tv FOX and Friends FOX News February 24, 2021 3:00am-6:00am PST
3:00 am
jillian: have a great day. make sure you download fox news app, scan qr code. todd: set your dvr4:00 a.m., record both shows. jillian: yes. bye. >> we have a rollover with someone trapped. >> it could clearly could have been so much worse. >> he's overcome a lot and he's had an incredible life and he will continue to have an incredible life. >> same facility that was open in the trump administration, that's when joe biden said there are kids in cages and now it's not under trump, it's under biden. >> dr. fauci is flip-flopping on masks. that's just the beginning of that. >> the lockdowns and the closing
3:01 am
of the schools are the worst policy decisions of my lifetime. >> by far the largest voice and big impact in our party. i don't know if he will run in 2024 or not, i'm sure he will win the nomination. >> the most passionate fans in the nba and to steal your energy once again. ♪ ♪ brian: clapping in madison square garden, about a thousand, not 18,000. various cities across the country able to watch nba game. straight to fox news alert, story we have been covering for the last 12 hours, tiger woods is responding and recovering at a los angeles hospital after serious car crash yesterday morning. steve: indeed, 7:12 morning, pacific time. golfer on his way to play when he lost control going off the road. the big question now what's -- what's next for him?
3:02 am
ainsley: poor guy has been through so much medically. jonathan hunt is live outside of a hospital as we are learning about his condition this morning. what are the doctors saying today? >> well, ainsley, steve, brian, let's get straight to that very good news first of all, a message posted to tiger woods twitter account just a few hours ago with the words we all wanted to hear. it read, quote, he, tiger is currently await, responsive and recovering in his hospital room. thank you to the wonderful doctors and hospital staff at harvard ucla medical center and the los angeles county sheriff's department and thanks to all of those. when you take a look at the video of the wreck, it could clearly have been so much worse. woods lucky to be alive according to la sheriff's deputy who was first on seen extricated from the vehicle with very serious leg injuries.
3:03 am
the chief medical officer at the hospital gave details on the legs in particular. fractures affecting the tibia and fibula bones, were stabilized with a combination of screws and pins. those injuries, of course, guys, sound pretty devastating for a golfer at tiger woods level and as he begins his recovery here at harbor ucla this morning. it is obviously going to be a very long road for tiger woods. steve, ainsley, brian. brian: absolutely, jonathan, thanks so much. you think about a year ago we got kobe bryant news. stunning reports about chopper crash and tragic death and his daughter and you hear about tiger woods again in california, again los angeles area.
3:04 am
you wonder what's going on, the fact is he was working for a golf channel streaming service doing something with some celebrities, due to do something with drew brees later and he's coming off of back surgery, and then in a rush it seems going in speeds that were too high according to sheriff, he skids off a road in which was known for accidents. they say experts say that it was because of the way this suv was able to encase him, the fact that he wore his seat belts, the fact that they had the air bags enabled him and not hit a pole or a tree or any object able to survive. steve: he went through two lanes of traffic and he hit a three and rolled down there. they are saying the vehicle saved his life. the former president of the united states who owns golf
3:05 am
courses who has been a long-time friend of tiger woods and gave him the medal of freedom just about a year ago was on with katie pavlich and talked about his friendship with one of the greatest golfers of all time. listen to this. >> i've known him for a long time and he was just always great to me. i've always just liked him. we had a good chemistry and always have and i'm just, you know, i'm a fan of his and as a golfer, he's just incredible. he was getting back to where it was and then a thing like this happens. don't forget he won the masters and when he won the masters people were not expecting that because he was just getting better from the back. and the back was a big problem but that shows you the level of talent that he has. you're not 100%. he's an incredible guy. ainsley: i watched that, it's on hbo a special about him,
3:06 am
documentary, his back pain, knee pain actually took him down to his knees at some point. i'm going to be praying for him because i feel so sorry for him. he's therein but a lot medically but he always comes back and so i hope he does after this. when you look at the images of the front of the car, the front of the car is completely gone and you understand why he has -- he's having trouble now with his legs and lindsey vaughn said i'm praying for tw. he dated her, the skier. brian: he's been famous since he was 15 year's old. we will talk to jim gray in about 2 hours, one of the first to interview tiger woods, kept track of him and does report him and might know him as well as anyone who doesn't play the game. i know we have to move on. when you grow up and you're beating people who are 20 years your senior by a lot and then
3:07 am
you kind of insulated, people thought he was -- maybe he was, when he has serious of injuries and personal setbacks, he found out there was a generation of golfers, the next one that was rooting for him. it turns out, one of the statements, it was pretty cool for the american team, our goal is make tiger great again, decided to come back and do it practicing a lot less, a lot less strain, then won the masters and america took him down, maybe he did some things that took him down but they root for comeback story. china is an issue, iran is always going to be a hurdle, european union on the same page it's going to be tough and the immigration problem. after some hiccups and a lot of
3:08 am
political rankling they managed to start building up the wall, security and getting control of migrant process, going ahead and doing deals with triangle countries and mexico and letting word know there's a way to come in the country and the border patrol seemed to be grateful for what was happening but then word came in that joe biden was going to change about the migrant policies, when it became clear they were going to stop building the wall and change those policies t word came from central and mexico too, that it's okay to come here and the remain in mexico policy was reversed and walked back, when they realized the people were coming through at great race between 13 and 17, what do we do with unaccompanied minors, i have an idea, let's build a facility and put them in. let's have a facility to put them in. the same facility it seems that donald trump was thought to be i guess being ridiculed for and protested against so you have
3:09 am
nowhere else to put them but when they went there controversy in suit. steve: keep in mind said i'm not a fan of donald trump's policies and if i'm elected i will undo do that stuff. he has been undoing as much as he can and what has happened in the last 72 hours is they have reactivated a migrant facility in carraso springs, texas. remember in the day that they are holding the kids in the cages, kids are in cages and the images with the chain-link fence and things like that. turns out, these are the images from the obama-biden administration, the blankets to keep them warm, it was during the obama administration when this policy started. trump continued it and yesterday
3:10 am
our white house correspondent peter doocy said, hey, wait a minute, it was depicted as one thing back when trump was in charge but now the new guys in charge and the washington post is not calling kids for cages but a migrant facility for children. here is peter. >> kamala harris said that this facility, putting people in this facility was human rights abuse by the united states government and joe biden said under trump there have been horrifies scenes of border -- at the border of kids being kept in cages. now it's not under trump it's under biden. >> this is not kids being kept in cages. this is a facility that was opened that's going to follow the same standards as other hhs facilities and not a replication, certainly not, never the intention of replicating the immigration policies of the past administration but we are in a circumstance where we are not going to expel unaccompanied
3:11 am
minors at the border. this is our effort to ensure that kids are not in close proximity and we are abiding by the health and safety standards. steve: so the administration is making clear these are not cages, but if you look at the images of where they are being housed, they look like shipping containers for the most part. lane greenwald said this, migrant facility for children, he said, when an absolutely sweet and lovely way to describe immigration detention centers, it's been a while since trump was president so my memory isn't perfect but i vaguely recall a different phrase used back then but that's the beauty of human language. it evolves. ainsley: jen psaki said we will not replicate the last administration. guys, this is the same facility, exact same facility. exactly, i thought she said we will not replicate what they did
3:12 am
in the past administration. it's the same thing it appears to be and keep in mind the kids in cages photos that were sent around were from the obama administration era. aoc wants open borders. this is actually a tweet. sorry, she said, it's not okay, never has been okay, no matter the administration or party and ilhan omar tweeted, this is a choice and kamala harris said last july in 2019, she said trump pushed policies that has been putting babies in cages at the border. she called human rights abuse. steve: let me at one more important point and jen psaki said that the main difference is because of coronavirus everybody has to be spaced out.
3:13 am
brian: the issue with the fencing was not to put kids in cages, to separate them from the adults which a lot of think is the humane thing to do. that dates back to 2014 with barack obama and under president trump. keep in mind, america didn't go into these countries and said i need all your children and i like to put them in our country in the meantime i will put them in facilities. they are streaming across the borders, you don't open up your front door and says who wants to come in and if you did, i don't know anything about you, i have to keep you separate. there's a logic that is left, american politics. keep in mind, what f you get into power, you will have to deal with later. guess what, democrats, this is later. sean hannity pointed something very interesting out last night about this crisis which is biden made. >> let me make a prediction, jen psaki, she will circle back on
3:14 am
this one since the situation at the southern border only going to get dramatically worse. that you can take to the bank. biden's open border policy are a green light for migrants and in the coming weeks and months, mark my words, there will be another huge massive uptick in illegal immigration. brian: keep in mind, the people that have to do this, round people up men and women, they have to put themselves in harm's way to do that, there might be fine people coming across the border, we don't know. they are in jeopardy, they are sitting in the middle of nowhere are, force to comes to school with few people in them, tough job which is 120 degrees in the summer and cold in the winter. so they're in the middle of it. some good news for me. a judge has continued to ban the enforcement of joe biden's deportation pause in texas, remember they sued to make sure they were going to ban all deportations for 100 days as joe
3:15 am
biden evaluates the situation, they sued and the judge says you can't do that and the judges reinforce that. that's immigration. this is a biden-made crisis that didn't have to happen. steve: and the reason we pointed out to show you the hypocrisy when donald trump was president, the migrant detention centers were presented in a very harsh light but now that we have fast-forward into the biden administration, you read the washington post article about the so-called migrant facilities for children and it almost sounds like they are at a fun summer camp which is not the case. all right, meanwhile, when you look back at the devastating number of people who have died during covid here in this country we are north of half a million which is jaw-dropping and nobody thought it was going to be that bad. you know what, because we knew so little in the beginning because it originated apparently from china and they were not forthcoming. our federal government and our doctors made some mistakes in
3:16 am
advice to the nation in particular dr. fauci who for the most part became the face of covid in america. here is just some of the flip-flops including the devastating one about masks and so much more. watch this. >> right now at this moment there's no need to change anything that you're doing on a day-to-day basis. that was probably towards the middle toward the end of january. right now in the united states people should not be walking around with masks. putting a mask on yourself, if everybody does that, we are each protecting each other. >> my parents have already gotten their second dose, does that mean it's okay for them to spend time with their grandchildren? >> i'm not going to make a recommendation now. ainsley: everyone is just looking to this one person but if you get a disease, many people in your family would probably say, let's get several opinions, let's get a second opinion before we decide how we are going to treat this and
3:17 am
what's the best option. brit hume made the point that we need to be listening to more than one person, more than one expert. he said he's an epidemiologist but we have to consider the kids and listen to this. >> the problem i think with dr. fauci is not so much with him, him as it is with our fall year as a society to recognize that he is a -- an expert in a narrow field. he's an epidemiologist. his job is to fight this disease. he's not an expert in child psychology or children's education, he's not an authority on the u.s. economy and the damage it may be done to it. that's not in his belly wick. when they talk about follow the science, which science, economic is a science, cardiology is science and if you listen to only some scientists instead of looking through a broader lens, you end up with the kinds of
3:18 am
policy decisions that we've made. ainsley: the thing is when you hear all of the flip-flopping, wear a mask, don't wear a mask, wear two masks, it gives the question, what do they really know. brian: while they figure it out our lives are destroyed. this is what i'm saying, anthony fauci should not be appearing on any show and i know he wants to appear on all of them without a psychologist because if you're the president you have to take the psychological cost with your recommendation. it's not just one alley, following the science and following other scientists like psychology, think about what it does to kids, think about what it does to adults who lose their job and think of what it does to seniors who can interact with people in waning years and the things you're looking for to see family and friends, when you take that away you are hoping to end their life. that's why an epidemiologist has
3:19 am
to sit next to a psychologist and next time you say to yourself we can't open up bars and restaurants, why is tennessee and florida doing that. and you can't have one and not the other. don't pretend that california has it right when florida clearly has it right because their lives are not destroyed. they are working their way through it and we have countless great news about vaccines and the decrease in infections and deaths and hospitalizations. why don't we ever bring up the good news anymore? i'm very disturbed by that. steve: brit hume said a great deal of unfortunate responses belongs to the news media which has been terrible on this and keep in mind the news media would hear whatever dr. fauci said and sometimes it was contrary to what donald trump said they said, the guy who is the expert says we should do this and that's how we got to where we are today. all right, 6:19 in the east
3:20 am
3:22 am
3:24 am
brian: sheriffs across the u.s. are taking stance on progressive agenda and they launched group called protect america now and on a mission and get everybody on the same thing. one to have leaders of the group is county sheriff mark lahm. sheriff, why was it necessary to form the group? >> like a lot of americans i was uncomfortable with the way the country is heading in. we want to be able to stand for
3:25 am
the rule of law in the country and fight against bad policies and orders like what we are seeing with the immigration stuff that you guys just talked about and, of course, we have seen constitutional rights and we have taken the oath and protect the constitution like second amendment and we took this serious, put the organization together and we will stand with the american people to fight against these things. brian: you're trying to educate people to know it's not your point of view, it's america's point of view. you don't have anything without law enforcement. you can't revitalize a city without law enforcement. >> that's one to have biggest issues, the rule of law is what defines us from so many other countries that have constitutions and democracies. it's our strength of the rule of law that we've had for so many years that have made america great and we are watching that deteriorate right in front of our eyes by our own politicians. brian: it's amazing, the mission
3:26 am
of your group is to educate the rule of law and activate the movement and communities across the u.s. your job is to protect us and it's, for example, the immigration, it's really not a political thing. you just told me you had 45 pursuits at the border of late. everyone is in danger when that happens, why is immigration everybody's problem? >> absolutely. we are not even on the border. we are 60 miles off the border, we had 45 pursuits in the last 2 months. that's reckless to our communities, but it's everybody's problem because everybody thinks well, everybody is going to stay there in arizona and that's not the case. anybody that comes into this country illegally, majority of those people travel throughout this country and like you guys talked about earlier, this is not about immigration anymore. if you care about human rights like kamala said, you should absolutely care about immigration and border security because people's rights are being violated on a daily basis
3:27 am
for human trafficking and drug trafficking and we need to stop that and that's why we started protect america now so that the american people know how they can help us, the sheriffs, to protect our communities. brian: and sheriff, less people like you who want to wear the badge and that's what people should understand. you keep making you guys and you ladies the bad guys, nobody is going to want to do it. >> absolutely. we are seeing that in other states that are passing terrible laws and getting rid of immunity for officers. it's hard enough to hire as it is and these policies and procedures and executive orders and what they are doing is only going the make it harder. the last administration we saw real increase and we saw real progress but now we are just watching that go down the drain in a month. it's crazy. brian: crime doesn't know a party. when you're sitting waiting for a subway and you get thrown on the tracks because you checked your watch, that's an issue. and illegal immigrant comes and robs your house, they don't care if you're a republican or
3:28 am
democrat. that's an issue. i believe that's part of your mission, final thoughts. >> absolutely. we want to get people now to protectamericanow.com. we want the american people to join our sheriffs, we are your last line of defense for freedom. we will stand up for the rule of law and fight against bad things like the immigration and we are certainly going to protect your constitutional right and we hope you stand shoulder to shoulder for us, go to protect america and check it out. brian: you don't want to wait for the next election. protectamericanow.com. appreciate you sharing your story. >> appreciate you having me on. brian: meanwhile straight ahead new york's nursing criesing isn't the only blunder and spotlight on how he has treated people with disabilities. our next guest with her son on the autism spectrum shares her
3:29 am
story. if your dry eye symptoms keep coming back, inflammation in your eye might be to blame. looks like a great day for achy, burning eyes over-the-counter eye drops typically work by lubricating your eyes and may provide temporary relief. ha! these drops probably won't touch me. xiidra works differently, targeting inflammation that can cause dry eye disease. what is that? xiidra, noooo! it can provide lasting relief. xiidra is the only fda approved treatment specifically for the signs and symptoms of dry eye disease. one drop in each eye, twice a day. don't use if you're allergic to xiidra. common side effects include eye irritation, discomfort or blurred vision when applied to the eye, and unusual taste sensation.
3:30 am
don't touch container tip to your eye or any surface. after using xiidra, wait 15 minutes before reinserting contacts. got any room in your eye? talk to an eye doctor about twice-daily xiidra. i prefer you didn't! xiidra. not today, dry eye. did you know you can go to libertymutual.com to customizes your car insurance so you only pay for what you need? really? i didn't-- aah! ok. i'm on vibrate. aaah! only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ germ proof your car with armor all disinfectant. kills 99.9% of bacteria and viruses.
3:31 am
we're carvana, the company who invented car vending machines and buying a car 100% online. now we've created a brand-new way for you to sell your car. whether it's a year old or a few years old. we wanna buy your car. so go to carvana and enter your license plate answer a few questions. and our techno wizardry calculates your car's value and gives you a real offer in seconds. when you're ready, we'll come to you, pay you on the spot and pick up your car, that's it. so ditch the old way of selling your car, and say hello to the new way at carvana. i've lost count of how many asthma attacks i've had. but my nunormal with nucala? fewer asthma attacks. nucala is a once-monthly add-on injection for severe eosinophilic asthma. not for sudden breathing problems. allergic reactions can occur. get help right away for swelling of face, mouth, tongue, or trouble breathing. infections that can cause shingles have occurred. don't stop steroids unless told by your doctor. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection. may cause headache, injection-site reactions, back pain, and fatigue. ask your doctor about nucala.
3:32 am
3:33 am
steve: cuomo cover-up, new york andrew cuomo facing investigation on how he faced the covid problem. our next guest is mother of adult child in the autism spectrum. the plight of the disabled deserves a spotlight as well. maria mcfadden. >> good morning. steve: when the government signed the directive that sent people to nursing homes regarding the hospital that had coronavirus back to the nursing homes, there was a begin directive to people in group homes. so i know your son james, you considered a group home for him for his challenges and you were just started to think about it and that put the intent on your head and that is this is not just about nursing homes, this is about a lot of different
3:34 am
kinds of group homes. >> yeah, so we are part of a community of parents, young adults on the autism spectrum so we were thinking that james might want to be with his peers and that was something that we might begin to look into and then the pandemic hit and as time went on i started hearing really scary stories and then when the nursing home scandal really hit the news, you know, i said, okay, they are not talking about the same exact memo that went to these group homes, congregate settings for the disabled, so i started. i'm a writer, i work at the human rights review and i started doing some researching and i found that a study in june put out by professors that i
3:35 am
believe that people with intellectual disabilities are 2 and a half times more likely to have serious effects and deaths from covid which is actually larger percentage than the minorities and then i found that there was a whole group of families called new york against developmental disabilities who had to come together in the spring. so the nursing home was the same for all of the congregate settings, infected individuals went back to the homes and parents could not visit their families at all because there was a blanket autocratic rule that nobody could visit. steve: right. the last point is so important because a lot of young men and
3:36 am
women that are facing challenges, intellectual challenges and people in these homes for the disabled, suddenly for them to be isolated because that was the conventional wisdom, keep away from everybody, for them to have their support team, their family or their friends around them and not next to them because they are isolating, a lot -- that just makes them regress, whatever progress they had made they start to regress. >> absolutely. and my own son who is home with us and we love him completely has regressed because all of his activities were ended so i've seen it and i can only imagine how, you know, the heartbreak of the parents seeing their children regressing and not being able to do anything about it. steve: sure. one of the other things is when governor cuomo said that, you know, apparently hospitals, ems, nursing facilities and dialysis centers for eligible for aid with personal protective equipment but that was not the
3:37 am
case for group homes that we are talking about right now for the challenge and you say the state government has basically no plan to protect those with special need and that is jaw-dropping that such a large portion of our health care and trying to look out for these folks with challenges has completely been forgotten. >> absolutely. this is one of the most vulnerable populations in new york state and you judge the government by how it treats its most vulnerable citizens and to add insult to injury the parents were hit in the summer with news of big budget cuts across the board for their families, so it's -- it's really distressing and, you know, again, that kind of not being allowed to test for covid. a lot of group homes have
3:38 am
individuals and a staff member that don't have place to isolate. parents had to raise money on their own. steve: terrible. >> i talked to a woman who raised money and bought 40,000 masks and she and her husband delivered them to homes in long island because she couldn't get anyone, local politician or the governor to do anything. steve: well, a lot of people had not heard about this until you wrote the op-ed. thank you very much for shining a light on the big problem in new york state. you bet. 21 minutes before the top of the hour. big story, tiger woods in the hospital recovering from serious injury in rollover crash. update on his condition and what led to the accident after the
3:39 am
break. with one companion that's been with me for millennia; hedging the risks you choose and those that choose you. the physical seam of a digital world, traded with a touch. my strongest ally and my closest asset. the gold standard, so to speak ;) people call my future uncertain. but there's one thing i am sure of... so you're a small business, or a big one. you were thriving, but then... oh. ah.
3:40 am
okay. plan, pivot. how do you bounce back? you don't, you bounce forward, with serious and reliable internet. powered by the largest gig speed network in america. but is it secure? sure it's secure. and even if the power goes down, your connection doesn't. so how do i do this? you don't do this. we do this, together. bounce forward, with comcast business.
3:41 am
advanced non-small cell lung cancer can change everything. but your first treatment could be a chemo-free combination of two immunotherapies that works differently. it could mean a chance to live longer. opdivo plus yervoy is for adults newly diagnosed with non-small cell lung cancer that has spread and that tests positive for pd-l1 and does not have an abnormal egfr or alk gene. opdivo plus yervoy is the first and only fda-approved combination of two immunotherapies opdivo plus yervoy equals... a chance for more starry nights. more sparkly days. more big notes. more small treasures. more family dinners. more private desserts. opdivo and yervoy can cause your immune system to attack healthy parts of your body during and after treatment. these problems can be severe and lead to death. see your doctor right away if you have a cough; chest pain; shortness of breath;
3:42 am
irregular heartbeat; diarrhea; constipation; severe stomach pain, nausea or vomiting; dizziness; fainting; eye problems; extreme tiredness; changes in appetite, thirst or urine; rash; itching; confusion; memory problems; muscle pain or weakness; joint pain; flushing; or fever. these are not all the possible side effects. problems can occur at the same time and some more often when opdivo is used with yervoy. tell your doctor about all medical conditions including immune or nervous system problems, if you've had or plan to have an organ or stem cell transplant, or received chest radiation. here's to a chance for more horizons. a chance to live longer. ask your doctor about chemo-free opdivo plus yervoy. thank you to all involved in our clinical trials. carl shopped for the lowest mortgage rate and chose amerisave, a choice he'll never regret... ...unlike the choice to hitch hike. ahhh! which ruined his hand modeling career... it's over. don't worry, carl. things are looking up. visit amerisave.com now. lower mortgage rates mean higher savings. steve: back with fox news alert,
3:43 am
golf legend tiger woods recovering from emergency surgery to repair serious right-leg injuries from a rollover crash yesterday. la county sheriff reveals she was conscious when first responders arrived. ainsley: here with more on tiger's impact "fox & friends" host will cain. good morning. thank the good lord he was wearing his seat belt. >> absolutely. absolutely. it's interesting and i heard you talking about watching the documentary about tiger. we learned so much about tiger through that documentary and if you followed golf and his career, the definition of his career has changed. if you would have watched tiger for the whole decade there's one word that would have come to mind, domination, he absolutely dominated anyone who stepped up to compete against him. but in watching his career unfold now the word that defines tiger woods i believe is
3:44 am
redemption. it is one where he's overcoming some of his own demons, injuries in the past and this might be just another chapter in the redemption of tiger woods. it's certainly allow point for him again right now but i will never count him out and if you want one image of redemption, ainsley, the image for me is the 2019 masters win, after he wins he's walking off the course and he know the role his dad played in his life, positive influence, at times negative influence but you know the role his dad played, walked away and there's his son charlie, he's now the father, his son wait to go greet him, the hug, if you didn't cry or misty, i don't know, you might be dead inside. there it is, that's the redemption and i would expect to see redemption from tiger woods. steve: still recovering from the back surgery, vertebrae fuse and
3:45 am
has to learn to have a change-up or sinker but i will bring this up too, is that he is somebody that has overcome a lot but if he's able to get through this and find a way to get on those legs and find a way to golf, he would be similar to another legend, bobby jones and broke both of his legs and came back. he knows history. this could be another passenger of history. will: it could, brian. let's set it in context, putting it against all odds, the idea that tiger woods can come back, the idea to win majors is against all odds. let's put that into two pieces of context. first, i was reading about the injury, type of break in his leg. we are familiar with clean breaks, there's the spiral fracture that everyone fears. tiger has one that i'm not going to attempt to pronounce, breaks
3:46 am
and splinters, compound, exposed. alex smith, quarterback from the washington football team suffered fracture of lowered leg and acquired flesh-eating bacteria that absolute destroyed his leg. against all to decide, alex smith was starting this year. you can happen, you can overcome the injuries. can tiger win again, i believe, brian, hogan had a terrible car accident, broke his legs and hog and won 3 masters and 3 majors in his 40's as did nicholas. tieing certify 45. the idea of him winning more majors is already statistically improbable. but it's not impossible. look at the lesson of alex smith and great golfers in the past and look at it and tiger has been defined by redemption.
3:47 am
>> i should have sed ben hogan and not bobby jones. steve: he has a good feeling that he can come back and all of our fingers across. will, thank you very much for joining us on this very busy wednesday. all right, meanwhile we are celebrating black history month, lawrence jones paid attention to savannah, georgia to see how they are helping more people to learn about the past. that's coming up. ♪ ♪ ♪ the holidays weren't exactly smooth sledding
3:48 am
this year, eh santa? no, but we came through smelling of mistletoe. the now platform lets us identify problems before they became problems. if only it could identify where my ball went. this you? hmm... no, mine had green lights. whatever your business is facing. let's workflow it. maybe i should workflow my swing... servicenow.
3:51 am
>> we are celebrating black history all month long here on the fox news channel by showcasing the rich history of the african-american community. "fox & friends" analyst lawrence jones joins us now to show one way that's happening in savannah, georgia, hey, lawrence. >> savannah is one of america's oldest cities with tons of historical landmarks that have helped shaped black history and one way to see to see sites, a public bus.
3:52 am
i got a firsthand look at how transit known as cat is helping locals and tourists explore just in time for black history month. take a look. >> i'm in savannah, georgia at a bus station and i know this may not be the location where you you would think i would learn black history but this is a means of transportation. >> i'm ready to take you on the savannah black history tour. >> let's get moving. >> so tell me a little bit about why you guys decided to do this? >> as you know, february is black history month so what better way to celebrate some of the amazing black history landmark that is we have here in savannah than by creating a self-guided tour than transit bus. >> his view is to complicate history. you had white masters and you had the slave corridors. free african-americans were
3:53 am
actually afforded the opportunity to be buried. >> wow. >> founded by some of savannah's first american entrepreneurs. >> the history is rich and i think this is our first stop, right? >> this is our first stop. this is the first african baptist church. >> had beginnings and the congregation took money that they could have used to purchase freedom and decide today build a sanctuary to god. >> there's holes in the grounds. there's tunnels that go to savannah river. when you look at the holes, the finish floor and the tunnels we know it must have been part of an underground railroad. >> wow, take me through a journey. >> these are the new pews, they were in 1901. >> you said original pews in the back, it's like markings right here. >> yes, sir. >> this is really incredible. >> kind of hard to leave the church to go to another spot but
3:54 am
here we are at at the savannah art museum. >> within one country, you could have several different cultures, several different languages. >> made of tercata, textiles, wood. >> it's used in annual ceremony by people in nigeria in honoring ancestors. >> this comes from cameroon. this shows incorporated into the object itself. we are proud just because black history month isn't just one month for us, it's a year-round celebration. >> please enter from the front door. >> our next stop is beach institute. >> one of the first schools to educate african-americans in the city of savannah back in 1800s. >> it's a flagship museum that brings to life the african-american history and culture here in savannah.
3:55 am
this is a jewel in our community and like any treasure it needs to be lifted up and needs to be cherished and need to be celebrated. black history is american history. we must tell our story. we must keep those stories alive. >> we went to a tour about our history. >> so savannah is the great place to come to learn all about the journey of african-american life, of african-american history here in america. >> now, ainsley, you can get more info on the tour at cat.org. she put nit a nutshell, black history is american history. i was fascinated in black church where people could have bought their freedom and instead build a sanctuary, they knew that
3:56 am
underneath there was a river going to the under ground railroad and to get their way to freedom. it's an amazing story. ainsley: that was fascinating. we were amazed by that. thank you so much for that tour. it was just -- we do need to keep the stories alive. i appreciate you doing this for us, lawrence. thank you. if you want more information as lawrence catchcat.org/blackhistorymonth20 21. president biden's pick to lead health and human services grilled by lawmakers over lack of experience in the field. closer look at his qualifications coming up next.
3:57 am
i've lost count of how many asthma attacks i've had. but my nunormal with nucala? fewer asthma attacks. nucala is a once-monthly add-on injection for severe eosinophilic asthma. not for sudden breathing problems. allergic reactions can occur. get help right away for swelling of face, mouth, tongue, or trouble breathing. infections that can cause shingles have occurred. don't stop steroids unless told by your doctor. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection. may cause headache, injection-site reactions, back pain, and fatigue. ask your doctor about nucala. find your nunormal with nucala.
3:58 am
(male announcer) to everyone in our great outdoor family, you may be feeling a little cooped up but don't forget-- there are still rocks to be skipped; trails to be trampled; fish to be caught. the great outdoors are wide open and they're calling us like never before. in these trying times, we need nature more than ever. we need nature to remind us that like a sunrise or the turning of the tides, these challenges will pass. we need nature to help us heal and reconnect with the ones we love the most. so when you can, get back to nature.
3:59 am
get back to each other. we're here for you. dinner with the drakes...tonight. alexa, ask buick to start my encore gx. ♪ ♪ four filets. you know this dinner's for their... kids. thanks for watching them. where's the pizza? the buick encore gx. current eligible non-gm owners get nearly $4,300 purchase allowance on 2020 buick encore gx models. how great is it that we get to tell everybody how liberty mutual customizes your car insurance current eligible non-gm owners get nearly $4,300 purchase so you only pay for what you need? i mean it... uh-oh, sorry... oh... what? i'm an emu! no, buddy! only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty, liberty, liberty, liberty. ♪
4:00 am
♪ ♪ ♪ >> we have a roll other with someone trapped. >> i'm sick to my stomach, i hope he's all right. will: this might be another chapter in the redemption of tiger woods. >> as attorney generally look for common cause. >> i'm not sold. you voted against a ban on partial birth abortion, why? >> we may not always agree. >> do you want to country to be turned into the california model, i can tell you from living here, no. >> a teacher under fire for now deleted tweet reading, quote, all the rich white parents suddenly concerned about mental
4:01 am
health can take a seat. president biden is reopening a controversial texas facility. >> same facility that was built in trump administration and now it's not under trump, it's under biden. >> these are not kids in cages. >> we want the american people to join us here. we are your last line of defense for freedom. brian: tiger woods in hospital this morning after serious car crash yesterday morning. steve: golf legend was on his way to a tv shoot when he lost control and went off the road and we saw the crashed car. ainsley: jonathan hunt live outside of the hospital with his condition. hey, jonathan. jonathan: steve, ainsley, brian, good morning to all of you, tiger woods long journey to recovery begins at harbor ucla
4:02 am
medical center and when you take a look at the scenes of the crash, you know that it is going to be a long road for tiger woods. he suffered terrible leg injuries in particular to his right leg and the chief medical officer at the hospital here issued a statement via woods twitter account detailing some of those injuries saying, quote, fractures affecting both upper and lower portions of the tibia and fibu la bones were stabilized by inserting rod of the tibia and foot and ankle were stabilized with a combination of screws and pins. the sheriff's deputy first on the scene when the accident happened yesterday morning says he is just surprised that woods got out with his life. listen here. >> that specific speech of roadway is one of our trouble
4:03 am
spots, i've seen fatal traffic collusions so i will say it's fortunate that mr. woods was able to come out of this alive. jonathan: now the tweet that i mentioned via tiger woods account said he was responsive and now recovering. the tweet also said, we thank everyone for the overwhelming support and messages during this tough time, but, steve, ainsley and brian, when you hear the doctor talk about those injuries, it's quite clear that tiger woods is going to have a lot more tough time through what will be a very long rehab process. steve, ainsley, brian. brian: he was recovering from a back surgery anyway and having trouble making the masters. thanks so much, jonathan, appreciate it. brian: a guy who knows him well, played with donald trump, brad, welcome, what was your reaction
4:04 am
when you heard the news, how relieved are you now? >> catties told me last night that one of the legs was especially bad. yesterday i went in area where tiger and so many pga players live and i was out on a construction site for a golf course renovation and my phone was zipping off the hook but i was in the meeting and i had messages and had no idea what to think and saw one of the great friends of tiger's and great friends, saw his interview around concern and human nature is how this happened. i really think now everybody is just like, hey, is he going to be okay, is he going to be alive and it's great to see that miami this morning. steve: one of your neighbors in the jupiter area is justin
4:05 am
thomas. here he is talking about tiger, watch. >> right. >> i'm sick to my stomach, you know, it hurts to see one of your -- my closest friends get in an accident and, man, i just hope he's all right. just worried for his kids, you know, i'm sure they are struggling. steve: brad, a couple of weeks ago after the super bowl we were talking about how one of the amazing things about tom brady was he's the greatest player, greatest quarterback ever and to watch the greatest ever in realtime be able to see him and see him win over and over, you know, that's something that we didn't have with babe ruth and people like that. that's one of the things of tiger woods, one to have greatest of all time, towards the end of the career but we just want one more. we want one more as bad as he
4:06 am
does. >> he was the host of this event, he even said he was hoping to play in the masters and having won a couple years ago, three away from jack, maybe he could tie and reach jack nicholas' record. people like dustin johnson and showing the generation of players what kind of person he is really. ainsley: i know that you have gotten the experience of being able the play with former president trump and with tiger woods in the past. take us behind the scenes, what was it like, what happened? steve: thanksgiving 2017 jupiter court. >> it was right after tiger's back surgery. he was coming back from over 800
4:07 am
days being away. i got invite today play by president trump and tiger and i was thrilled to play with tiger. i played with him when i was on pga tour when he was 16 year's old but to get to see him come back and hit it right out there with dustin johnson who is a long as player in the tour then to see him feel good and hit shots, that was a special day for me in a lot of days. brian: i had a chance to interview him about 5 or 6 times and i found him engaging and well-read and smart, but brad, talk about how he's perceived now as when he came in? the guy is on the tour, when he got all the wins, made it look easy, obviously resentment but the resentment seemed to have dissipated now, what's the reality from the inside? >> he's become a friend as well as a fellow competitor in his
4:08 am
peak in his hay day, in early 2000's throughout the stretch, it wasn't like he got close to many players and now he's accepting of so many players. you think about u.s. champion last year. they watched tiger, they seek him for instruction, advice, they look at him as a dad. their two kids live here in palm where i live. he was out here a couple of weeks for charlie's birthday. at least a dozen kids. he's much more relatable now. i think he's somebody that the entire world is pulling for. when you look at the twitter response yesterday of all the great golfers, jack nicholas, justin thomas, like a michael jordan. brian: brad, i want to add one story that he can relate to and
4:09 am
talked about winning a tournament, he was so happy, new wife at the time and let's go out and celebrate and he looked at her, no, no, i'm expected to win. we have another tournament. describe the mindset, you never really enjoyed the spectacular moments. >> a lot of greats are like that. i'm sure tom brady is thinking how he's going to win another super bowl in tampa and tiger was like that for sure. when he won the masters 2 years ago, with his kids there, it was a stamp on his career, they read what he had done or seen it on social media or video, but now to experience that, i really felt like he's culminated everything that he could ever want to do in golf and with all due respect to jack nicholas, it's hard to win like tiger has won and do it with all the pressures in the media and he's played certainly the best golf
4:10 am
ever in certain amount of time, tiger woods. steve: thank you very much for joining us from palm beach. 7:10 here in the east. let's talk a little bit about what happened yesterday on capitol hill. republican senators an democrats got their chance to grill joe biden's nominee for the health and human services secretary, the former attorney general for the great state of california xavier becerra. here is the interesting thing, health and human services. you would think that that person would be a doctor, right? he was attorney general in california and yesterday the republicans really let him have it. wait a minute, you have zero background in the health profession and as mitt romney pointed out, you voted against banning late-term abortion which mitt romney could not believe,
4:11 am
but nonetheless he was in the hot seat yesterday, another day yesterday. if you missed it, it was something. watch this. >> as attorney general, i worked with my colleagues in other states both republicans and democrats to make treatments made available, i will look for common cause and i will work with you to improve the health and dignity of the american people. >> i'm not sold yet. i'm not sure that you have the necessary experience or skills to do this job at this moment. >> i'm a physician, what would you as attorney if i were nominated to be the united states attorney general. >> most people agree that partial birth abortion is awful, you voted against a ban on partial birth abortion, why? >> when i come to the issues i understand we may not always agree on where to go, but i think we can find some common ground on these issues because everyone wants to make sure that if you have an opportunity, you will live a healthy life.
4:12 am
steve: mitt romney responded, we are not going to reach common ground on partial birth abortion. during a pandemic, we are still in the middle of it, we are going down the mountain on it but you should probably have a doctor in that particular department and that is why he faces some really tough shredding going forward and because we do not know from joe manchin how he's going to vote. there's a possibility he may not be confirmed, ainsley. ainsley: ric grenell, former acting dni, he warned against this nomination. >> he's a politician that loves the power, keeps the information, keeps the information away from the people and is having a hay day and let me just say, in sacramento, we have one party rule. we have a media that is afraid of the one-party rule because the democrats always win and they don't want to get on the wrong side. he has been unlearned in california with no checks and we
4:13 am
really have a problem and senators need to understand, look at the california model right now. do you want the country to be turned into the california model? i can tell you from living here in this great state, no. ainsley: group of them from california that were on the list of nominees for these cabinet positions, kamala harris, super, super progressive, very progressive, very liberal, not a moderate, in fact, sued president trump i think more than 100 times i saw on fox news yesterday. so, you know, this is -- exactly. more of the progressive party really seeping in to washington. brian: yeah, it's a little scary, he's a lockdown artist and that's all we need in this country. more people that want to lock down the country and give us more of the magic of california and being sarcastic but let's transition. let's talk about schools in california. last week we told you the story and shared a zoom call video of teachers mocking parents, saying, yeah, they want to go
4:14 am
back to school because they want babysitters back. ainsley: a lot of them had to resign. brian: the whole board did. across the bay we have it again. deleted tweet from bethany myer, secretary, listen to this, quote, all the rich white parents suddenly concerned about mental health can take a seat, most of them are causing kids anxiety by pressuring them to complete -- asynchronous -- i don't know what that means, sorry, not sorry. also in the same story, a mom says, black moms still want kids returned to school, being home have caused stress for us and for them. how ridiculous and mind-numbing, stupidity is that. why do people have to bring race into everything when i think
4:15 am
there are 600,000 pediatricians who just got together and signed a petition to get kids back to school because the psychological damage they are already seeing and she thinks it's a matter of color. steve: well, her tweet is no longer available. we don't know whether or not the school board or her union told her to get rid of it but it is now deleted and, in fact, apparently her account is now in private mode. it is unclear if she has been disciplined. there was a parent, aeileen, one of the parents in the school district. when i saw her tweet, talking about all the rich white parents, i felt like i was punched in the gut. this is has been such a difficult time for my family. this hurts me on a deep and personal level. frankly, we are all at a breaking point right now and i think we need to be unified. the strange bullying tactics
4:16 am
seem misplaced and frankly offensive. the union, the school board statement in a minute, but the union came out and said, look, we are making progress on coronavirus, but they said in order to get there together, everyone in our oakland unified school district community will need to treat each other with respect and empathy as we move forward. it's unclear if they're talking about the parents or if they're talking about the teachers who -- it is so vague on what exactly they are doing, ainsley. ainsley: we saw one tweet from a staff member that left many parents disrespected an insulted. it has been shared numerous times by upset families and the staff member has since apologized for the tweet. i hope the staff member has learned from her mistake because she's saying, all rich white parents suddenly concerned about mental health can take a seat. brian: we know people are
4:17 am
suffering the most, the ones in challenging economic situations, the minority community. the children's hospital associations come out and asking lawmakers to find a way to open up the schools for in-person learning. they see 20% increase in suicide rates and 40% in behavioral disorders and this woman thinks it's because white parents feel entitled. it is sickening and gavin newsom wants to prevent a recall, open up the state and force these unions to open up the classroom. if not, he's probably going to be looking for another job. ainsley: let's hand it over to jillian, she has headlines. jillian: good morning, let's begin with fox news alert. overnight a federal judge banned order indefinitely. the judge issuing preliminary insuction which argue the deportation clause violated federal law. it comes after the judge had issued a temporary restraining order that was set to expire on tuesday. president biden is planning to visit texas on friday, stop
4:18 am
comes at 3.4 million people are still without fresh running water following last week's winter storm. in san antonio the sheriff launching an investigation into 15 possible storm-related deaths. >> we are going to look at each and every one of these deaths and any others. we do intend to file criminal charges on somebody if it's found that that negligence caused somebody's death. jillian: overnight the chairwoman and four other board members who see the state's power grid all stepping down. governor gavin newsom signs $7.6 billion relief package, 600-dollar stimulus checks for residents including many illegals and $2 billion in grant and comes as newsom faces recall and closing in on 2 million signatures and how about this, after 77 years, a decorated world war ii hero's postcard is finally delivered. bill caldwell wrote this letter
4:19 am
about his first week serving in the british royal navy. his family just receiving it nearly 8 decades later. now his 6 children are getting a glimpse into his late father's experience. the royal says postcard was recently put in the system rather than being stuck or lost. i don't know how that was recently put into the system but pretty amazing that they at least got it. >> it's not like they didn't clean the room for 77 years. eventually got there. jillian, thank you very much. meanwhile, 7:20 in the east. a new report claims john kerry and other biden officials met with the people from iran during the trump presidency to try to undermine president trump. a former state department employee is going to weigh in on that coming up plus new york times columnist call coming
4:20 am
right up (noise of fridge opening) guy fieri! ya know, if you wanna make that sandwich the real deal, ya gotta focus on the bread layers. king's hawaiian sliced bread makes everything better! ♪ (angelic choir) ♪ umm, honey...why is guy fieri in our kitchen? i don't know. i'm booking you a one-way ticket to flavortown with a king's hawaiian meatball sub. ♪ ♪ i gotta go. your neighbor needs king's hawaiian bread. hey, i got you. guy fieri?
4:22 am
if you have obstructive sleep apnea and you're often tired during the day, you could be missing out on amazing things. sunosi can help you stay awake for them. once daily sunosi improves wakefulness in adults with excessive daytime sleepiness due to obstructive sleep apnea. sunosi worked for up to nine hours at 12 weeks in a clinical study. sunosi does not treat the cause of osa or take the place of your cpap. continue to use any treatments or devices as prescribed by your doctor. don't take sunosi if you've taken an maoi in the last 14 days. sunosi may increase blood pressure and heart rate, which can increase your risk of heart attack, stroke, heart failure, or death. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure. sunosi can cause symptoms such as anxiety, problems sleeping, irritability, and agitation. other common side effects include headache, nausea, and decreased appetite. tell your doctor if you develop any of these, as your dose may need to be adjusted or stopped. amazing things happen during the day. sunosi can help you stay awake for whatever amazes you.
4:23 am
visit sunosi.com and talk to your doctor about sunosi today. oh, you think this is just a community center? no. it's way more than that. cause when you hook our community up with the internet... boom! look at ariana, crushing virtual class. jamol, chasing that college dream. michael, doing something crazy. this is the place where we can show the world what we can do. comcast is partnering with 1000 community centers to create wifi-enabled lift zones, so students from low-income families can get the tools they need to be ready for anything. oh we're ready. ♪ ♪
4:24 am
brian: iran says it will not back down on the u.s. of nuclear activity and may enrich uranium up to 60% and news that john kerry and obama/officials met with iran to undermine trump in 2018 and 2019. iranian refugee who worked on the state department under president trump. first off, how wrong is this, a previous administration undermining a current administration saying hold on, don't listen? that's antiamerican. >> ryan, that's exactly right.
4:25 am
what john kerry did is antiamerican -- [inaudible] >> one can't help but to think about what happened with general flynn who was punished for having conversations with foreign government and john kerry did this when he was out of office. you have to wonder what exactly john kerry was advising the iranians because they want to hold iranians accountable and -- which was the strongest -- [inaudible] >> so what is it that john kerry has been telling them? it's kind of unbelievable and, brian, what the biden administration is doing is that they are making a number of unilateral concessions to the iranian regime. there was an announcement that
4:26 am
washington is working with -- why are we doing that? the iranians -- the iranian people have taken to the streets to protest over and over again and the iranian regime is struggling -- brian: you're breaking up a little bit but i got your message. you were talking about this, iranian, former iranian citizen because the pressure campaign was working. taking out solamani sent a message. the people had hope that the oppressive regime they were under and then you figure that the iaea have declared sites in iran and bragging about the fact
4:27 am
that they are close to a nuclear weapon. what are we doing, knock, knock, please talk to us. final thought real quick. >> the iranian regime is on the verge -- they are the ones that need -- the biden administration is practicing what i call diplomatic malpractice. we need to stop making unilateral concessions to the regime. brien: i agree. we will have you back, we promise and this is serious and we don't want to skate over the fact or if the trump people or you started doing it would feel outraged. that should be one message, one voice, thank you so much, appreciate it. >> thank you. brian: dr. fauci being called and moving the goal post. how should we trust his
4:28 am
information, what are his goals and what are his aims, dr. nike- dr. nicole saphier to react. ♪ ♪ ♪ four years clear. five years now. i just look and feel better. see me. real people with psoriasis look and feel better with cosentyx. don't use if you're allergic to cosentyx. before starting, get checked for tuberculosis. an increased risk of infections and lowered ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor about an infection or symptoms, if your inflammatory bowel disease symptoms develop or worsen, or if you've had a vaccine, or plan to. serious allergic reactions may occur. five years is just crazy. see me. learn more at cosentyx.com. research shows that people remember commercials with exciting stunts. so to help you remember that liberty mutual customizes your home insurance,
4:29 am
here's something you shouldn't try at home. insurance is cool. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ and that■s about it. today, just ten percent of what they spend protects things like this: the rest helps pay for nra executives to enjoy this: designer suits from beverly hills. luxury trips to italy, hungary, the bahamas. private jets. golden parachutes. and lots of lawyers.
4:30 am
no wonder the nra is bankrupt. ditch their sticker. the nra has lost its way. it's time for the ultimate sleep number event on the new sleep number 360 smart bed what if i sleep hot? ...or cold? no problem, with temperature balancing you can sleep better together. can it help keep me asleep? absolutely, it intelligently senses your movements and automatically adjusts to keep you both effortlessly comfortable. will it help me keep up with mom? you got this. so you can really promise better sleep? not promise... prove. don't miss the final days to save $1,000 on our most popular smart bed and adjustable base. plus 0% interest for 36 months. ends monday. germ proof your car with armor all disinfectant.
4:31 am
kills 99.9% of bacteria and viruses. ♪ ♪ the chevy silverado trail boss. when you have a two-inch lift. when you have goodyear duratrac tires. when you have rancho shocks and an integrated dual exhaust. when you have all that, the last thing you'll need... is a road. the chevy silverado trail boss. ready to off-road, right from the factory. ainsley: dr. fauci has been one of the leading voices for
4:32 am
guidance on how to navigate the coronavirus pandemic since the start but even he has flip-flopped on several issues, listen. >> right now at this moment there's no need to change anything that you're doing on a day-to-day basis. we were in real trouble probably middle towards the end of january. right now in the united states people should not be walking around with masks. putting a mask on yourself, if everybody does that, we are each protecting each other. >> my parents have gotten their second dose, does that mean they can can spend time with their grandchildren? ainsley: hi, dr. nicole saphier. doctor: hi. ainsley: it's frustrating with you in the medical community the contradictions. doctor: he really needs a
4:33 am
translator to interpret responses as he will continue to continue tobe circumspect. we have to stop saying no all of the time and get to the answer of yes and what is the metric where we will start saying yes to people. for me two weeks after the second dose when community levels of transmission are low, that tells me it is safe to be out. now dr. fauci likes to wait for those -- the results from randomized controlled trials. but what happens when you wait for results, people get restless. that's what happened with mask wearing, he didn't recommend mask wearing until we had more data but at that point months had already past. it's not normal for nondoctors to say that it's antiscience whenever new information comes out or changes. and because of that controversy and division really have caused significant damage to our country throughout the entire
4:34 am
pandemic. ainsley: if one of your loved ones come down with a sickness, illness, sometimes families will say let's get a second opinion, let's compare what doctors are saying and come up with a plan together as a family. why are we trusting one person with our national plan? >> well, he's really become -- he's become famous throughout this. everyone know who is dr. fauci is and unfortunately because we become so divided, because of the politicization of science throughout this pandemic, people either love him or hate him and at the end of the day he's still a good guy. he does everything that he does is backed by science and you cannot fault him for that. but unfortunately i believe he waits too long, too much for those clinical trials that he's negating common sense. preliminary data, preprints and a lot of information that we see boots on the ground tell us it's safe to go out after the vaccinations, transmission is likely going to be lower and unfortunately he doesn't have that hard data yet so he really -- he really delays giving those recommendations. i have a piece coming out on
4:35 am
foxnews.com later this evening talking about whether or not grandparents should see their grandchildren after they've been vaccinated and i'm sure everyone knows my answer and that is yes. i have a new book coming out, exciting news today that i want to reveal my cover but it has to do with all of this. it's called panic attack for a reason because it unveils hypocrisy and hysteria that has occurred from the ramped politicization of the science and what we do dive into the science and true of if facets of the pandemic from the origin of the virus an concealment efforts and delayed response from the world organization and everything that has caused so much controversy. the partisan foes have push forth their political agendas to gain power by inappropriately claiming things are science or antiscience and i break it all down and i point out the people who really have misused science and the quest for getting more power. ainsley: congratulations on the
4:36 am
second book. the first one is behind you. panic, if you want to preorder, you can as of right now. >> springtime, the exact time that i say we will be getting back to a level of normalcy, perfect time to dive into and understand covid-19. ainsley: congratulations on all your success. >> thank you. ainsley: white house defends opening migrant facilities even though president biden previously blasted the policy. joe concha and the white house flip-flop next. download the fox bet super 6 app and play for a chance to win $10,000, all you have to do is predict 6 outcomes in the quiz show, topics range from entertainment to sports, it is free to play, download the fox bet super 6 app now.
4:37 am
♪ ...and i'm feelin' good ♪ start a new day with trelegy. no once-daily copd medicine has the power to treat copd in as many ways as trelegy. with three medicines in one inhaler, trelegy helps people breathe easier and improves lung function. it also helps prevent future flare-ups. trelegy won't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking it. do not take trelegy more than prescribed. trelegy may increase your risk of thrush, pneumonia, and osteoporosis. call your doctor if worsened breathing, chest pain, mouth or tongue swelling, problems urinating, vision changes, or eye pain occur. it's time to start a new day. ask your doctor about once-daily trelegy. and save at trelegy.com. to veteran spouses everywhere we salute you. ask your doctor about once-daily trelegy.
4:38 am
we salute how you balanced work, family and home life. we salute your courage. and your service. by offering you our service. newday usa specializes in helping you make the most of your va benefits. from home purchase to refinance. it's either the assurance of a 165-point certification process. or it isn't. it's either testing an array of advanced safety systems. or it isn't. it's either the peace of mind of a standard unlimited mileage warranty. or it isn't. for those who never settle, it's either mercedes-benz certified pre-owned. or it isn't. the mercedes-benz certified pre-owned sales event. now through march 1st. shop online or drop by your local dealer today.
4:39 am
4:40 am
(vo) discover the exclusive, new miracle-earmini- a nearly invisible hearing aid from the brand leader in hearing aids. new miracle-earmini. so small and comfortable that no one will see them, but you'll notice the difference. call today to start your 30-day risk-free trial. start the year with better hearing and big savings. call miracle-ear today. the holidays weren't exactly smooth sledding this year, eh santa? no, but we came through smelling of mistletoe. the now platform lets us identify problems before they became problems. if only it could identify where my ball went. this you? hmm... no, mine had green lights. whatever your business is facing. let's workflow it. maybe i should workflow my swing... servicenow.
4:41 am
>> kamala harris said that this facility, putting people in this facility was a human rights abuse and joe biden said under trump there have been horrifying scenes of border -- at the border of kids being kept in cages, now it's not under trump, it's under biden. >> this is not kids being kept in cages. this is a facility that was opened that's going to follow the same standards as other hhs facilities. it is not a replication, certainly not. that is never our intention of replicating the immigration policies of the past administration. brian: meanwhile tell that to aoc and it's the exact same thing and by the way it is. the white house depending reopening of border facilities in texas, the same facility heavily criticized by joe biden during his trump administration. steve: here to react fox news contributor joe concha, good morning to you.
4:42 am
>> how are you doing, guys? steve: we are doing good. peter asked the question of jen psaki because they reactivated the migrant facility but, you know, just go back a couple of, everybody was in sense that they were keeping kids in cages. it's a safe facility but the kids are not in cages because they are essentially in shipping containers. i saw an image in the washington post because where it showed the particular image. where are we on this? >> it's interesting because we go back a couple of, not just the trump administration but the obama-biden administration as well that had the same facilities, opened the same facilities and good for peter doocy for pulling a tim, that's a good thing, say, all right, this is what you said now, this is what's happening, defend that and jen psaki had no defense. brian, you brought up alexandria ocasio-cortez before, she tweeted, yesterday quote, this is not okay, this is not okay no
4:43 am
matter the administration or party. so now we've had twice in the past week where jen psaki is asked about involving policy like this, governor cuomo, do you think that cuomo is the gold standard as biden said and he has the nursing home scandal and what we get from jen psaki, basically don't answer basic questions that have obvious questions and good for peter doocy for calling her out on that. ainsley: there's an op-ed section blasting the culture and headline is woke me when it's over. the op-ed behold in the little story dear reader the woke, no transgression on sensitivities is to trivial that it would not involve a more moralizing rebuke
4:44 am
from social media at least the critic has the wrong ethnic pedigree. talking about the smallest little thing can get you canceled. what's your reaction? >> i know that was one of your favorite songs growing up the great late george michael. when you can work that in, great for bret stevens. we are describing the culture in "the new york times" newsroom. you remember over the summer you had editor james bennett who won a pulitzer and had audacity to have op-ed, this was last june, that the military, national guard should be called in if protests get out of control and the staffers at "the new york times" said how dare you print the op-ed where polls show that the majority of people supported that position and james bennett was shown the door.
4:45 am
you saw a couple of weeks ago, don mckneel, 45 years with "the new york times" assigns reporter reporting covid, trips, he won several awards and he was fired after quoting back racial slur with conversation with students because staffers said no, that's not good enough, he has to go, overriding the editor. i did like the fact that in this case you have bret stevens showing this example as woke culture. a law professor of the illinois in chicago was placed on indefinite administrative leave barred from campus, kicked off his committee assignments after students protests that he included n and then blank and b and then blank as part of a semester exam on civil procedurele he doesn't even use the words, he's trying to teach about civil procedure and this guy loses his livelihood. so good for bret stevens for going against the tide in terms of his own newsroom and calling this out for what it is. it's ridiculous and after -- it's going to get a certain
4:46 am
point where it will have a boomerang effect because when you call wolf -- brian: disney had to put disclaimers in cartoons and it's going to ridiculous, what's it going to take for people to put the brakes on and say we are just not abiding by it anymore? you're not fired, you can write this, you can view that, it's in the okay to take the statute down, joe, what is it going to take to stop this? >> i think it takes more bret stevens of the world. it takes glenn greenwald on the left, for instance, for calling this out. it'll have to take more from the journalists and community i would think to call this out and show why it's ridiculous and hopefully enough people say this is too much. i can't listen to this anymore because every day it's a different soap box that somebody is jumping on over something that if you look at it logically just doesn't make a lot of sense, guys. steve: great analysis, that's
4:47 am
why we call you. see you next time. 14 minutes before the top of the hour and jillian joins us with headlines. jillian: protests in rochester, new york after grand jury decides not to charge in the death. >> this is not what we wanted and until there's justice in the system they will not get no peace if us. >> after living consciousness while being restrained by police during what they say was a mental health emergency. several officers were suspended from the force following his death. in just hours fox news senior meteorologist janice dean will join ron kim at a rally in new york city, they will present the list of demands to hold govern o andrew cuomo accountable if the nursing home scandal and comes as kim accuses cuomo of protecting donors about covering data of covid deaths, both
4:48 am
janice and ron will join us to outline demands. suspected criminals will no longer be held on bond in illinois. governor making the state to first to eliminate cash bail. the bill allows defendants to be released while awaiting trial, some may still be detained if a judge seems they are a threat to the community. it is said to take effect in 2023. that's a look at your headlines, let's send it back to you. ainsley: thank you, gillian. guarding old glory, the civil war hero who refused to let the american flag hit the ground.
4:49 am
4:52 am
4:53 am
>> carrying the stars and stripes was shot down. >> and that's when sergeant carnie runs into action. >> the wounded sergeant carnie keeps the colors. >> i did my duty. the flag never touched the ground. steve: look at that. our next guest is featured in the clip and participate in civil war reenactments, founder of the slave dwelling project joseph mcgill joins us right now from south carolina. joe, good morning to you. >> good morning to you. >> tell us a little bit about sergeant carnie. >> sergeant william carnie, an amazing man who was born into the institution of slavery in virginia escaped that institution and when given the opportunity to join the union army he did not think
4:54 am
individually. he -- he thought collectively as to his effort in what he was embarking upon and that was joining other men like him to strike a blow against slavery, a man who did not have to do it because he was already free. that's sergeant william carney and his actions during the battle at fort wagner which is a very close to where i sit currently in the charleston harbor on july 18th of 1863 earned him the medal of honor. steve: it absolutely did. here is an excerpt from the fox nation special on sergeant carney and what he did in such an extraordinary fashion on that day in 1863. >> sergeant carney managed to retreat with the flag. >> and he was beginning to make his way back to the union line when the second bullet hit him in the left arm. carney wouldn't give up the flag
4:55 am
and only give it to a 54th man. wounded a third back. they got back to the union siege line. carney gave up the flag. steve: what an extraordinary story. he's shot, he's hurt but he will not let the flag touch the ground, joe. >> yeah, but even more amazing than that, it was -- he was in a situation where he knew that had he been captured by the enemy that was possibly his death because they had this policy if it's not written it was actually said that if any black person fighting for the union were given an opportunity to be a prisoner, it would not be afforded to. they would be killed in the spot and to surrender.
4:56 am
we asked the stewards the spend nights in the spaces and that's an attempt to bring attention to the spaces when one should visit a plantation or historic city you see antebellum buildings and you see buildings prior to the civil war, there's embodied energy of enslaved people there and we want to incorporate the stories of the enslaved people responsible for those buildings for being there. so we bring attention to them by spending nights in the slave dwelling. steve: indeed you do, slave dwelling project. check them out on the internet. guarding old glory available on fox nation, fox nation is a streaming service. it's membership only, so check it out, foxnation.com. we will step aside, back in a ..
4:59 am
i've lost count of how many asthma attacks i've had. but my nunormal with nucala? fewer asthma attacks. nucala is a once-monthly add-on injection for severe eosinophilic asthma. not for sudden breathing problems. allergic reactions can occur. get help right away for swelling of face, mouth, tongue, or trouble breathing. infections that can cause shingles have occurred. don't stop steroids unless told by your doctor. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection. may cause headache, injection-site reactions, back pain, and fatigue. ask your doctor about nucala. find your nunormal with nucala.
5:00 am
>> the fact that he was wearing a seatbelt save his life. steve: tiger woods responding to emergency surgery. >> the long road to recovery begins in a room at the ucla medical center. >> he has overcome a lot and had an incredible life and he will continue to have an incredible life. >> reopening in a controversial texas facility. >> that is when joe biden said kids are kept in cages. >> kids being kept in cages.
5:01 am
>> providing nonanswers that don't answer basic questions that have obvious answers. >> facing backlash accused of mixed messages on masks, vaccine and more. because of that, they caused significant damage. >> the nursing home crisis isn't going to cuomo's new pandemic blunder, an op-ed with a spotlight on how he treated people with disabilities. >> how to treat the most vulnerable citizens. ainsley: tiger woods awake and recovering at a los angeles hospital after a serious car crash. brian: he lost control and went off the road. jonathan hunt is live outside the hospital and shortly after 5 am west coast times. >>, very good news published via tiger woods twitter account.
5:02 am
responding to tiger saying he is currently awake, responsive and recovering in a hospital ring. at harvard ucla medical center, and the fire department, facts do indeed to all of those, it could clearly have been so much worse, would do lucky to be alive according to the sheriff's deputy, extricated with serious leg injuries, the chief medical officer, talking about those in a statement saying, with the upper and lower to be a and philia bones, inserting a rod of the tibia. a combination of screws and
5:03 am
fins. there are questions about what caused the accident. speed may have been a factor but the sheriff says there was no evidence of any impairment through drinks or drugs. whatever the cause, tiger woods is beginning what would be a very long road to recovery. ainsley: we are all pulling for him. let's bring in jim gray, legendary sportscaster and fox news contributor and author of talking to ghosts. okay, jim. >> reporter: good morning. ainsley: he was wearing his seatbelt. what is your message? you have known him since he was 7 years old. >> my message is the day has gone on in the evening has gone on, they have gotten better come a long recovery along
5:04 am
rehabilitation, he would be able to do that. a little over a year ago with kobe bryant come our worst fears came in front of us, off the side of the road, he will recover, who knows what that would be? that is kind of in the distant future and the good news is once again he is going to rehabilitate himself. the trauma that has been suffered is all secondary because he is alive and he can hug his kids again. brian: there are a lot of accidents in that area and look like it is winding. >> there's an offramp for trucks, on many mountain roads in colorado, if you get high-speed you can take an
5:05 am
offramp where you go up and pull yourself down, it is a dangerous stretch of road. i have been on it many times, speed can get away with you. the sheriff's department says there are a lot of accidents that occur there. don't know that any occurred like this but it is highly dangerous, highly traveled and it is a place to go very fast because you are going downhill and it can get away from you quickly. steve: anytime there is a runaway ramp that is a significant road. you wrote the book on goats, the greatest of all time. the day before this happened, what they are talking about, i will say that often. >> an opportunity, he is not comfortable with it, but coming out with this guy, thank you for teaching me something.
5:06 am
we are getting better. everybody be on the lookout. >> so nice to see the interplay, was so serious. for him to have that tone. >> he was always searching for perfection and touched it from time to time and when you know you can be perfect, you want to keep getting there again and again and again. it looked like a joyous experience for tiger woods, giving us a lot of joy but trying to reach a place that is impossible to hold onto in fact it is. when you saw what happened in
5:07 am
the 2019 masters after tiger had gone from that peak and winning all those majors and an 11 year drought, going through the scandal and having the dui. the surgeries total, that is a joyous experience. and instead of holding everybody often looking tortured he brought them all in, put his arm around everybody, was hugging his competitors at the end of the router. and he gets up playing with his son charlie. and have a normal life. >> when you watch that video you do think at the top of the interview. thank goodness he is with us today because it can be a
5:08 am
different story this morning. if anyone can recover tiger woods can. >> reporter: you can never count the guy out. he has the heart of a champion. all those years ago the houston rockets, never underestimate the heart of a champion. tiger woods is a goat, he brought us so much joy, broke racial barriers, change the game of golf, the most popular figure in golf, where arnold palmer did in the 50s and 60s, took it to a whole new level, if you can do it is tiger woods. brian: you've known him since single-digit and now he is in his 40s. how he is by his competitors has changed. this next generation looks up to him, the generation he was coming into, in some cases resented him and his rise and
5:09 am
all the attention he got but this new generation, they don't present tiger. they love this guy. >> they resented him because they beat him all. they got tired of losing to him. the checks they were getting listed everybody so high, he has been a mentor to justin thomas ricky fowler, so many guys look up to this guy, rory mcelroy, patterned his golf game after the life of tiger woods. they idolize him, they admire him. brian: it is in your book, and streaming on our special fox nation. thank you for joining us. >> good to talk to you. brian: quite early for us. just to clarify duane wade, nba
5:10 am
legend, just went out to golf. ainsley: he teaches celebrities how to play golf. brian: he was going to do a shoot withdrew breeze when he got the ax. steve: let's talk a little bit about what is going on in washington. we have been telling you joe biden made it clear when elected and taking office, he would undo as many things regarding donald trump's policy, when we have seen that. there has been such a rush to the southern border from south of their. in triangle countries and mexico trying to get into that. at the southern border, in migrant facilities, we have thousands of people, during the trump administration, when the
5:11 am
images came out, how the government was so inhumane taking -- putting kids in cages and yet it is the same facility that has been reactivated to hold up to 700 kids and during covid-19 things are different according to jen psaki who responded to peter doocy asking there is some hypocrisy on how people describe that place. >> this facility, putting people in this facility was a human rights abuse committed by the government and joe biden said under trump there have been four five at the border, could be kept in cages, now it is not under trump, it is under biden. >> this is not kids being kept in cages. this is a facility that was open that will follow the same standards as other hhs facilities. it is not a replication, certainly not -- it is not our intention to replicate the
5:12 am
immigration policies of the past administration. we are not going to spread expelled unaccompanied minors, that would be inhumane. this is an effort to ensure the kids are not in close proximity and health and safety standards. >> kids are being detained but what a difference a couple years makes. kids in cages turns into migrant facilities quickly when a democrat is in office. yesterday the washington post took some heat, because they were describing that particular facility as a migrant facility for children and it sounds like a fun summer camp for kids who spent a little time. >> usa we are not going to replicate it. it is the same facility. the trump used. doesn't make sense. aoc is not buying it. she wants open borders. this is not okay, never has
5:13 am
been okay, no matter the administration or party and ilhan omar piled on and tweeted out this is a callous choice. here is joe conchali on the issue. >> the fact the obama biden administration as well had the same facilities, opening the same facilities and good for peter doocy for pulling a tim russert, that is a good thinker read back the quote of what the candidate said, now the president, and say this is what you said now, this is what is happening. and jen psaki had no defense. twice in the past week jen psaki is asked about something specific involving a democrat, a policy like this and what we get from jen psaki providing nonanswers, don't answer basic questions that have obvious answers. brian: let's fast-forward to talk about covid-19.
5:14 am
if you look up your stats, when you have deaths going down and the number of cases decreasing, hospitalizations, 50,000 in the nation, vaccines picking up the pace with 5-year, modern, and trees. places like florida thanks to a new federally run vaccine facility offering people 50 and up vaccines officially teachers who are teaching full-time. with all this good news even though we passed a terrible milestone the numbers are slowing down. when we can start living our lives, going to work, going to school, riding the train, riding the plane and eating indoors, not so much according to anthony fauci. he's talking about still wearing masks into 2022. even in the uk they are moving faster than that but a lot of
5:15 am
people say what is he saying now? what did he say then? there's a lot of changes. here is an example. >> right now at this moment there is no need to change anything you are doing on a day by day basis. that was towards the middle to end of january. right now in the united states people should not be walking around with masks. putting a mask on your self if everybody does that, we are each protecting each other. >> my parents of gotten their second dose. does that mean it is okay to touch their grandchildren? >> i'm not going to make a recommendation now. mike: he should be making recommendations now. 67,000 primary physicians have come together demanding in person learning for those students and kids. the quality of life for those seniors. he's an epidemiologist. a lot of people disagree with him distinctly. with this, has to be psychological or sociological element. seniors in their last lap of life, you take away that in over a year it could be over
5:16 am
and whatever factors into his decision, that is pretty much what we have been discussing. one person walks on water, what he says goes but a lot of times what he says depends on who he is talking to and i will add this, he never missed an opportunity to throw donald trump under the bus, two days ago he said donald trump's policies caused people to die. he is covering for jen psaki, the vice president, the president but all three disagree on covid-19. steve: the problem with covid-19 is it seems like we are learning something else. one of the things he said in that little montage of soundbites that was so devastating is back in march of last year you don't have to wear a mask. we now know the science supports a mask protects you and the people around you because the way you get covid-19 as you breathe the air
5:17 am
from somebody with covid-19 and so had they said earlier we don't know but he was emphatic, you don't need to wear - steve: he wants us to wear two. brian: i was talking to my doctor yesterday and other healthcare professional, actually been fully vaccinated, had both the moderna shot in two weeks past that, fully immunized but this is a guy who studies covid-19 all the time is not changing a thing. he is wearing a mask for the foreseeable future. he continues to social distance. and a lot of changes. it is 95% effective. why where two masks? in the 5% range. think of polio. the polio vaccine. >> you can listen to the experts and make your own choice and that is what he wants to do. steve: this guy a trust with my doctor says until we get -- where we have fool hurting
5:18 am
unity, when we get the all clear signal from the government that is when we can feel comfortable. brian: when we are down to 0? steve: when we get to the point that it is hurting unity just like the flu and things like that going forward. these, everybody has to decide what level of carefulness they want to follow. he is a doctor scientist and that is what he wants to do. carley: what is in -- the contradictions and inconsistencies, say one thing, get the vaccine, now i don't know, maybe you can't see your grandkids. brit hume was saying we are looking at one guy to decide our federal rules and was we are going to do as a government. listen to this. >> the problem with doctor anthony fauci is not so much with him as it is with our failure as a society to recognize that he is an expert in a narrow field. he is an epidemiologist.
5:19 am
his job is to fight this disease. he's not an expert in child psychology your children's education. he's not an authority on the us economy and the damage that may be done to it. that's not a his valley wic when they talk about follow the science. the question becomes which science? economics is a science. cardiology is a branch of science. if you listen to only some scientists instead of looking through a broader lens you end up with the policy decisions we have made. ainsley: that is why you get a second opinion. some people get third, fourth opinions, could be failing you go to another doctor and they say no, i can save your life. to get one person's opinion, he is exactly right. there are so many factors here. brian: rescue package of $1.9 trillion, the epidemiologist is kids to be back in school which he has said before, you get vaccinated, we will get on the
5:20 am
other side of the senate doesn't look like that. staying on to with a political party as opposed to the other party and that is what i find egregious. steve: that is what brit hume was talking about. he's an epidemiologist, that is his department but donald trump looks at what he should do, he has the epidemiologist, the economist, people from the education field and he listens to all of that and then you decide and a great deal of responsibility for the news media which has been terrible on that because they amplified everything that doctor anthony fauci said because sometimes it was contrary to what donald trump said. billionaire from new york, are you going to listen to doctor anthony fauci? ainsley: janice dean's in-laws were victims of andrew cuomo's
5:21 am
deadly nursing home orders and now growing calls to hold him responsible, when new york democrat leading the charge, new york is will: -- new york assemblyman ron kim and janice teen leading the charge. ♪ ♪ the chevy silverado trail boss. when you have a two-inch lift. when you have goodyear duratrac tires. when you have rancho shocks and an integrated dual exhaust. when you have all that, the last thing you'll need... is a road. the chevy silverado trail boss.
5:25 am
>> as fallout mount against andrew cuomo for nursing home deaths new polls show voters are watching closely. 60% of new yorkers say cuomo mismanaged nursing homes in the pandemic. one state democrat who lost his loved one leading the charge to impeach the governor with a rally at city hall. janice dean will be there as well. assembly minute good friend janice dean through all of this, janice lost both her in-laws after they were exposed
5:26 am
to new york nursing homes was tell me what you would expect at 11:00 today. >> the public advocate, a lot of people showing up calling on cuomo on every dollar he talk, they really toxic bill in the budget to give you legal shield, i call it a license to kill the results. poison:requesting turnover every correspondence with its lobbyist to the media. >> what the me license to kill. do you understand what ron kim is getting at.
5:27 am
>> instead of talking to the families, have more interest in the lobbyists, hospital lobbyists, for lack of better turning that with this governor for many years. they donated millions of dollars to his campaign. we didn't know there was a march 20 fifth order in place to put infected patients in nursing homes. there's a lot of correction and thanks to ron kim we are seeing the rod under the floorboard. brian: you were in the zoom call, i apologize for the political problems on the nursing home thing, we were frozen in place and feared donald trump's tweets and the investigation. were you the one to get that out to the public. >> the press broke that story. they have a recording, give them a statement of my impression of what the secretary said. the moment she said it, no longer was a private
5:28 am
conversation, they admitted to obstructing justice the hiding information for political reasons. i criticize donald trump all the time. the federal government tells me to comply with something i don't care who the president is. it is legal trouble. they omitted an obstruction of justice and i had a duty to tell the public. they might have broken the law, and i will not be complicit in the cover-up. brian: why was it important to be here today, why did you want janice there. why don't you start? >> janice: ron kim is a hero. he was with me when a lot of democratic lawmakers were not. he was there in august with a makeshift hearing after they canceled my invitation to speak to albany lawmakers, the only
5:29 am
democratic lawmaker, he was affected personally and this is not about politics, yes, he is a democrat but both sides of the aisle need to come together. this is about good and bad and what we do going forward for families that don't have to deal with something like this again. brian: she talked about you behind your back, all good things that you got a call from the governor speaking so loud, he scare your wife, then called you repeatedly and left messages on the machine almost daring you to pick it up. can you bring us to that moment? >> it is a pattern of this abusive behavior and abuse of power in his position. calling me at 8:00 when i was getting ready with my kids and my wife and the rating me for 10 minutes, what seemed like one hour at the time and
5:30 am
putting my wife -- she was crying and shaking. i told this story many times and had a couple of meltdowns visualizing that moment, seeing my wife shaking, she is a strong woman and for her to be in that position gets me every time. i almost never came forward as a result. think about the paralyzing moment a powerful politician in the state tells you he will ruin you, ruin your livelihood. we get to gather, told each other we love each other and make the right call. this is the time to call out his abusive behavior, we have janice, we talk about you and have this before you need and back me up. brian: you lost, and you were intimidated.
5:31 am
lastly, your thoughts real quick. you know what it is like. the approval rating, his approval rating is at 72%, now at 49% and you have a lot to do with that. do you feel good? >> janice: it is not a feel-good moment. we are talking about relatives we don't have anymore but we will continue to shout from the rooftops. ron kim, i love you, i love your family, your hero, thank you for standing with me and the angels are on our side and that is the bottom line. brian: 11:00 today there will be a rally and a press conference at which time there will be marching orders to go forward. governor cuomo cannot shake this. thanks so much. coming up straight ahead the battle rages to reopen schools nationwide but states that are letting kids back in the classrooms are showing success as well. we will break it down and trace atkins is back, the ultimate
5:32 am
cowboy showdown, the country music star joins us live coming up. ♪♪ >> or all of success pass bringing the action from florida to you with the future of the conservative movement and the republican agenda more important than ever, see the biggest including your fox favorites, and tomi lahren and lawrence jones recap every moment. enter promo code seepac, america is dreaming all things seepac. sign up today. remember that liberty mutual customizes your home insurance, here's something you shouldn't try at home... look, liberty mutual customizes home insurance so we only pay for what we need. it's pretty cool. that is cool! grandma! very cool.
5:33 am
only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ we need to reduce plastic waste in the environment. that's why at america's beverage companies, our bottles are made to be re-made. not all plastic is the same. we're carefully designing our bottles to be one hundred percent recyclable, including the caps. they're collected and separated from other plastics, so they can be turned back into material that we use to make new bottles. that completes the circle, and reduces plastic waste. please help us get every bottle back. tiger woods
5:34 am
(noise of fridge opening) guy fieri! ya know, if you wanna make that sandwich the real deal, ya gotta focus on the bread layers. king's hawaiian sliced bread makes everything better! ♪ (angelic choir) ♪ umm, honey...why is guy fieri in our kitchen? i don't know. i'm booking you a one-way ticket to flavortown with a king's hawaiian meatball sub. ♪ ♪ i gotta go. your neighbor needs king's hawaiian bread.
5:35 am
hey, i got you. guy fieri? i felt awful because of my psoriasis. i was covered from head to toe with it. it really hurt. then i started cosentyx. okay, thanks... that was four years ago. how are you? see me. cosentyx works fast to give you clear skin that can last. real people with psoriasis look and feel better with cosentyx. don't use if you're allergic to cosentyx. before starting, get checked for tuberculosis. an increased risk of infections and lowered ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor about an infection or symptoms, if your inflammatory bowel disease symptoms develop or worsen, or if you've had a vaccine or plan to. serious allergic reactions may occur. i look and feel better. ask your dermatologist if cosentyx could help you move past the pain of psoriasis.
5:36 am
every veteran family deserves to fulfill their dream of owning a home if cosentyx could help you move and to continue living that dream throughout their lives. at newday usa, we have va refinance loans to do just that. from refinancing to lower your monthly mortgage payments to refinancing and getting cash for your family. whatever you need, we're here. >> outrage in oakland, california after teacher
5:37 am
written to parents after the push to reopen schools. brian: and bethany marie wrote all the rich white parents suddenly concerned about mental health can take a seat, most are cosmic his anxiety by pressuring them to complete acrimonious work and feeding it to their sense of entitlement. sorry, not sorry. here to react, author and journalist douglas murray. >> great to be with you. brian: the school district did issue a statement, saw one tweet from a staff member the left many families feel disrespected and insulted, has been shared numerous times by the families and staff ever, the staff member apologize for the tweet, the teacher has been nonetheless disciplined. for one person to talk about all the rich white parents some of them said i feel like i was just hit in the gut.
5:38 am
>> if only this was a one off. a fully this was just one teacher in one county in america saying this but it isn't. this has become one of the prevailing ideologies of the time. people including this teacher decide that their role in education is basically to be divisive as possible and race-based, to say things about races of people, in this case white people that should be deemed completely intolerable. the problem is what she has done is not unusual. people across america do it particularly in the american teaching system. something is rotten in the culture. whole swaths of people in this kind of way. ainsley: the school district tells the students at all white people play a part in perpetuating systemic racism. what is your reaction to that?
5:39 am
>> in the last 24 hours, schools pushing exactly the same kind of racially divisive ideology. the person doing this, associate superintendent for culturally and linguistically responsive initiatives. who knew in a year when the american people had so much education taken from them, any people in america, culturally and linguistically responsive initiatives, this is not an individual here or there, it is a whole system of fault from the top down in america which is rotting and dividing the nation and the nation has to unite against it. brian: a lot of parents are saying what can we do about it? a lot were forced to go to parochial schools because a lot of schools weren't open.
5:40 am
what do you do if you are a parent, middle class, working class and received this curriculum, meet with the teacher in the parent-teacher conference and you see this, what do you recommend people do? >> you've got to speak up. the problem is this system of thought is being forced on people and it is only working because people, the american public, parents across america, trying to silence them. when you get a higher education, oberlin college, the professor who turns out to have advocated distraction the parents are going to spend 60,$000 a year for kids to be educated like that and the problem is american parents have to speak up, none of it, from the first time they went to the school system to the
5:41 am
time they may leave college, none of them is right, it is all divisive and individuals across america to speak up and say -- take your kids to such rules. make sure your voice is heard. pete: your book is out in paperback, gender, race and identity and the strange death of europe and we had your sense of this. and friends in particular, america woken us, keep it there, not here. they are worried, it is unbelievable. we will have you back to talk about that. jillian joins us with the headlines. jillian: a massive explosion caught on camera in texas. look at this video, police say in 18 wheeler hit a train
5:42 am
starting a massive fire, the flames spread to a nearby barn burning it to the ground. the fire is expected to burn several days. no one was hurt. the senate homeland security committee is postponing today's vote for a candidate's nomination, director of office and management and budget, they are asking for more time to consider tandon as the nominee. tandon has been under fire for attacking the same lawmakers who will vote on her nomination. press secretary jen psaki tweeting, quote, the leading policy experts who were in critical qualifications during this time of unprecedented crisis. we will keep you updated. bipartisan lawmakers are pushing to legalize sports betting in texas. built of been filed in the lower and upper chamber aiming to bring the matter to a vote. lawmakers say $1.8 billion over the next 10 years if the market is opened up. back to you.
5:43 am
ainsley: as the battle to get our children back in the classroom, 5 states are requiring in person instruction to be available in all or some grades, full-time or full-time. giving parents school choice is the best way to go. his name is ed fullreally, ceo of trip scott offerman represents charter school usa which is the largest charter school management company in the country. good morning to you. i have read your op-ed. he really state your case, how this is impacting our children. tell the folks at home what you found. >> first of all we have to open schools because we should be focusing on putting students interests first. not the adults. we need to focus on the children so in florida through the urging of governor desantis
5:44 am
and commissioner of education richard corcoran we were able to push open live instruction and providing parents and empowering parents with the choice whether to send their children to public charter schools and district runs tools with live instruction option. it was up to the parents of the parent can send the child to live instruction. it is done with all the protocols, safety protocols in place based on cdc requirements and the science says you can open schools safely. let's follow the science and the interests of protecting our children. ainsley: what are you saying to disadvantaged students? >> we start with the achievement gap, the mckinsey and company study showed this, there was an achievement gap in education heading into the pandemic before covid-19. it has widened because those students, students of color, students who get services in
5:45 am
school, children who need other services, school becomes a safe place for them as much as anything, those students are being impacted in a greater way than other students. the covid-19 slide, the achievement gap is widening, we need to bring back students for live instruction, florida has done it right. parents not only have the choice of bringing their students in line but since they have a circumstance that he wants to keep their students home, there is instruction blended, virtual instruction being offered, charter school usa and other charter school entities have been on top of this, opening their schools, offering unique, innovative mobile classroom settings, districts have followed. students are coming back. in september, we are all the way up to 65% of students
5:46 am
coming back for live instruction. confidence is gaining that you can do live instruction, that is the best for each and every child. jillian: thank you so much. keep fighting. trace adkins back in the saddle to find america's ultimate cowboy. we talk about that coming up. let's check up with dana perino. >> thank you, coming up at 9:00 an update for you on the condition of tiger woods as he recovers from the car accident. in dc we talk about president biden's immigration conundrum and senator can enable join us to talk about the covid-19 relief bill. plus jim lee, former cia director, what he knows about the assassination of jfk.
5:47 am
we talk about it at 9 am. see you there. fewer asthma attacks. nucala is a once-monthly add-on injection for severe eosinophilic asthma. not for sudden breathing problems. allergic reactions can occur. get help right away for swelling of face, mouth, tongue, or trouble breathing. infections that can cause shingles have occurred. don't stop steroids unless told by your doctor. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection. may cause headache, injection-site reactions, back pain, and fatigue. ask your doctor about nucala. find your nunormal with nucala.
5:50 am
oh, you think this is just a community center? no. it's way more than that. cause when you hook our community up with the internet... boom! look at ariana, crushing virtual class. jamol, chasing that college dream. michael, doing something crazy. this is the place where we can show the world what we can do. comcast is partnering with 1000 community centers to create wifi-enabled lift zones, so students from low-income families can get the tools they need to be ready for anything. oh we're ready. ♪ ♪
5:51 am
5:52 am
atkins from the great city of nashville. good morning, congratulations on season 2. obviously it was such a hit, people want more. >> this year was even more fun. steve: one of the things about cowboys is they all work together to get something done, to roundup the cattle or something like that but your show they compete against each other for big prizes. >> there would be a blue team against the green team. i would have to pick who was the weak link who was going on that day but there were a lot of team chores as well as the individual competitions.
5:53 am
>> to be the ultimate cowboy, how you perform the ultimate rage. >> you are low man on the totem pole. steve: you were famously on celebrity apprentice. it is much like that. somebody gets fired. >> sometimes i let two of them go except for me. steve: the boss of the show. of the things we see cowboys do, how many can you actually do? you must be a cowboy at heart. are you a cowboy in the saddle? >> know. i can ride. i can keep up with them.
5:54 am
i am not going to do that. when i fall off a horse these days i am trying to stay in the saddle as much as i can. i don't want to -- i wanted to turn out well. steve: didn't your dad have horses? >> yes. my dad was a good cowboy. steve: it premieres tonight on insp. let's talk about the music business. what is going on with it? >> everybody in the studio. when this is over, everybody is working in studio because that is all that's left. we do some stuff online, we have been doing a lot of new stuff. i will have a new album come out with new songs on it. that is all we have been doing.
5:55 am
steve: how is it going to work? in the studio, you are socially distant, hope you are not wearing a mask. >> i met a little bubble booth by myself. i'm not wearing a mask. everyone is following guidelines and doing what we are supposed to do, wearing masks, staying socially distant. there are some big studios in nashville. it is not a problem. steve: check out tonight the ultimate cowboy challenge at 9:00 pm eastern time. thank you very much. it is a pleasure. "fox and friends" stepping aside. we will be right back. ♪♪ ♪♪ i've got my game on
5:56 am
♪♪ just gave that a helped me g. ♪ oh, oh, oh, ozempic® ♪ my zone? lowering my a1c and losing some weight. now, back to the show. ozempic® is proven to lower a1c. most people who took ozempic® reached an a1c under 7 and maintained it. and you may lose weight. adults lost on average up to 12 pounds. ozempic® isn't for people with type 1 diabetes or diabetic ketoacidosis. don't share needles or pens, or reuse needles. don't take ozempic® if you or your family ever had medullary thyroid cancer, or have multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2, or if allergic to it. stop ozempic® and get medical help right away if you get a lump or swelling in your neck, severe stomach pain, or an allergic reaction. serious side effects may include pancreatitis. tell your provider about vision problems or changes. taking ozempic® with a sulfonylurea or insulin may increase low blood sugar risk. side effects like nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea may lead to dehydration, which may worsen kidney problems. once-weekly ozempic® helped me get in my type 2 diabetes zone.
5:57 am
5:59 am
♪ ♪ the chevy silverado trail boss. when you have a two-inch lift. when you have goodyear duratrac tires. when you have rancho shocks and an integrated dual exhaust. when you have all that, the last thing you'll need... is a road. the chevy silverado trail boss. ready to off-road, right from the factory.
6:00 am
>> from our friends at box bet, download the fox bet super 6 apps. predict six outcomes in the quiz show from entertainment to sports. it's free. download the app now. >> bill: good morning, tiger woods said to be awake and responsive and recovering from a very long surgery. the golf legend shattering his right leg in multiple places after a rollover car crash. he today is lucky to be alive. stunning story. we'll tell you what we know. >> dana: i'm dana perino. doctors say they inserted a rod in his leg and used screws and pins to stabilize his foot an ankle. firefighters say they had to use an axe and prying tool to free him. >> bill: jonathan hunt is live this morning near the hospital where tiger woods is beginning
178 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on