on newspaper articles and public fear. and then they realized they had to make their decisions on the basis of science. then they established certain minimum standards that would have to be met before things could open up indoors. guess what? everywhere in the state of new jersey and everywhere in the state of new york, excepted new york city, those standards are complied with, meaning if you have a very low rate of infection in lon in or bergen cr west chester low enough so you can open up the restaurants and the same low standard in manhattan, they still won't let you open up in the city.
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brian: a joke. >> they are not following their own rules and their own standards for the five burrows in the city. and i think that's what a judge will find. and i think the mayor and the governor will probably cave before the court comes to that ruling. steve: well, all they got to do is drive across the george washington bridge and judge, there are a lot of restaurant rs who would lo to seat them. follow the science. the science says for 31 days the rate of positivity the infection rate is less than 1% in new york city. so that would be the science that would say, you know what? it's okay to open. >> so governor cuomo said months ago when the rate is lower than 1% we'll open everything up. he has complied with that statement and that ruling for everywhere in new york except the five burr low rows. and he can't give a scientifically based of. he can give a political reason
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but not a scientific based reason. the political reason is he angry that some bars are serving too much booze to too many kids and the kids aren't wearing masks. don't punisso punish those barst everyone else. ainsley: some people only own one restaurant and that is their income and they are not allowed to seat people indoors. >> yes. ainsley: the fisa court fbi doesn't follow the rules and there are widespread violations for improper searches for information on american citizens. what do you know about this? >> i am sick and tired of this, guys. we have been going through this for a couple of years, ever since the fbi and others were spying on then candidate donald trump and it's still going on today. so these numbers should outrage everyone. 16,000 warrantless searches that the fbi engaged in that this judge, judge boseburg examined. only seven. seven were valid under the law.
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15,993 of them were not. that means that the fbi is telling the court that they are doing one thing but, in reality, they are doing another. the temptation to spy on americans is so irresistible to these fbi agents that they are willing to break the law northward to do so. and they don't produce any evidence that helps in intelligence or criminal matters whatsoever. brian: sororitiedly judge, peter strzok fisa fisa issue and says it's a shame because a lot of hard people do. sometimes they work so hard they make mistakes. he evidently says that in his book and in some of these follow-up interviews. do we give people some latitude then because they work hard? >> no, we don't give people latitude when they violate our right to privacy in the numbers that judge boseberg found. only seven out of 16,000 were
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valid judge boseberg's report which came out on friday night. worse than they were 6 and 12 months ago. so the fbi has a problem and they don't seem to be. steve: judge, have you said many times it's a secret court and sometimes with secret courts you don't know about stuff because it's a secret. all right. judge, thank you very much for joining us. >> you are right. somebody should be there in that courtroom to challenge the fbi and then this stuff would be exposed. steve: what are you doing? why don't you show up and shadow them. [laughter] >> i would love that job. where is jillian? is she around this morning? steve: she is right here weather forecast headlines. brian: are you running out of polo shirts or are you okay? [laughter] i know you had a lot of white shirts. i don't see them anymore. [laughter] >> love you, brian.
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brian: i guest that's yes. ainsley: jillian, he knew you were coming up. jillian: good morning, judge. good to see you. former national security advisor john bolton pushing back on an atlantic article claiming president trump insulted veterans during a 2018 trip to france. >> that was simply false. i don't know who told the author that but that was false. the main issue was whether or not whether conditions permitted the president to go out to the cemetery. jillian: a former john kelly aide denying the claim. do you think general kelly would have stood by and let anyone call fallen marines. jennifer griffin has confirmed parts of the article with her sources. university of west virginia. the university will be teaching online classes through september 25th. school administrators say on campus classes will resume on the 28th as long as conditions allow. the announcement comes after 29
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students were suspended following a frated party. michigan republican party says its headquarters in lansing was vandalized with radical anti--police statements. the state party sharing photos showing spray painted graffiti on the building over labor day weekend. one statement calling to abolish police and ice. police are looking for those responsible. do you want to win a candy factory just like in willy wonka? ♪ >> hey, you got it. you got the last golden ticket. jelly belly founder is making that dream a reality. david klein is releasing golden tickets in the form of necklaces. you will need to pay $50 to get a riddle telling you where it's hidden. those who find them with l. win
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$5,000. one lucky person kitchen factory in florida. the riddle is set to be released in georgia at the end of this month. interesting. send it back to you. steve: reagan loved jelly bellies. just loved them. ainsley: don't we all. he had a big jar of them on his desk in the oval office. steve: he did, indeed. brian: someone who is anti-jelly, janice dean. ainsley: she prefers preserves. ainsley: i haven't met ceanged that i haven't loved. i'm not sure where that came from. brian: more from the dentist later. janice: let's move on. i love you, brian. i love your intros it. brings me back to the family here. take a look at your current temperatures. the big story here is we have a winter storm. a winter storm across the rockies bringing measurable snow in the highest peaks 1 to 2 feet of new snow. this is pretty awesome my friends this early on in the season. plus the fact that we had temperatures in the 90's for this area just a couple of days
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ago. and measurable snow really awesome as this trough digs in and brings pure artic air moving in from canada. look at denver, you know, you blink and it's summer again as we get into friday and saturday. so just a short-lived winter storm for this area. still pretty awesome. also watching the tropics by the way. we have paul let and we have renee. the good news is neither of these storms going to effect the u.s. so far. all right. can you believe there is a winter storm happening right now? steve: crazy. it's 2020. steve: it's that kind of year. all right, j.d., thank you. brian: i also heard the moon is rusting. steve: i don't know what your news source is speaking of jelly bellies, according to the reagan library what was ronald reagan's favorite flavor jelly beaten? ainsley: blacklick his? steve: congratulations. ainsley: i don't know how i remember that. steve: you get to read the
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tease. ainsley: pro-football is back. gearing up for week one in the nfl what can you expect fox news analyst and former pro-bowler chris spielman is here with the preview ♪ ♪ i'm a performer. -always have been. -and always will be. never letting anything get in my way. not the doubts, distractions, or voice in my head. and certainly not arthritis. new voltaren provides powerful arthritis pain relief to help me keep moving. and it can help you too. feel the joy of movement with voltaren.
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that selling carsarvana, 100% online wouldn't work. feel the joy of movement but we went to work. building an experience that lets you shop over 17,000 cars from home. creating a coast to coast network to deliver your car as soon as tomorrow. recruiting an army of customer advocates to make your experience incredible. and putting you in control of the whole thing with powerful technology. that's why we've become the nation's fastest growing retailer. because our customers love it. see for yourself, at carvana.com. when i came to the u.s., my family was really poor.d. now, i've got fifty employees. when the pandemic hit, i was really scared about losing my business. but osmar, my financial advisor from northwestern mutual, he told me, brother we got your back. his financial planning helped to save my business. if i could talk to my younger self, i would say, you're going to be proud of yourself.
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brian: the nfl will kick off their season this week. catch six of the games on fox 11:00 a.m. eastern time. kickoff at 1. with more to expect this season former pro-bowler himself ohio state standout chris spielman. by the way chris, you will be doing the arizona san francisco game. so that's going to be one of your focuses. how hard has it been preparing without a preseason game with footage to look at? >> so it's a little difficult. but you kind of do what you do as a player when you get ready for the opener, at least that's how i approach my duties. and i will go back and look at the matchups last year when those two teams played with the 49ers and cardinals.
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i'm excited because, one, we have an exciting player for the 49 orgs in george kitell, right? he just wants to run everything over which i love. i would love to play against that guy. then, of course, you have, i think, a super star in the making. he is going to make a big improvement from last year to this year. and that would be the quarterback with the cardinals in tyler murray and of course they added hopkins with a weapon for kyler murray for week one. brian: as a player you don't need to take extra hits but do you need to run through some things. between the off season not being able to prepare and run everybody through before their draft between the no preseason this year. do you think coaches and players will choose to do things differently from here on in? >> well, i think we have the best athletes in the world and best coaches in the world. and so they tend to adapts and adapt well. and i looked at the draft, for example, my brother happens to be the general manager of the
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minnesota vikings. i actually asked him that very question. they find there is a will the of thidgesz think can do more efficiently. i think if the players respond welled to the non-otas they will be able to adapt and make the necessary changes to move forward and still keep an excellent product on the field. brian: chris, played focus one game at a time i get it but look at thursday. that's when the nfl season kicks off on fox. the texans play the kansas city chiefs. it's hard to imagine having a game with more talent on the field than that. >> and more money on the field than that if you look at patrick mahomes and watson's new contract. that's the nfl that's the position. it's a star studded lead. i can't wait to get started. you know, brian, for me, i think we as a country sometimes need things to galvanize around. and the nfl can serve as a great galvanizer for our society.
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i really do believe that. that's not hyperbole. that's something i truly believe. brian: are you worried about the protests overwhelming that. >> no. i don't. i think that, again, people have a common interest in the nfl and i'm a big believer in the first amendment. the first amendment is not ala cart. we can't pick and choose what we want to hear and not hear. for me, i'm going to celebrate the right that players do have the first amendment right to express themselves and we will see how that plays out. but let's play football and see what happens. steve: i hear you. chris feelman thanks. so. kicks off this weekend. tom cotton, mollie hemingway next hourpa separately. what yo. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪
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>> campaigns full swing. >> 56 days to election day. >> if biden wins, china wins because they will own this country. >> you will never have a better friend and stronger ally in the white house. >> unprecedented disaster a massive creek fire exploding to 135,000 acres. that's nearly double the size it was one day ago. >> new video released of black lives matter protesters harassing diners in the city of pittsburgh. >> there is not a single leader on the left that has the moral courage and authority to call this out for what it is. >> fisa court because they have found that there are widespread
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violations concerning improper searches. >> 16,000 warrantless searches. only 7, 7 were valid under the law. >> firefighters in one town are rocking some new shoes thanks to dwayne "the rock" johnson. the star donating 100 pairs of his new signature sneakers saying it's a small way to say thank you. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ainsley: we are up here or the mezzanine level here we go again hour two of "fox & friends." thanks so much for joining us. it's official the campaign season has really kicked off. i guess unofficial there kicks off labor day. shorter week for most people and schools starting back this week or next week in most of the places. steve: a lot of them. ainsley: yeah, next week for us. brian: so my daughter goes back to school today and she is going
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to be handed plexiglass. they will be walking the halls with plexiglass so i said take some video see how that works. ainsley: hold it and surrounds you? brian: i assume it's just a pen. pane. steve: sounds like a pain. ainsley: tell her to get a backpack her hands will be occupied. brian: okay, i will send her to staples. steve: that's just 2020. have you seen the year so far where it goes. president trump hitting the campaign trail today he stopped out at jupiter inlet lighthouse and head north to north carolina. ainsley: meanwhile joe biden is going to be heading to michigan tomorrow as he looks to flip states won by the president in 2016. brian: is he going to try anyway. griff jenkins is live with the swing state showdown. griff: if you think you are seeing a battle ground beatdown right now. we may have just started. yesterday the president at a
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rare alicia day holiday press conference was demanding an appalling from anti-vac senile rhetoric while biden out of pennsylvania was doubling down over doubts on a vehicle seen, watch. >> under my administration produce a vaccine in record time. biden and his very liberal running mate should immediately apologize for the reckless anti-vaccine rhetoric that they are talking right now. >> part of the problem playing with politics he says so many things that aren't true i'm worried if we do have a really good vaccine people are going to be reluctant to take it. griff: meanwhile the vp candidates were duking it out in appearances in the badger state. >> under this president, i promise you we will have law and order in every city in this country for every american. we're going to keep fighting for
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tax relief for working americans every day. >> we see the benefit to the entire country to invest in our small businesses and our small business leaders. we see you. we understand the significance of what you are in terms of the health and well-being of communities. griff: harris met with jacob blake's family while she was in wisconsin. it's a state certainly sizing up to be a key swing state. along with pennsylvania, michigan and north carolina. as you mentioned, the president heading to south florida this morning. then north carolina. tomorrow biden travels to michigan where trump narrowly won in 2016. meanwhile congress comes back to washington to work on a coronavirus package. there is no progress in sight. they are still miles apart. of course, the suffering of americans will become part of this campaign trail as well. 56 days to go. buckle up. brian, ainsley, steve? steve: you are right about that. griff, thank you very much.
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how far are they apart? up on capitol hill bring in arkansas senator come to the con he joins us. senator, we will ask you about the coronavirus bill coming up in a moment but, first, you know, today is the first day after labor day historically when the big presidential campaign starts. it's interesting, there is a "u.s.a. today" poll out that says more people expect the president to win the debate than joe biden. independents think that president trump will win by a margin of 10 points. the debates are three weeks from today. what do you think people think that the president is going to come out on top? >> hi, steve. good to be on with you all. i think they believe the president will win because president trump has a strong world of accomplishment for the american people. just look where we stand now six months after this pandemic was unleashed on the world by china. we just had another great jobs report. 1.4 million new jobs were created. we're not back to where we were in the strongest economy in my lifetime, but we have beaten the
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expectation of almost every prediction. in part because congress, along with the president, passed legislation back in the spring that helped families and businesses survive the peak of this pandemic but also because the president has led a smart, safe reopening as more states begin to reopen their businesses. i think we are going to see more economic growth, more jobs. whereas joe biden would get the country back in lockdown. just look at what the president said yesterday about china. american people know that joe biden has been soft on china for 50 years. he has led the charge to get the most favored nation status or admit them to the world trade organization. he said that we should celebrated china's rise. president trump by contrast has caced down on china and is making them pay for decades of stealing our jobs, our factories, our property and now unleashing this plague on the world. ainsley: i'm so glad you brought up china it sets up the next soundbite. this is the president talking about china, listen. >> if biden wins, china will own this country and hopefully you
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are not going to be able to find that out. it's the most important election in our history right now. under my administration, we will make america into the manufacturing super power of the world and we'll end our reliance on china once and for all. we will end our reliance on china because we can't rely on china and i don't want them building a military like they are building right now. now you can understand why china would much rather see sleepy joe than donald trump. as long as i'm president, we will never waiver in our undying loyalty to the american worker and to our country as a whole. ainsley: senator, why is it that he is saying he thinks china would rather have joe biden in office? >> our intelligence community has said that china prefers joe biden to donald trump and it's pretty clear why. joe biden has been soft on china for 47 years in public life whereas president trump has cracked down on them. in the middle of this campaign, not 20 years ago but in the middle of this campaign, joe biden says that china is not our
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competition. they are not bad folks. that's kind of similar to when he would rather to china other and over again to toast jinping and celebrate china's rise. whereas president trump has imposed tariffs on china for taking our property and for not trading fairly with the united states. he is now going to take action to make them pay for unleashing this pandemic on the world. it's no surprise that china would rather deal with joe biden, who embodies the failed consensus in washington for 30 years cold war that china would somehow become a mature responsible company opposed to the pariah state they have become. brian: come cotton first one to say we have to stop flights from china. the respect respected your decision. joe biden is tough on china. when he has free agreements there and plays basketball with the president -- president xi. he has no problem bringing -- letting manufacturing go there but then he sees the polls.
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73% of americans look at china in an unfavorable way. now is he against china. and when manufacturing let's bring it back home. now is he going to do it. where was he when he was pushing the tpp building international. i don't know that he can successfully change on dime meanwhile a place the vice president used to work former vice president is the senate. you guy goes back to work today. and the president is not optimistic of any type of rescue deal, the latest one. what about you, senator, do you see any give? >> brian, it will really depend on whether the democrats drop their unreasonable and outlandish demands. back in the spring when we knew so little about this how would would impact our health and economy. we passed $3 trillion in relief spending to help families and businesses get through the worst of the pandemic. the democrats now, even with all we know, even with cases declining. even with the economy reopening. even with record jobs reports for four straight months.
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want another $3 trillion. they want a blank check to find their long standing wish list. that's thought what we should do. we should have a relief bill that is targeted and calibrated those need it most. industries still hard hit like the travel industry or the hospitality industry. we should help those families that are still out of work maybe because their state hasn't lifted their lockdown orders. we should help schools reopen or stay open in a safe and responsible fashion. we shouldn't just give nancy pelosi $3 trillion to longstanding -- brian: senator, how do you target that type of money. everything you have said is right. it's hard to get from d.c. fanning across the country while not backing up these programs. >> well that is right. because the democrats are unwilling to target the money right now. what we want to do is target it. is to give it a more pinpoints accuracy to the places of greatest need for our families, our businesses and our communities. in the end, the democrats are
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also holding out for their holy grail, which is a no strings attached unconditional bailout for states and cities that have long standing decades old fiscal management problems. obviously we are not going to do it. steve: that is what the president has said. he said those states and cities have been run by democrats for decades and he is not going to bail them out using this particular crisis. meanwhile, the north poritco is where the president held an impromptu preference yesterday. in addition to talking about china, senator, he was also talking about the "new york times" 1619 project. he does not want to see that used in america's schools. here is potus. >> i want everybody to know everything they can about our history i'm not a believer in cancel culture. if you don't study them it will happen again. i do want history studied carefully and accurately.
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we group up with a certain history. they are trying to change our history. revisionist history. that's why they want to take down our monuments. that's why they want to take down our statues. washington monument they want to rename it. d.c. committee. the d.c. committee is all democrats. abraham lincoln, thomas jefferson. we are talking about there is the big stuff now. no, we don't do that. never going to happen with me. i guarantee you that. steve: so, senator, how big is cancel culture going to be on the list of things people are thinking about on november the 3rd? >> i think a lot of americans are worried about it. anti-american historical revictim of 1619 project. worried about their ability to speak their mind freely whether it's at work or in their community for fear they will be targeted by, online mobs or targeted for by their bosses who want to avoid controversy in the workplace. the president is right we are a
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country that's build on the equality of all mankind which leads directly into the rights to speak freely. to say associate politically. to worship god as you choose. and we should not allow left wing mobs whether they are on the streets on social media to silence those voices. people should be able to lead their life, their god country in accordance with their values and their principles. ainsley: senator, thanks so much for being on with us this morning. >> thank you all. ainsley: you are welcome. jillian, over to you. jillian: good morning. let begin with this story. nebraska police officer shot while serving a warrant nearly three weeks ago has died. a 20 year veteran of the lincoln police department. the department calling him empathetic, kind and committed to protecting the community a 17-year-old accused of shooting him was wanted for assault.
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escorted body from lincoln. he leaves behind a wife and four children. a fox news alert now. overnight police firing tear gas during protests in los angeles. [explosions] jillian: protests erupting over the deputy shooting death of da shawn kinsey last week. near portland hundreds of trump supporters right wings group the proud boys holding a labor day rally to honor danielson shot and killed last week. police arresting two people in unrest there. in seattle, police seen breaking down a barricade set up by protesters as body cam footage shows demonstrators throwing what appear to be molotov cocktails. police sharing this photo showing one of them recovered you see it right there. made with beer bottles, liquid and bandannas. 22 people were arrested. the house oversight committee reportedly launching an investigation into postmaster
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general louis dejoy over accusations he broke campaign finance laws. dejoy pressured employees to donate to republican candidates and then reimbursed them. a spokesman says he was not aware employees felt that way. the committee chairwoman now demanding dejoy be suspended. and dustin johnson winning the tour championship in dominant fashion. >> wow. how good is that? jillian: oh, man. johnson finishing at 21 under par at the eastlake golf club in atlanta. he also won the fedex cup which comes with a $15 million prize. ainsley: and a kiss from your family. brian: wayne gretzky's daughter. steve: it is. when i hit the ball that hard it never goes. in. brian: thanks, guys. meanwhile with less than two
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weeks to ago until the election some say it's joe biden's race to lose. mollie hemingway says media is lying about the election again. she explains herself. ♪ ♪ (customer) movie night. (burke) should have been watching the stove instead. (customer) tell me something i don't know. (burke) with your farmers policy perk, home guaranteed replacement cos, this can be rebuilt, no matter how much. (customer) that's really something. (burke) get a whole lot of something with farmers policy perks. ♪ we are farmers. bum-pa-dum,bum-bum-bum-bum ♪
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steve: with 56 days until the election some media claim little change in the race for the white house. next guest calling out the media for lying about the election again. here to explain is fox news contributor mollie hemingway. mollie, good morning to you. >> good morning, steve. steve: okay. what you say they are lying about is at the beginning of the
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summer it was a run away train. joe biden was going to win by a landslide and now when you look at the polling data, wait a minute, that's not the case. >> right. very reminiscent of 2016 when the media claimed it was almost impossible for donald trump to win the republican nomination and certainly very unlikely that he would win the president and he turned out to win in solid fashion. you are seeing that same kind of thing in how people are covering the 2020 race it. is absolutely true that months ago polls showed that donald trump was an n. a very bad place. but even just in august, you saw dramatic shift in key battleground states. so at the end of july, in florida, donald trump was down according to an average of all the polls, something like 8.4 points. now he has cut that in half. in pennsylvania, again, 8 and a half points -- i'm sorry in florida it's down to 1.8. one polster saw a movement of 10 points in florida toward donald trump. in pennsylvania, he was also down 8.5 points. that's been cut in half.
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another polster saw dramatic movement down to a very small percentage within the margin of error for donald trump. look at michigan and wisconsin and north carolina. he has cut his -- how much he is behind according to this average of polls significantly. and so it's important that the media portray that instead they keep saying well, nothing much changed in august. we can all see there was a lot of change in august. steve: sure. so we highlighted. we just put up graphics for florida and north carolina. that is where the president is heading today. where he also a cut joe biden's big lead. what's going on. is it the fact that people were simply not engaged a couple of months ago and now they are catching up or have the priorities for america changed? >> well, the campaign really got going a couple weeks ago when joe biden picked kamala harris to be his running mate. picking a running mate is an opportunity to set a tone for the campaign. i think joe biden, if he wanted to, again, win those battle ground states he wanted to present himself as a moderate.
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picking a woman with the most liberal voting record in the senate according to some studies is not the way to do it. there was the democratic convention where they thought that the campaign theme should just be how much they don't like donald trump. then he move to the republican convention where the republicans were clearly making a plea for votes that they wanted to win those battle ground states whether it was night after night appealing to african-americans to vote for them other key interest groups. night and day how they handled the actual campaign. partly about missed opportunities by the biden campaign, also about republicans taking advantage of things that are going in their favor. whether it's unrest in the street. greater control over the coronavirus or any number of the underlying campaign irksz. steve: you know to the point about the unrest in the streets. there are some channels that really don't cover that as if it does not exist. so, when those channels, to their credit did run a big portions of the rnc, suddenly i think a lot of people for the first time saw what was going
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on. because ultimately. the chaos in the street despite what they might think. the people who are protesting and then it turns into violence in some cases. that is not helping joe biden. >> right, a lot of people have talked about fact-checking during the trump era and there is certainly room to fact check president trump. the republican convention sort of served as one massive fact check of the media. it looked at all of the successes that trump and other republicans have had in the last few years and told them in a way that many americans were hearing for the very first time. having a successful presidency, asking for another term is a totally different narrative than one that the media had been setting and also looking at what is happening in democratic-run cities is something a lot of people understand they might not be in portland they don't want their city to become like portland either. steve: mollie, exit question the debates are three weeks from today. the president wants more debates. when you look at this "u.s.a. today" poll i cited more people
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across the country and 10 points independents think trump will win. have you got to figure it's just a performance thing, right? >> well, biden, again, had three opportunities. it was his vp pick, how he handled his convention and now he has the debates. i actually think people are under estimating how well he will do. biden has the gift of gab and he usually does well in such a scenario. people should not expect that he won't do well it. really is his last opportunity to win some of those moderate voters that he hasn't seem to be going after thus far. steve: all right. mollie hemingway, can you read her op-ed at the federal its. molly, thank you very much. >> thank you. steve: all right. 7:25 now here in new york city. a number surface cleaner just got approved by the fda to fight covid. that gizmo right there. it could be the key to getting things back to normal. we're going to show you how that thing works and what it does coming up. when their growing family meant growing expenses,
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of care of respect. because it means you fight for the safety of those you love. when you come into walgreens you get a flu shot that's right for you... and them you become a flu fighter. do your part and defend your crew against the flu. ♪ walgreens ♪ brian: first and only antiviral surface clean tore help stop the spread of covid-19 now approved by the fda two liners will be the first to use surface wise 2 a disinfectant which creates a barrier on surfaces and breaks
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down the virus for several days. here to discuss this potential benefits is professor of micro biology and immunology at the university of arizona dr. charles gerber with here. fox news contributor dr. marc siegel has been looking at this for us. former nfl fullback for the dallas cowboys and nfl analyst darrell johnson graduated syracuse. first of all, darrell, i'm used to talking football with you. what sold you on this product. >> the big thing is i met the coe three years ago on the first generation product and trying to get it into the athletic space for staph and mrsa and some of the bacteria problems that happened with athletes after the xfl had to close down business because of the pandemic i reached out because i knew they were going down this path and excited what they were doing. he invited me out and showed me second generation product and everything it was capable of doing. i just wanted to be a part of this team because i knew the sports leagues were going to have to close down and they would need to start up. my challenge has been through this whole process to getting
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this in front of the nfl major league baseball, the nba and nhl and mls making sure their athletes were safe and push it down to the collegiate and even to high school football. i always believed the return to sports that was going to be one of the big things help us get back to normal in our country. brian: in layman's terms because i'm the ultimate layman in this. you are saying if i'm in a locker room or if i am on an airline i spray it once, i could have that plane fill up two or three times within a week or 25 times within a week and i don't have to spray it down again? >> yeah, that's correct. in fact, it's really been tested both in the real world and in the laboratory. we actually wear test. this we try to wear it down. and this really holds up for a long time. at least in our studies, you know, up to ningtsd days, it's still very effective. brian: this is game-changing which is why we asked dr. siegel to look at it. you have been talking to dow johnson too on this for about a month now.
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dr. siegel, what do you think? >> i think it's a very impressive. brian, i want to you understand this is not instead of regular cleaning. but it's the idea of putting on a surface that is something that gives you a baseline grection. one study they did last april one of the major infectious disease shows 30% reduction in hospital infections using. this and, again, you lay this on and then on top of that, you do your daily cleanings. you are not going to replace it. think of a football locker room, for example. if you think that doing the daily cleaning matters, the next day they are there with more sweat. so this provides a baseline protection. and i think it's very effective sars cov 2 virus very easily killed. it has a coat on it that's easy to kill it. this is a very good edition. brian: can i get it to that small school to that small community that doesn't have much money, can i get it into a major
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private college? is there any way for this to be ready if it's proved effective and the epa is sold on it. is there any way to get it to everybody. >> that's what we are hoping brian. we are working with the side by side to get a section 3 waiver to roll this out nationwide as we continue to press the length of the residual protection. we just had a great conservation with a small school down here in texas defending 3 a division state champions at gunner high school. and they only had two cases. so they really weren't worried about the virus. when we told them that they could return to precovid-19 cleaning protocols their head coach looked us straight in the eye so you are saying my coaches can coach and teachers can teach they don't have to be janitors anymore? time element another huge component as we get down into the smaller schools and colleges. brian: i told new my town they are walking around with plexiglass. and today is the first day of school. i mean, you are saying that the american airlines sold on this to the point where they can take
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some additional precautions but they could feel there is a foundation there? >> yes. i think this really adds the additional barrier we always wanted because we know surfaces get recontaminated all the time. i think that that way it's a break through as we have an anti viral product in particular that can be put on a surface and cover those times when the surfaces get recontaminated. brian: so, dr. siegel, what would be your question that you have right now if you had a health club or you were principal of a school to make you feel better to tell the kids to come back and maybe think this thing is going to be clean for a week. clean at least a week at a time? what's your question? >> well, so, brian, i love that it does common surfaces and areas of high volume like planes and like schools. i want to know that my kids don't get irritated or don't get allergies from this. i would want to know from dr. gerber that they tolerate it
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and doesn't cause any -- watering or anything like that. brian: your answer, dr. gerber? >> yeah. that's a good question. the epa requires that type of testing. that's been done. it's not a skin sin advertiser. one of the ratings epa gives for disinfectant. brian: the free market doing its work while going through the scientific steps. darryl johnson, okay, no eye black on. you don't have to wear a chin strap but i think you are making thank you for this work. dr. siegel thanks for your expertise and i will talk to you guys soon. >> thanks, brian. >> thanks, brian. brian: best of luck. this is the first time they are talking about this publicly. they waited for us. we appreciate that meanwhile president trump and joe biden battling over the economy. >> biden and his very liberal running mate would destroy this economy. >> president trump keeps talking about how great this economy is. millions of people out of work.
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brian: who is he yelling at? who is right? charles payne here to react next.
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juvéderm it. talk to your doctor about the juvéderm collection of fillers. cop tras biden presided over the weakest since the great depression. >> president trump keeps talking about how great this economy is millions of people out of work. evictions on the rise. 20 million people worried about losing their home because they can't make the mortgage payment. what else on god's earth can this guy do? ainsley: host of making money charles payne. >> good morning. ainsley: you heard they were sparring yesterday about the jobs and economy. the economy is most important issues in many it is obviously
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this election, too. do you give president trump a pass because of covid or do you blame him for so many people being outs of work? >> i don't blame president trump for covid-19. i think any clear-thinking person knowing that this is a global pandemic that has taken millions of lives around the world would understand that. it's a once in a century situation. all that finger pointing stuff is nonsense i think the idea for voters look forward which candidate has the best plan to bring us out of this economically and obviously i think everyone is going to be on the same page medically. we are making rapid advances there. a vaccine and all that kind of stuff could actually be a mute point by this time. when we look at what is happening. first of all have you got to do two things. look at what president trump accomplished before covid-19. you know, manufacturing jobs, which declined by hundreds of thousands under obama and biden actually gained 499,000 from
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january of 2017 to november of last year. what i look at are wages, also. particularly blue collar wages. when president obama and vice president biden came in office. they were growing almost 4% year over year. when they left, they were down 61% growing less than inflation and that has changed dramatically. in fact, we had about a 19-month run where blue collar wages not only beat inflation but they grew faster in all the other wages combined. i think that's what the heartland is looking for middle america how they can have the economic back drop where they can earn their way to prosperity. brian: 43% of americans in last week's axios poll report they were concerned about their job security, 44 percent said they are worried about their ability to pay their bills. so that worry is out there. we understand why. blaming president obama for the 2008 situation that collapsed on wall street would have been wrong. just like blaming the president for coronavirus would have been
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wrong. but let's talk about another thing that's very wrong. what's happening in new york. 25,000 eateries. they now say we probably will not open up those restaurants to till the rest of 2020. let me know your fall plans for eating on the sidewalk so there is going to be a lawsuit brought forward to make these restaurants, allow these restaurants just to have the opportunity to make business on what's left. what's your reaction? not in the legal aspect about the financial toll on the city and on these individuals? >> all right. well, first of all, i didn't blame obama for 2008 the banking collapse. i was comparing 8-year record that actually should have benefited from coming in with a broken economy. as the president, i would love to come into an economy that's already broken. in america, we are going to snap back almost anyway. as far as that's concerned. that's not what i said. it's a no-brainer with restaurants. bring people in and feed them
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then you can't run a business. there will be a few restaurants with good takeout business that will do well. for the most part, this is the most asinine program idea out there. i'm not sure what they are thinking about. you have counties and it doesn't make sense. people understand now how to do all of these things in a much safer fashion. we are going to destroy a lot of small businesses. i deliberately went to harlem saturday with my wife, melba was on my show, melba wilson. she harlem fixture. this woman i have known her for 25, 30 years. i remember when she told me first time her dream she worked -- i want to have my own place. she worked hard. she is a single mother. she is an american dream. she opened up her own restaurant. she is thriving but all of these things can kill them if they don't allow them to do limited business. limited business. we are talking about just stay alive until we get a vaccine. steve: no kidding. charles, a big story today in
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the "wall street journal" and it talks a little bit about how since 1928 the incumbent party has won 90% of the presidential elections. if the three months before the election are good with the s&p 500. and things like that. you look at the month of august, i think it went up 7%. and september historically kind of not a great month but right now with a lot of investors have noticed is after hitting some highs, the stock market futures are way down again today. what happened at the end of the week with the sell-off? >> you know, sometimes in a market goes up 60% in 106 months it pulls back. so unless you just got involved in the market and haven't been paying attention for the last your whole lifetime, news flash every now and then it pulls back particularly when it gets. we had the best -- we had the best six month 100 day rally, whatever. in the history of the stock market.
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got over -- a little bit. i think we will be okay. i'm personally salivating at the opportunity to buy some of these names i missed on the way up. you are right though, the market matters. the wealth effect matters. you know, and that also by the way is not just for the election but for the economy itself. when the market is at an all-time high. our homes are at all-time highs. a lot better. little bit of intangible becomes tangible when it comes to us keeping this economy going. i think we are going to be okay. let's flesh out some o excess in the market early on. some profit taking and resume move to the upside for sure. ainsley: hurt, charles. thanks for waking up so early for us. his show is on at 2:00 in the afternoon on the fox business channel if you want to watch. thanks, charles. see you soon. and it's called "making money" right there on fox business. steve: we love to do that. ainsley: janice, what's going on in the weather. we just completed the first week of september. where has the time gone?
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janice: yep. where shut snow happening? it's happening across the rockies. temperatures were well above ningted degrees across colorado a couple of days ago. and now below freezing. with measurable snow in some of the mountain tops. 1 to 2 feet of new snow. that is incredible. taking a look at the forecast temperatures, can you see where the temperatures are going to drop considerably over the next 24 hours. as we get into wednesday, thursday, we will start to moderate a bit. but look at this. denver 37 today by thursday 54. but we were talking about temperatures close to 100 degrees, just you know, 48 hours ago. so really amazing weather across portions of the rockies. we are also watching the tropics. we have two named storms paul let and renee. the good news is both of these will stay away from the u.s. we will keep you up to date, of course it's still very busy and we are reaching peak hurricane season today and tomorrow. steve, ainsley, brian, weather is amazing. back to you. brian: thanks so much, janice.
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meanwhile nearly 30 years of the deadly bombing of the world trade center the one in 1993 that is. a new fox nation special looks at what led up to that attack. andy mccarter prosecutor of the bombers he joins us live with a preview next. advil targets pain at the source... ...while acetaminophen blocks pain signals. the future of pain relief is here. new advil dual action. ♪
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what we started to payment a picture of was something pretty darn scary. this was no long ear group aspirational in plans this was a group operationally effective. they were killers. >> they want to do something glorious that will make them iconic figures. in the jihad. >> magnitude of the attack. ainsley: fox news contributor and attorney for the southern district of new york andy mccarthy is one of the experts you saw there on fox nation and he joins us now. good morning to you. >> good morning, ainsley. how are you? gains gains i'm doing well. we hear about world trade center. we think 9/11. tell us what happened in 1993
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and what was your role. >> well, there was a bombing of the world trade center in the garage level of a 1400-pound chemical bomb, which was aimed by the jihadists who carried out the attack to try to take the complex down. it's actually one of the great miracles of modern history that only six people were killed because it was a shocking amount of damage, if you actually looked at it. and i think what we learned is that it was really radical islam's declaration of war on the united states. it was the effort to show that they could hit us here, could hit us in our political and financial strength as we saw it at the time. and i think i was the lead prosecutor on what was known as the blind sheikh case which dealt with that bombing and a subsequent plot to bomb new york city land marks and if there is any lesson that came out of it.
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i think to the 8 years, ainsley, from the time the trade center got bombed until it got destroyed, we kind of stuck with this template that what we were dealing with was just a law enforcement issue. when it was obviously something that was much bigger. ainsley: who was the suspects involved in this and what was their reason for it? >> well, they wanted to attack the united states. this was a jihadist cell that was actually i think coordinatinged under omar abdel rockman who was known as the blind sheikh. he was not a well known figure in the united states at the time but globally he was an iconic figure in jihadist circles had issued fatwa the edict that are killing of anwar sadat years earlier. weighs somebody who was a driving figure driving figure in their battle with the russians
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and afghanistan in the late 1970s into the late 1980s. he was a pretty important figure turned out under our nose he had an entire group of people who had various ties to other international groups that were forming up in the new york metropolitan area and planning political assassinations and bombings of major military, financial and political targets. ainsley: i know you were one of the experts in this series on fox nation. here is another clip. >> investigative source that. so jihadists flee. >> if they had fled we would never have been able to get them again. the decision was made to get as many oof these guys in the ware. we vape videotaped them as theye mixing the bombing components and the fbi jumps in and takes them down right there.
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ainsley: any link to 9/11? >> yeah. a lot of the people who were connected to this also ended up having ties to the al qaeda organization which we just really learned about at the very beginning in 1993. and obviously our knowledge of that grew as time went on. ainsley: all right. well, thank you so much for being on the show this morning. we look forward to watching that it's called the rising crescent. it's streaming now on fox nation. andrew mccarthy, thanks so much and coming up, caile kayleh mcenany and we have mark steyn. stay with us. these are real people, not actors, who've got their eczema under control. with less eczema, you can show more skin. so roll up those sleeves. and help heal your skin from within with dupixent. dupixent is the first treatment of its kind that continuously treats moderate-to-severe eczema, ...
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and, had significantly less itch. don't use if you're allergic to dupixent. serious allergic reactions can occur, including anaphylaxis, which is severe. tell your doctor about new or worsening eye problems, such as eye pain or vision changes, or a parasitic infection. if you take asthma medicines, don't change or stop them without talking to your doctor. so help heal your skin from within, and talk to your eczema specialist about dupixent. if your financial situation has changed, we may be able to help. rioting is not protesting. looting is not protesting. it's lawlessness, plain and simple. and those who do it should be prosecuted. fires are burning, and we have a president who fans the flames. he can't stop the violence because for years he's fomented it. but his failure to call on his own supporters
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to stop acting as an armed militia in this country shows how weak he is. violence will not bring change, it will only bring destruction. it's wrong in every way. if i were president, my language would be less divisive. i'd be looking to lower the temperature in this country, not raise it. donald trump is determined to instill fear in america because donald trump adds fuel to every fire. this is not who we are. i believe we'll be guided by the words of pope john paul ii, words drawn from the scriptures. be not afraid. i'm joe biden and i approve this message.
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steve: president trump hitting the campaign trail today going to stop in jupiter. ainsley: meanwhile joe biden is heading to michigan tomorrow. president trump: we're currently witnessing the fastest labor market recovery in history. >> we know its been great for his rich friends but hadn't been so great for the rest of us >> the idea for voters and everyone is to look forward which candidate has the best plan. >> it's set to return to capitol hill today as republican s and democrats are locked in a stalemate over coronavirus relief. >> the democrats now even with record jobs reports for four straight months don't want to blank check their longstanding wish list. >> protesters demanding justice for a sixth straight night in rochester, new york, following the death of daniel prude.
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an unprecedented disaster a massive creek fire exploding for more than 135,000-acres. >> [applause] >> he's got the title. >> ♪ ♪ brian: nice to leave a little glimmer of the side-view of the statue of liberty welcome to tuesday this is the beginning of the stretch for the presidential campaign as we get set to get set for the first debates, on september 29, and then we have november 3, the election and we'll probably decide that when, february? we'll get the final results in perhaps, we'll see. hopefully before that, but busy hour coming your way. steve: no kidding they've all been busy the debates are exactly three weeks from today, ainsley. ainsley: that's exactly right and we're going to be watching those debates for sure and reporting on it meanwhile president trump hitting the campaign trail today, with
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stops down in florida and in north carolina. brian: meanwhile, joe biden heads to michigan tomorrow as he looks to flip states won by the president in 2016. steve: degree jenkins is live in washington d.c. with the swing state showdown. griff: steve, ainsley, brian, good morning, and it was not a day off yesterday for either campaign in the badger state, and president trump holding a rare labor day press conference to hammer his opponents for anti-vaccine rhetoric while biden was doubling down over his doubts over a vaccine in the key stone state. watch. president trump: under my leadership we'll produce a vaccine in record time, biden and his very liberal runningmate should immediately apologize for the wreckless anti-vaccine rhetoric that they are talking right now. >> part of the problem is when he's playing with politics is he's said so many things that
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aren't true i'm worried if we do have a really good vaccine people will be reluctant to take it. griff: meanwhile, the candidates were duking it out on opposite sides of wisconsin. >> under this president, i promise you, we will have law and order in every city in this country, for every american. we're going to keep fighting for tax relief for working americans every day. >> we see the benefit to the entire country to invest in our small businesses, and our small business leaders. we see you, we understand the significance of what you are in terms of the health and well being of communities. griff: harris also met with jacob blake's family in wisconsin a key swing state where trump nearly won in 2016 and today as you mentioned president trump heads to jupiter , florida and winston-salem, north carolina and biden to michigan tomorrow. meanwhile congress coming back here today to work on another coronavirus relief package, but
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guys, no progress is in sight, and anything that happens on that front that too will become part of the campaign trail punch es thrown, brian, ainsley, steve? ainsley: thanks so much, griff. let's bring in kayleigh mcenany, white house press secretary, good morning to you, kayleigh. >> good morning, ainsley. ainsley: what was your reaction yesterday to joe biden going after president trump on the economy? actually, let's play it and then you can get your reaction on the other side. >> president trump keeps talking about how great this economy is, how great the stock market is, if it hadn't been so great for the rest of us. millions of people out of work, evictions on the rise, 20 million people worrying about where they're going to lose their home, what in god's name else can this guy do? let's look at one simple fact. this president is on track to be the only president in modern history to end up with fewer jobs at the end of his term than
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existed in america when he began his term. ainsley: kayleigh is that fair? we just went through, we are in the middle of a pandemic. >> yeah, one thing for joe, he wants to talk about simple facts i have a few simple facts for him. let's start with the fact that obama-biden oversaw the slowest economic recovery since world war ii. he had his bite at the apple. that's what they delivered compare that to president trump 's fastest economic recovery in modern history, the cbo told us we were supposed to have double-digit unemployment until the end of the year. we are in single-digits right now, record number of jobs created out pacing the rest of the world in terms of an economic recovery, so, we're on track with the jobs president , but the pathetic record of obama-biden stands very clear, and those are simple facts. brian: the other thing that everyone is talking about is excited about but seems to be politicized is the race to get a vaccine the president said december, hoping for maybe earlier in november, joe biden says the president has got a
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credibility issue. let's listen. >> i would want to see what the scientists said. reporter: [inaudible] >> i want full transparency on a vaccine. one of the problems is the way he's playing with politics. he's said so many things that aren't true i'm worried if we do have a really good vaccine people will be reluctant to take it. so he's undermining public confidence, but pray to god we have it. if i could get a vaccine tomorrow i'd do it. if it cost me the election i'd do it. we need a vaccine and we need it now. >> [applause] >> we have to listen to the scientists. brian: was the president going to come up with a vaccine himself or is he going to depend on the scientists? >> he's going to depend on the scientist which is is what he's done every single step of the way. what you see democrats doing is very very dangerous. they are literally playing
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politics with people's lives here by throwing doubt about a vaccine. we have experts over at operation warp speed that are working on this , president trump has tore through bureaucratic barriers so we can get a safe, effective, and timely vaccine, and once again, compare that to obama-biden where they promised a vaccine, they vastly underperformed and you have biden's advisor back in the obama-biden days saying it's a pure miracle that swine flu wasn't a mass casualty event of our times. steve: you know, kayleigh last time you were with us we asked you about that music. you'd think that you be able to figure out where it's coming from. >> that's right. apparently it's some sort of protest but what's funny is i don't think the viewers can hear the music so we think we're just hearing it. brian: no we could hear it. steve: hey, you know, clearly, the president as he goes to jupiter, florida today and then to north carolina as well, he's going to be talking about the environment today down in florida where people are very concerned about the red tide and
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blue algae but also talking about the chaos in the streets and the economy. now, one of the things that hogan gidley put out a statement yesterday talking about the differences between the president and joe biden and one of the things he said was that joe biden is promising to raise taxes on more than 80% of taxpayers by $4 trillion. that's a lot of money on social media, you see people talking about he's going to double our taxes and things like that. where are you getting that figure? he's going to raise $4 trillion on 80% of the people. >> yeah, well just one simple proposal look at the payroll tax on capitol hill you have a democrat there proposing to rollback the president's payroll tax forgiveness. this is a huge tax that forgives , that benefits mostly middle and low income workers and at the same time, we're not touching social security because the money is coming out of the general fund to pay for this , just simply the payroll tax, democrats will pull that back and also the
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trump tax cuts. steve: but doesn't a majority of the $4 trillion come from people making more than $400,000 a year >> when you look at the trump tax cuts what they've done is benefit mostly low and middle income americans, as a percentage, and the payroll tax cuts in particular, that's for people making under $100,000 , and it is a regressive tax, and we know that low and middle income workers the vast majority of their taxes come from that payroll tax, so that's what this president has prioritized in the midst of a pandemic and you'll have joe biden and others rolling back those trump tax cuts and not forgiving the payroll tax which president trump promised he would do. ainsley: kayleigh the senate is heading back to work today what's the latest on the covid relief? >> yeah, right now again, it's nancy pelosi playing politics. she's been fundamentally un serious every step of the way here. they would ask for a certain number of school funding we would exceed that amount and then they would reject it. she's saying she wants $2.5 trillion but won't say what that money will go to. democrats want a bailout for blue states, and look at the priorities here,
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when this president put out eo's to help stop evictions and that payroll tax cut i mentioned, and other items what was nancy pelosi doing? vacationing and going to a hair salon when no one else in california or in her area had the benefit of that. brian: the rubber hits the road evidently it's money to states and who it's going to go to and where it endoscopies up meanwhile the big story resonat ing is jeffly goldberg's atlantic magazine report says the president called those who died in world war i suckers and some other disparaging remarks and losers and veterans in particular he says he has anonymous sources and more coming forward and we didn't know john bolton told martha mcc allum last night whose not a fan of the president that it didn't happen there and the aid to general kelly says it didn't happen and he was there. who else was there that you like to hear from? >> well i've heard from enough people. i've heard in fact from 19 on-
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the-record sources who put their names on their testimony, and those 19 sources more than a dozen of which have firsthand accounts have dismissed it that it's fundamentally untrue. you have a liberal activist publication in the atlantic with these absolute lies about president trump and again, anonymous cowardly anonymous sources won't put their name on their allegations but you have now almost 20 people putting their names on this , and saying this is fundamentally untrue and this president loves our veterans i see it each and every day. he deeply cares about our military and this is democrats trying to wedge veterans away from a president that has done more for them than any president in the history of our country. steve: kayleigh mcenany from the north lawn of the white house where she's being serenad ed by the protesters. >> [laughter] steve: kayleigh thank you very much. >> good to join you. steve: it is 8:11 now here in new york city and jillian joins us with some news. reporter: good morning so let's begin with a fox news alert an eight-year-old boy is killed and three others injured after someone opens fire into their car in chicago.
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police say they were stopped at a light when the gunman's car pulled up behind them targeting someone inside. two adults shot in the back are in critical condition. at least 51 people were shot in the city over labor day weekend. the wave of violence also hitting baltimore where three people were killed and 12 others shot. >> we have another fox news alert protesters demanding justice for a sixth straight night in rochester, new york, following the death of daniel pr ude. his brother speaking to demonstrators. >> they did not want that visual of my brother getting assassinateed by some cold blood ed killers. >> [applause] reporter: in los angeles, police firing tear gas during protests overnight. >> [horns honking, shots fired] reporter: protests erupting over the police shooting death of di
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jon kissy last week in oregon members of the proud boys rally ing to honor danielson, shot and killed last week and police arresting two people and unrest there and in seattle police seen breaking down a barricade set up by protesters, as body cam video shows what appears to be molotov cocktails thrown at officers. police sharing this photo showing one of the recovered bottles, 22 people were arrested >> the fisa court revealing the fbi regularly does not follow rules meant to protect american's privacy. the december ruling was just declassified. the widespread violations were found while searching through e-mails that were gathered without a warrant, judge andrew napolitano joined us earlier to weigh in on the revelations. >> the temptation to spy on americans is so in resist irresistible to these fbi agents that they're willing to break the law in order to do so and they don't produce any evidence that helps in intelligence or
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criminal matters whatsoever. reporter: it comes just days after the doj and fbi said they are making reforms to the fisa process. >> paying a big price for accidentally hitting a line judge during the u.s. open. the tennis star losing more than $267,000. he was fined 10 grand for un sportsman-like chondroitin duct and most of the rest was prize money and also begging fans to stop sending the judge death threats tweeting, "she's done nothing wrong at all. i ask you to stay especially supportive and caring to her during this time." brian, ainsley, steve? brian: it's unbelievable why would you blame the woman for standing there and she got hit in the throat. reporter: i know. brian: i don't get that. ainsley: thanks so much jillian. well, still ahead, peter strzok says that there were mistakes on fisa applications because fbi agents are overworked, and we
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steve: president trump has made law and order a key issue in the 2020 race condemning the surge in violence and unrest across the country as well. watch. president trump: when you look around at portland and you see what these democrats are doing to our cities, take a look at what's happening in new york and chicago, we have democrat- run cities and mayors that are running and governors that are running states so badly and mayors running cities so
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badly, it's very sad. steve: okay. this all comes as some democrats are warning the president's message seems to be working with suburban voters here to react is black voices for trump advisory board member stacey washington and stacey joins us from the st. louis area, good morning to you. >> good morning. steve: so, you know, there was a politico argument out that talks about how the president has shifted the emphasis of the campaign toward the chaos in the streets and public safety, and a woman by the name of holly lion whose the chairman of the democratic party in arizona said there is that little sort of unsettled feeling in people because we can tell that trump's messaging is grabbing hold and it is working. why is it working? >> well, you know, i think it has a lot to do with what we've seen culturally. we've just been through the period in american history
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that i can think of where american is told by local government they couldn't be open and so you couple that with 100 days of rioting, sustained rioting in portland and other areas and that video of the things that are happening is starting to really get , it's reaching people, it's actually getting out there. it's 100% saturation i would say so people are seeing what's happened and they are shocked by it and in rochester you have people literally sitting outside the restaurant being forced out, driven away from their food having their food thrown at them by protesters and they're not sure what they've donald most americans, in fact, 99% of americans aren't racist and have nothing to do with what this is on the streets of america so of course it's working. steve: yeah, why do you think somebody thinks that that strategy of going up to people who are just trying to have a quiet meal, or a drink, social
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ly distanced out on the street where there's plenty of fresh air and the scientists all say that's the safest place for you to be if you're going to be in public. who thinks that is a good strategy to get their message across? >> so listen, i want to just for one second, can we think about who these people are? this is the everybody gets a trophy generation. a group of young adults who have probably 100 trophies at home for soccer games and t ballgames they lost, these are kids who are told they don't have any value, there's no intrinsic value to them because they are just talking animals, and they have not been taught to love god or to really respect the country and they also don't know civics so they have no idea that they actually have things that they can do to change society that don't involve violence, and so with those mechanisms that have been taught these kids are running amuck and i'm calling them kids because adults don't set things
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on fire, adults don't go to protests and adults don't call burning down and throwing molotov cocktails protests so these aren't adults and they didn't understand what this country is about and they are literally ripping the fabric of our society apart with its own hands. steve: sure and you know stacey i think part of it is in the very beginning when it first started in minneapolis and people thought oh, that's terrible, but it just seems to be isolated right there. it has spread across the country and the worry of people and in particular, the biden people want to make sure that suburban voters get out there, urban and suburban voters get out there and vote for joe biden. it's the suburban voters feel that they could be in pair ill in their safe suburbs that's going to be a problem for joe biden. >> well it is a problem for joe biden because the responsibility
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for this lies with the democrats these are not republican voters out burning things down. these are not, they always say white supremacists who this is a miniscule number of people who don't have an impact on what we do in our every day lives. this is democrats these are people literally being paid by organizations and their brand is antifa and black lives matter and no one else can hold responsibility for what they're doing other than the leadership of the dells democrats who could put a stop by saying we no longer support black lives matter and antifa and we're going to have everyone prosecuted whose involved in destroying property but they won't do that because these are their people and americans are beginning to wake up to that fact and all i can say to you is , do you want to be peaceful and have this assurance when you dial 911 someone will come and you certainly can't vote for the democrats because they want to defund the police and they want those afraid so that
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you one vote for president trump in november. steve: that's what happened during a lot of the violence and the looting and the business owners called the police and nobody came. stacey washington advisory board member, black voices for trump, stacey thank you very much for your point of view on this tuesday. >> thank you for having me. steve: you bet always a pleasure meanwhile switching gears, peter strzok playing the blame game with the former fbi agent is now saying about why the fbi made so many mistakes in that fisa process. byron york knows so much about this and also has a brand new book out, he's coming up, next.
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ainsley: an sanitation booth could be the answer to getting businesses back to full capacity from the pandemic. jeff flock from our sister network fox business joins us live in vernon hills, illinois with a first-hand look. jeff what are they doing there? reporter: ainsley, take a look at what could be the new normal, this is the first multi facetted what they call intelligent dis infection door, this doesn't cure coronavirus but it makes sure it doesn't come into your workplace or perhaps a sporting venue. i've got the team that developed it here, jason, take the microphone a moment if i go through this and explain how this works. >> yes, sir if you could walk
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up to the device and put your face in the silhouette now it just read your temperature so you can enter into the device put your arms up and take a slow 360-degree turn. want it to last about six to eight seconds. reporter: what am i getting as i'm going through this? >> inside the device you've got overhead ozone as well as fire u vc, and it's a cold disinfectant. reporter: so i'm getting multiple disinfectant as well as being checked for the temperature. >> yes, basically it's combining three technologies to be more assured that you're killing off that rna before it enters into a venue. reporter: this is the first time these have all been combined into one, ainsley, and this is now in use. dana you got this in use where? >> in las vegas, here in a corporation in northbrook, and this weekend we'll be installing them in bridgeview. reporter: this has all been developed since covid and this about $20,000 for one of these, yes, sir? >> yes, sir and that comes
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complete so the installation as well as getting it there. reporter: oh, my temperature is taken there again, >> [machine speaking] reporter: people can move through this fairly rapidly about 10 seconds for each and again tell me what i've got here >> so the cold combined with the far uvc in the ozone the reason why we focus on these three technologies is because the disinfecting of just light is not enough. reporter: you've combined them all. could this be the new future? i don't know, ainsley. ainsley: he said just the light alone is not enough because some stores have just the light. reporter: exactly, yes and this combines three. so there you go. can't be too careful. ainsley: you are so good i love watching you everything is so visual and you take us through thanks so much good to see you. reporter: i'm healthy. ainsley: we're all trying to stay safe. and healthy. brian: former fbi agent peter strzok who played a key role in the russia investigation speaking out in the mistakes his
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agency made while obtaining fisa warrants and carter page. >> i don't think at all that it's anything improper. you get people overworked who make mistakes and don't get me wrong, inexcusable mistakes. brian: yes work for the cia wasn't working for the cia, oops i'm so tired here to react washington examiner and chief political correspond entered and author of the brand new book out today "obsession" and the never- ending war on trump which plays into this , byron before we get specifically into your book what about peter strzok coming out and the only thing he says about his text messages reportedly is i regret comedy about things i observed in the headlines of behind the scenes, but peter strzok is a problematic character, isn't he? >> absolutely, listen, the over worked explanation just doesn't really fly. remember that all of the mistakes, the so-called mistakes went in one direction. they went toward allowing unreliable information into the carter page fisa warrant and
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keeping out exculpatory information and remember, the fbi had actually tried to hire christopher steele in the fall of 2016 to work for them to investigate russia and the trump campaign and then the fbi wanted to include the dossier in the intelligence community assessment and then they briefed it to the president and the president-elect. these were not mistakes. these were not the result of overwork. this was what the fbi was trying to do. brian: so they end up with network contracts, look at brennan, mccabe, now this guy will have someone knocking on this door so it all plays into your book, obsession and it starts on day one. when the president wins this election no one buys it the investigation is already going on we already know it and then all of a sudden you point out the first time they try to impeach him officially is may 7, 2017. this is why we have to impeach this guy, he hasn't done anything yet. >> you know, few people know
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that may 17, 2017 is a big day, because it's the day robert mueller was appointed the special counsel but it's also the day that was the first formal call for impeachment in the house, and this is what the book is about. remember in december of 2019, democrats were rushing to impeach the president, and a reporter asked nancy pelosi and says what's the hurry? and she says there's no hurry. this has been going on for two and a half years, since the start of the mueller investigation, and a lot of republicans listen to that and said welshes finally admitted it this impeachment, this is not about a phone call between the president of the united states and the president of ukraine. this is a continuation of a long effort to remove president trump from office and that's what the book is about. brian: and in researching this book you brought depth to a lot of things we experienced but also talks about the amount of headwinds the president faced and some of the takeaways for example, urge by chris christie to fire james comey, you have the right to do it, you probably
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had democrats on your side because they were upset about hillary clinton, big mistake the president is not firing him right away, right? >> this was during the transition, a number of trump advisors advised him to fire comey immediately. brian: wow. yeah, we just lost, we were having some problems before so we'll do him 10 minutes earlier and he also believed that the mueller probe, that robert mueller broke his promise, and they also saw in the prosecutors too hungry to go after trump along the way, and he also pointed out the electoral college, when they were just ban ging in the vice president at the time was joe biden and he were saying here is confirming the electoral college people are standing up one after another protesting it. sheila jackson was one of them and they also claimed he stole the election, they never gave him one day after high-fiving look at the upset we pulled off. the book is out today, byron
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york wrote it is really excellent gives perspective, on what the president has been through his first three and a half years, meanwhile, still ahead, gym owners crying foul in san francisco and they are still closed wouldn't you feel the same way but gyms and government buildings are open. it's sickening, mark steyn sounds off on the double standard, next. >> ♪ ♪ (gong rings) - this is joe.
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stop taking ozempic® and get medical help right away if you get a lump or swelling in your neck, severe stomach pain, itching, rash, or trouble breathing. serious side effects may include pancreatitis. tell your doctor if you have diabetic retinopathy or vision changes. taking ozempic® with a sulfonylurea or insulin may increase low blood sugar risk. common side effects are nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, stomach pain, and constipation. some side effects can lead to dehydration, which may worsen kidney problems. once-weekly ozempic® is helping me reach my blood sugar goal. ♪ oh, oh, oh, ozempic®! ♪ you may pay as little as $25 for a 1-month or 3-month prescription. ask your health care provider today about once-weekly ozempic®. brian: san francisco gym owners demanding to reopen, citing a double standard after learning some begins and government buildings are allowed to operate >> it's just a lot of
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unanswered questions as to why these gyms were allowed to remain open and there's no reason that they should delay letting gyms reopen indoors at limited capacity with full covid safety protocols. steve: this all comes as their congresswoman, nancy pelosi, the speaker of the house, is facing escalating backlash over her visit to a shuttered hair salon while nobody else could do what she could do ainsley? ainsley: here to react is columnist and author mark steyn, mark, good to see you. >> great to see you ainsley. ainsley: what's your reaction to all of this? >> i think that it's astonishing that we're now into the third quarter of this , and the people are still putting up with it. basically, in the last six months there's been a massive transfer of not just economic power but also basic liberties to state workers.
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we're now like china where basically, we're not just getting the chinese diseases, but we're also getting chinese levels of right. the more connected you are to state power the more freedom of movement you have. it's completely preposterous, but a government worker should be able to do a 20 minute work out in a gym but not somebody whose got a mom and pop business, always running a private gym and how long are people going to put up with this i do not know but basically for political reasons, not scientific reasons, not health reasons, these guys have determined to keep this going to the election. brian: they got to make it clear they are going to pay for the election because i don't know how many gym openers care if they are democrat or republican they just know there's one party stopping them from opening, and just trying to earn a living. meanwhile, let's pivot if we can to something that's way overdue, a full examination of darwin. is he indeed overrated? well the british history museum
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is going to review the darwin exhibits for offensive content and he hasn't made much impact on civilization. it's about time we give him a true examination. mark do you want to take this? >> yeah, i mean, basically it used to be the so-called conservatives. if you go back to the smokes monkey trial, darwin was the light standard for the left on how enlightened and how scientific you were, and basically, they are now saying well, you know, darwin may not have had the right views on transgender bathrooms or whatever, but the best guy on this , and it pains me to say this because it's not my kind of guy in any other respect is president macron in france said we're not taking down a single statue or changing a single street name and they are all part of our history so forget about it and as a result he hasn't had any problems with this kind of thing. unless you're prepared to surrender anything, unless you're prepared to surrender
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everything, don't surrender anything, because to trade with people in these circumstances is crazy. it's not good faith negotiation and all it's actually doing, a country that has a civilization that has no past has no future, and that's basically the end game here. steve: sure. two things, mark. what lake are you at because it looks beautiful, and secondly, what is different about this time where people are taking down statues as opposed to for instance in the past where people go look, that's part of our history we're not going to do it. what's different now? >> well, the first question is i'm on the south china sea and that's chairman xi's beach house steve: it says vermont in the corner! >> pay no attention, pay no attention to that, and basically, i decided to move to
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wuhan because that's freer than anywhere else. what's different, i think, this time is that it used to be for very narrow political reasons, although even then i don't oppose it. i oppose it. i mean, for example, during the whole decolonization period in the 60s and 70s they used to take down occasionally statues of queen victoria and i notice that all the places that kept up the statues of queen victoria still function and those that took it off and dumped her in a landfill basically don't. statue toppling is basically a war on your civilizational in hairy inheritance on the truth about the past and that never plays out well. ainsley: mark thank you so much for being with us. >> hey it's great to be back with you, ainsley, and i can't wait for the return of the curvy couch, to treat the curvy couch
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like a confederate general is a travesty. brian: mark very good point i'll say this we'll bring the couch back as soon as you pledge to leave the lake and come back too. would you do that? >> [laughter] i will do that. i can't wait. i may even permit myself to approach you with an extended hand, as if we're going to do a terrible deed. brian: don't you dare! don't you dare. steve: thank you, mark. enjoy vermont. ainsley: yes, thank you. jillian over to you. jillian: looks beautiful good morning. let's begin with a fox news alert. an unprecedented disaster, that's what california officials are calling massive creek fire exploding to more than 135,000- acres. that's nearly double the size it was just one day ago. this morning crews will attempt to rescue more than 50 people trapped by the flames and the national guard could not reach them overnight because of heavy smoke no word on their condition. >> americans are trading in northern cities for the sunshine
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state. a new report finding nearly 950 americans are moving to florida every day. the majority are coming from high tax areas like new york, boston, and chicago. that's according to the 2020 miami report. florida residents do not pay state income or a state taxes of up to $50,000. that's helping to fuel home prices in the state which have more than doubled since the pandemic started. >> a driver rescues a man just seconds before his semi is fully engulfed in flames. >> please, somebody. >> we need help! >> help! >> somebody help! >> we need help! jillian: the tractor trailer caught on fire after allegedly rear ending another semi on a highway in iowa. four other vehicles were involved in the crash and the driver says he got out of his semi and was able to break the other driver's window and pull him out of the burning truck. he was not seriously hurt. >> an indiana police officer
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giving a family a sweet birthday surprise, watch this. >> ♪ happy birthday to you, happy birthday dear rosie ♪ reporter: sargent sanford swanson jr. serenading them during their family celebration when he happened to be walking by and they were shocked and said it really made their day and he has a fantastic voice. doesn't he? steve: no kidding that's great. brian: do they teach you that at the academy? steve: i think you learn it before then. brian: i'm going to look into that, meanwhile thanks jillian. seattle closing the park for a religious rally while letting left wing protesters take over the streets and the prayer rall ies organizers sounds off on what he calls total hypocrisy. >> ♪ ♪ if your dry eye symptoms keep coming back,
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♪ go your own way your wireless. your rules. only with xfinity mobile. there were tsunamis fourtin the world. and once they happened, we were in a major hurry to get to those regions to provide aid and support. it was very humbling to be able to help out all those people. it's my dream now to go into clean energy and whatever the next new fuel source is, that's where i want to be. i want to be on the front lines of implementation. ainsley: the city of seattle accused of discrimination for closing a park ahead of a planned prayer rally. the city says it shut the park down due to "anticipated crowding from the christian
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event" despite left wing protests that continue throughout the city but the show down didn't stop the prayer rally which was held in the street. let us worship rally organizer and founder of hold the line, shawn foyt joinses nows so good to see you again. >> hey, so good to be with you guys. good morning. ainsley: we just love what you're doing you're traveling around cities and promoting revival instead of riots, but the city of seattle, what happened over the weekend when you tried to do that in seattle? >> well you know it's so wild, because yesterday, they had on 4th avenue in seattle they had antifa rioters throwing molotov cocktails at policemen, and yet the city focused their energy on our peaceful worship and prayer rally in gas works park. they barricaded the whole park and put fences around it. i don't even know how much tax dollars was wasted on that, and we're blocking this out from gathering to worship. ainsley: what was their reason, what did they tell you? >> they just said anticipated
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crowding from an event. i mean, we were the only event that was planned. we were the only rally that was scheduled to be there so it was obviously a targeting and a discrimination towards believers in the city. ainsley: what do you think the real reason is? >> i mean, you know, there's just a bias. you know, it's the height of hypocrisy right now that they're letting these cities, you know, succomb to rioting and burning and yet they're targeting christians. ainsley: yeah so this is what the city of seattle said about closing down the park. out of concerns for the safety of all those who visit gas works park we've opted to close the entire park for the day, seattle parks and recreation does not allow unpermitted public events to take place in seattle parks, and asked the public to continue to adhere to current public health guidelines, so that we can keep our parks open. you know, shawn, i know you've traveled around that was your 21st city. why are you doing this and what are the crowds telling you? >> well by the way, last night it was a pretty easy, you know,
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we just pivoted and we called it a worship protest, so now technically it's legal. and we went to the streets but yeah, what we're experiencing across america is especially with the churches being closed and, you know, these godless politicians that are taking aim at the church, you know, people are rising up. there's a backlash that's growing. we had 12,000 people that gather ed with us at the capitol in sacramento two nights ago and it's just continuing to build momentum. ainsley: shawn tell us about your story. did you get saved in college? i was reading about your life last night and it said what happened? >> well i grew up in church, and my parents were both full time medical missionaries and so i grew up watching the move of god and other nations in the world and really have largely been focused on other nations until the pandemic hit, and we just, you know, wasn't able to travel anywhere so i felled like the lord said focus on your nation for the sake of your children, you know, fight for america and so that's what
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we've been doing. ainsley: i know you have four beautiful children your beautiful wife, and thanks so much for always coming on our show and saying yes to our invitation and thanks so much for what you're doing our country needs faith and god more than ever. >> thank you, guys thanks for supporting us it really means the world. ainsley: you're welcome god bless you. more fox & friends moments away. >> ♪ ♪ advil targets pain at the source... ...while acetaminophen blocks pain signals. the future of pain relief is here. new advil dual action.
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>> the concludes the fastest three hours in morning television. we'll be back at the same time and same virtual couch tomorrow. >> trace: chaos in los angeles as protests grip cities across the country. officers firing tear gas and rubber bullets at protestors demonstrating after the shooting death of a black man by police last week. violent protests in seattle. salem, oregon, and rochester new york. all this minutes from now. but president trump back on the campaignl

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