tv The Ingraham Angle FOX News March 29, 2021 7:00pm-8:00pm PDT
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with this face grabbing thing? manhandled her, kissed her when they were doing a flood damage to her in 2017. we will see what happens. we are fair and balanced, laura ingraham is next. let not your heart be troubled. big show tonight. >> laura: yes, sean, and i was fascinated by gregg jarrett's -- his commentary about what happened. it was extremely interesting, we are going to pick up where you left off on that because this is going to get really, really wild and interesting if you love the law, but everyone is on pins and needles, so thank you for that interview, i enjoyed that. >> sean: thanks, have a great show, thank you as always buried >> laura: i'm laura ingraham and this is "the ingraham angle." we are going to have a full breakdown of the opening arguments, what they really mean, where is this headed with alan dershowitz? plus, covid's true origin, the
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debate has now taken center stage and we speak to an insider who says china and the w.h.o., shocker, or hiding information. also the debate over a satanic shoe? is something wrong with my prompter? is that real? and mayor pete is already out of gas. how sad. raymond arroyo has it all in seen and unseen. but first, when medicine becomes megalomania, that's the focus of tonight's angle. americans are traveling again, angry parents are pressuring schools to open for in person learning. restaurants, other businesses, they are slowly but surely in those blue states beginning to reemerge. we see that the damage that has been caused by covid israel but too by the lockdown that did enormous harm to american families. we are kind of tired -- aren't you tired of being pessimistic? and we are finding our own reasons for optimism.
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states like florida, texas, tennessee, and so many free states are thriving. people there look happy. and look at new york and california. they look at those states is almost foreign places at this point. so is most normal americans are disgusted by covid-chambers who push double masking and face shields even for children and the vaccinated, the biden medical bureaucracy is desperately trying to keep the drama going, got to keep it going. someone should tell, by the way, cdc director rochelle walensky, she's kind of late for the awards season. speak on going to pause here, i'm going to lose the script and i'm going to reflect on the recurring feeling i have of [indiscernible]. we have so much to look forward to, so much promise and potential of where we are, and so much reason for hope, but right now i'm scared. >> laura: did she satiate -- she will lose the script, she is
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still reading! i'm going to lose the script, but let me keep reading. impending doom? what is she talking about? texas? more than two weeks after the governor lifted the state mask mandate, remember everyone was freaking out, going to be a super-spreader, well, the lone star state announced a low in daily cases. in some cases -- cases in some states have gone up and cases nationally up about 15% in the last two weeks. there's been a slight increase in some hospitalizations and deaths in the last seven days but they are still down significantly over the past 14 days. it's hardly a doom and gloom situation. furthermore, the cdc's own data shows that nearly half of senior citizens are now fully vaccinated. that's a whopping 73% of them that have gotten at least one dose. remember, that group makes up 80% of covid deaths, so as more of them get vaccinated, the fewer deaths we are going to see from covid. that's good news, and less of
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course preventing severe illness and death is less important than controlling americans behavior and holding onto power at all costs. >> so i'm speaking today not necessarily a cdc director and not only as cdc director but as a wife, as a mother, as a daughter, to ask you to just please hold on a little while longer. >> laura: hold on a little while longer? until we what? destroy education of more children? until we force more of people who worked for their entire lives for a small business new immigrants coming in setting up great businesses, they all have to close up shop so you feel better until americans become, what, more dependent on government checks? until we forget that america is supposed to be the land of the free, that we have to hold on for that long? so it was more than 2 million doses of vaccine being delivered every day.
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it's not going to be long before the most vulnerable among all of us are inoculated, so cases may pick up as the virus becomes more and more transmissible, that's the law of viruses, but among younger, healthier americans, it's just not as serious, we've known that for almost a year. by the way, a year ago the goal wasn't to reduce covid to zero, it was to save the hospitals, a laudable goal. by the way, do you ever wonder what happened to that metric? this isn't about science. it's about casting trump as the villain and dr. birx, fauci at all as heroes. but wait a second, do you think heroes allow themselves to be painted in retrospect as damsels in distress? no. heroes speak out when it's inconvenient, when they have the most to lose. >> i knew i was being watched. everybody inside was waiting for
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me to make a misstep so that they could i guess remove me from the task force. >> laura: did he threaten her, president of united states? with what? trump essentially at the beginning at least did everything fauci nt told him to do with this virus. if there was really such a massive opposition to the science in the trump white house, why didn't she resign? because she started believing her own press, that's why, and she loved exercising unelected power. >> you know, i've dealt with presidents and prime ministers around the globe who will often have misperceptions about diseases, but i've always found that if you can find that common ground with the information and data, they will change policies. >> he's been so attentive to the
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scientific literature and the details in the data and i think -- >> and it's part of the reason why i did say at one time the president looked at the data and understood the data, because he wouldn't have shut down the country for 15 days and then another 30. but that never really happened again. because there were too many streams of data. >> laura: are all these people crying? what was parallel streams of data? she means actual facts and science, but you see how upset she was that we didn't stay closed down longer? because we would have been fabulous, just like europe is right now. truth be told, she learned her act, and she would just thought, at the foot of her master. the diminutive man with an outsized ego loves telling people what they can and cannot do. >> if we get into the summer and you have a considerable percentage of the population vaccinated and the level in the
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community gets below that plateau, it is conceivable that you would have a good degree of flexibility. children can clearly wind up getting infected. when the children go out into the community, you want them to continue to wear masks. >> laura: triple masking during t-ball. but how could anyone trust this man who has said so many conflicting things? last night on cnn it was tony the china skeptic. >> how much did you trust the information coming out of china initially? >> i always had skepticism about it because of what we went through with sars. they are not very transparent in the past. it wasn't outright lying, they just didn't give you all the information. >> laura: well, he obviously didn't do his homework. the good dr. fauci had a different view when pressed by the angle 13 months earlier.
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>> so you're satisfied with all of the transparency coming out of china today about the trajectory of the disease and the origin of the disease? >> i can tell you in my direct interactions, chinese scientists and chinese health officials, not party politics people, but medical people and scientists, that i can believe what they are telling me. >> laura: which tony is it? i'm very confused. so are these the people you want green lighting vaccine task forces? after all, if you have that special little code on your phone, we are all going to get back to normal, you won't be hacked, your medical data will be hacked. no, and by the way, i promise it's all going to be temporary. the task force are expected to be free and through applications of smartphones which could display an code similar to an airline boarding pass.
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the busboy, the janitor, the waiter that works at a restaurant wants to be surrounded by employees that are going back to work safely and wants to have the patrons ideally be safe as well. that all sounds wonderful. but something called the vaccine credential initiative is a coalition of 225 pro vaccine organizations and companies that include microsoft, oracle, and salesforce. in other words, big tech is very excited to capture more of your data and help the government track you. that's exactly what the angle warns you about back in, was it may 2020? not about reopening. it's not about freedom, it's about controlling americans movements and that screamed mandate if you ask me. >> you know the technocrats are seeing a real opportunity here, laura. a health care emergency to seize power.
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if we start acquiescing to rule by experts instead of a democratic federalist approach, they will never let go of that power even after the emergency passes. >> laura: you see this emergency will never pass. remember, it was 15 days to slow the spread, 100 days to mask up. once we have vaccines, things are going to be okay. they keep changing the rules of the game. why? because that's what megalomaniacs do. but we have more power and more know-how than they understand and florida's governor desantis is already taking preventive action against more covid power grabs. that's good news and that's the angle. joining us now, the man you just saw warning us 11 months ago, wesley smith, senior fellow at the discovery institute center on human exceptionalism. wesley, to your knowledge, has
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there ever been a law passed that required everyone in the country who wants to have, you know, movement, like the freedom we always had -- require them to take a vaccine? >> i don't know of any law in the history of this country that requires every human being here to be vaccinated. there have certainly been laws at state level and local level that had requirements for local outbreaks. for example, there's a supreme court case, jacobson versus massachusetts, that allowed cambridge, massachusetts, to require people in cambridge to receive a smallpox vaccination. we were talking about smallpox and get that case, which was actually a case supporting federalism, is being used as justification by the technocrats to say that somehow we could have the entire population ordered to take this vaccine and
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i just don't agree. >> laura: well, the ties between big government and big tech are only strengthening, wesley, and biden's covert advisor explained this today. watch. >> the government here is not viewing its role as the place to create a passport. we view this as something the private sector is doing and will do. the private sector and other groups working together or marching in that direction. >> laura: wesley, marching in that direction. explain for our viewers why the private sector doing this is essentially like the government doing it because it involves our freedom of movement. >> there's no checks and balances when big business does it. if the government tries to require mandates for vaccines, you're going to have -- first you have to get it through congress or you have to get it
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through a rule making process or even if you do that, you have to go to court, but one private sector does it, there are a lot less protections for people. this is about coercion, and this is about the public -- the private sector actually making their own public policy, which we've also seen in other areas of contentious cultural discord in recent years. >> laura: and wesley, the left is already -- not going to shock you because you were so far ahead of this, they are already fantasizing about how to kind of weaponized -- i'm so sick of that word, but it is so appropriate here. the passports against people who disagree with them. like this former doj official harry litman tweeted that vaccine passports are a good idea. among other things, it will single out the still-large contingent of people who refuse vaccines who will be foreclosed from doing a lot of the things their peers can do. that should help break the resistance down.
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break the resistance down to what? >> right, and coercion leads to distressed. i mean, we keep hearing about how people don't trust the institutions anymore. well, when you're trying to force people to put chemicals into your body, and i have the vaccine, i have them a dharna vaccine, but people should have the right to decide that for themselves. i think governor desantis is right on. libertarians say, well, businesses can do what they want. well, the way we conduct our lives today, we will not be able to lead a normal life if we allow big business to set their own public policy. dr. fauci, let's say, issues a guideline and then it starts getting enforced by the airlines, facebook, twitter, and so forth. you start to object and maybe you get canceled from social media. health insurance, they treat you like a smoker, this kind of thing. it really is i think an unprecedented threat to our freedom, what's happening today.
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>> laura: yeah, they already did it to our first amendment, now they want to do it to our freedom of movement guaranteed in the constitution as well. wesley, thank you so much. buried deep in cnn's two hour-long grievance session last night without jan friends, a little intriguing observation from the former cdc director about the origins of covid. >> i have spent my life and virology. i do not believe this somehow came from a back to a human. normally when a -- it takes a while for it to figure out how to become more and more efficient and human to human transition. i just don't think this makes biological sense. >> laura: if we had more thinking like that on the w.h.o. team, maybe china would have been closer to the truth about how covid started, but of course that investigation, it was nothing more than a propaganda ploy and it was a point made by a frequent guest of the show on
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"60 minutes" last night. >> it was agreed first that china would have veto power over who even got to be on the mission. secondly -- >> and w.h.o. agree to that. >> secondly, on top of that, w.h.o. agree that in most instances, china would do the primary investigation and share its findings with these international experts. imagine if we had asked the soviet union to do a coinvestigation of chernobyl. it doesn't really make sense. >> laura: the man who just saw, jamie netzel, atlantic council sr. fellow and w.h.o. advisor. that was a fascinating interview on "60 minutes." you say this report is not credible. for our viewers, why is this very unlikely that the story would have unfolded from a -- from a bat to a person without any lab involvement?
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>> so there's two points. one is why is it not credible. people feel this must be a world health organization investigation. it's not. it's not an investigation and the world health organization isn't doing it. it's an independent committee with their chinese government counterparts. so anything that they come out with is going to be a compromise, a consensus between this committee and the chinese government. it could be possible that covid-19 began through a zoonotic jump through animal hosts. it also could very well be possible that it comes from an accidental lab leak. there's a lot of evidence that suggests it's all circumstantial, that that is a very, very real possibility, that the virus comes from horseshoe bats that are more than a thousand miles away from wuhan, but what wuhan has is china's only level four virology institute, the world's largest collection of that coronavirus is. doing dangerous gain of function
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research with a spotty security record and we have this massive chinese cover-up that came afterwards. so nobody knows or very few people know what exactly the story was, but at the very least, we need a full and credible investigation exploring all hypotheses. >> laura: now, is it richard a bright who gave the big interview where he gave all the likelihoods -- pretty smart guy, right? he doesn't think it's all that likely that it would have come from the animal, the human jump. he went through all these reasons why. but the strange thing about this from the beginning is why -- you know, why are people like anthony fauci, who should kind of no better, why is he so resistant to this idea that, you know, it couldn't have been at least an accident from a lab? >> part of it is that most of these pathogenic outbreaks in
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history have come through that other way, through jumps through animals in the wild. this, there certainly have been thousands of outbreaks from labs, but nothing like this. so it's hard for people to imagine, but we know that whatever happened, it's something weird and quirky. we don't have these kinds of massive pathogenic outbreaks all the time. it happens once in a while through a strange set of circumstances that could have happened to the mild but very, very well could have happen from an accidental lab leak. >> laura: i think the point here is if it's all innocent explanation, than they would have thrown open their doors and interview anyone you want to, we want to get to the bottom of this. that's not what they did, right? >> no no, it's the total opposite of that. china and frankly this joint committee is doing everything possible to explore this animal jump hypothesis and the chinese government is doing everything
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possible to destroy samples, to hide databases and other records. they've imprisoned journalists and there's a universal gag order on chinese scientists making it impossible for them to say anything or write anything without prior approval about the origins of the pandemic. >> laura: yeah. leading us to the conclusion that we've pretty much try to bring out on the show. jamie, fascinating interview, thank you very much for joining us tonight. and, given my legal background, we want you to think of this show is your one-stop shop for the development that you need to know and what could be an ongoing and explosive murder trial in the george floyd case. ahead, alan dershowitz, john [indiscernible] are going to walk us through day one opening arguments. you bet, stay there.
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♪ ♪ >> we need to examine the totality of the circumstances to determine the meaning of evidence and how it can be applied to the questions of reasonableness, actions, and reactions. >> the evidence is far greater than 9 minutes and 29 seconds. >> laura: derek chauvin's defense team making the one point they hope is going to pierce the jury box, that floyd died of drug use, including some taken minutes before his arrest
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as well as unrelated medical issues. here to weigh in, alan dershowitz, the harvard law school professor, here is john, minnesota attorney and president of the center of the american experiment. alan, can a defense that's based on in part at least unrelated health issues, drug use, cannot work here? >> it can only work if the judge gives an instruction to the jury on causation, which enables the jury to find a reasonable doubt. i had a case like this years ago where i won our murder appeal because the prosecution failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that my client who actually shot the defendant had killed him because somebody had shot him a few minutes earlier. so the government has the burden of proving beyond a reasonable doubt that it was the knee on the neck that actually caused the death rather than the underlying conditions, the drug use.
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now, if judge instructs was it a but for cause, just a but for cause, the prosecution will win because i think we all agree but for the knee on the neck, george floyd would be walking around today, but if he charges that the causation of the defendant has to be a substantial or significant or a major, then i think the defendant has a lot to play with but if i were the defense attorney, i would be moving now in limiting for a decision by the judge telling me in advance what the instruction he's going to give on causation so i could make my -- >> laura: i'm going to get to that. to alan a posthumous point, because one of chauvin's defense attorneys did say about floyd's autopsy. >> there were no bruises to mr. floyd's neck either on his skin or after peeling his skin back to the muscles. there was no evidence that mr. floyd's airflow was
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restricted and he did not determine to be at the positional or mechanical asphyxia -- the results of mr. floyd's toxicology screen revealed the presence of fentanyl and methamphetamine among other things. >> laura: all right, john, with that, you were not impressed with nelson's performance, but did that not seem to be strong -- obviously relying on the autopsy. >> here's the thing, laura. the key issue in this case is the cause of death. if it was asphyxia and, chauvin hasn't got a chance but if what killed george floyd was a fentanyl overdose perhaps combined with some pre-existing conditions, then he's innocent and what i thought was that while chauvin's lawyer, eric nelson, did mention these things, talked about them a little bit, i didn't think he was forceful enough. i didn't think he was detailed enough. he talked about fentanyl, but he
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never said that george floyd had two to three times a lethal dose of fentanyl in his blood and he didn't talk about the fact that long before he encountered derek chauvin, derek chauvin's knee, he was complaining that he couldn't breathe, which is a symptom of fentanyl overdose, as is foaming at the mouth, as are the heavy lungs on autopsies which were filled with fluid. he mentioned it but didn't really make the point, and i don't know that he did enough to really get into the jurors heads the idea that there's another possibility here about what killed george floyd. >> laura: yeah, and -- >> he did a good job, who did a sensational job in their opening, really laying everything out, anticipating the defense and showing that video. when you watch that video, you want to convict and then for the [indiscernible] opening by saying reasonable doubt, that's
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almost an admission of guilt when you start with reasonable doubt. you have to start, if you're the defense attorney, with a claim of innocence, a claim that yes, he would have died even without the knee on the neck, and yes, the death was caused by something else. you get to reasonable doubt at the end of the case, but you don't start out with reasonable doubt when the other side has presented such a compelling case, so i don't think it was as effective and opening as could have happened, but it was not ineffective by any means. >> laura: i want to play something from prosecution's opening today as well. watch. >> you're going to hear from minneapolis police sergeant david pflueger. he was the officer on the scene, so he arrived on the scene after this took place. he is going to tell you that the force against mr. floyd's -- force against mr. floyd should have ended as soon as they put him on the ground. >> laura: okay, explain why you get testimony from an officer who arrived after the incident took place?
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>> well, not only that, laura, i mean, i have never seen anybody thrown under the bus like derek chauvin. the chief of police of the city of minneapolis is one of several police department witnesses who are going to come in and testify against chauvin, including the sergeant you just mentioned who was on the scene, got there a little bit later, but the city of minneapolis in the middle of jury selection announced, they had a press conference, announcing a $27 million settlement of the wrongful death case against -- by his family. the well here is so -- >> this case should never have been tried. this case should never be try to minneapolis for two reasons. every juror there is going to worry that there is an acquittal, it will affect them. it will affect their businesses, it will affect their homes. it should have been in a rural part of the state. >> laura: two choices, we burn your house stone or you vote guilty. gentlemen, thank you very much.
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up next, biden stumbles, a rapper takes the own town road to hell. raymond arroyo explains that, "seen and unseen" next. rapid grass. rapid grass is a revolutionary mix of seed and fertilizer that will change the way you grow grass. it grows two times faster than seed alone for full, green grass in just weeks. after growing grass this fast, everything else just seems... slow. it's lawn season. let's get to the yard. download the scotts my lawn app today for your personalized lawn plan.
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♪ ♪ >> laura: it's time for our "seen and unseen" segment where we unpacked the cultural stories of the day and for that, we turn to fox news contributor, author of the new book, raymond arroyo. all right, biden had to go public appearances today but only one event where he actually spoke. >> that's right. he updated his vaccine distributional plans of the white house and he urged governors and mayors to reinstate mask mandates but along the way there were a lot of male stops, countertops, word confusion. it's tonight marquis malarkey. >> president biden: a bunch of malarkey! ♪ ♪
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>> president biden: there are more doses of the vaccine available for seniors this week than any week thus far. 10% will be eligible no later -- the final 10% eligible no later than may 1. the failure to take this virus seriously, risk more cases and more deaths, over 60% of the shots given at these sites goes to minority communities. they're the ones most affected by both the vaccine, but also by the pandemic. >> laura, every biden speech is like a modern version of supercalifragilisticexpialidocio us backwards. this is where we're going to see him contract more and more from the public stage. watch. >> laura: i don't even have words anymore. just keep going. >> apparently neither does he, laura. i can tell you about with little nasdaq controversy.
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the wrapper -- >> laura: it's nas. >> his old town road song made his name with country audiences, he built a large following among children, he appeared on "sesame street," released kids books, even performed at schools. >> kids determine the future. these are the people that grow with you, learn from you, and emulate you and they are like the most loyal fans. >> but like miley cyrus before him, lil nas x has changed his tune. his newly released song and video, laura, are far from kid friendly. i'm not going to show the worst of the video because that's what he wants, but in it the wrapper slides down a stripper pole for hell and gives satan a lap dance and maybe something more. it's meant to provoke obviously attract criticism. putting aside -- normal
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operating procedure for these music acts seeking attention, what's most outrageous is the timing of this. it was intentionally dropped on the evil of holy week, try this with any other than religious group than christians and might find himself sliding down a pole for real. this is desperate and really pathetic. >> laura: we are all so tired of this routine. all the atheists pulled us every holy week for christianity. when you start doing it during ramadan, you'll impress us but right now, the christians, we have bigger issues to focus on, which is going to be the resurrection, "the passion of the christ" and -- -- we are not worrying about that. in partnership with a design company, he has released a limited-edition tie-in, which is his own satan sneakers! >> with my song and my video, it was kind of like the perfect match up. we came together and issue, this
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crazy shoe. look at this. that's insane. >> lovely. all 666 pairs of the sneakers, laura, sold out for a grand pop. then today the nike federal lawsuit dropped claiming copyright infringement. they are demanding that the satan shoes be destroyed and all profits handed over to them. pity they couldn't include the music and the video in the lawsuit. >> laura: yeah, i'm not one to stand up for the nike death star given all the money they make from china but in this case i might make an exception. from lil nas x to little pete, transportation secretary floated this wonderful idea of a mileage tax to fund biden's, what, infrastructure plan? it would be taxed on every mile driven. today he reversed himself. >> you said also that a mileage tax showed "a lot of promise" is a way to help pay for the plan.
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is that under consideration? >> no, that's not part of the conversation about this infrastructure bill. >> this bill, there's no guarantee it might not come up again later. look, the biden administration needs cash for these ongoing stingless packages and the mileage tax would cost the government about 20 billion annually to track everyone's mileage, so mayor pete come he always preferred bikes to cars. >> one thing i don't think a lot of americans are aware of is how far behind we are on bicycle and pedestrian safety. sometimes we do need to add a road or widen one. just as often i think we need to subtract. >> tried this in south bend, he brought this group in, they left after two years. the locals were throwing the bikes into the st. charles river. it ain't going to work nationally either. >> laura: if i was talking about playing the little matchbox cars, that little set he still plays, that's what i thought he was talking about. raymond, thank you, wonderful to see you.
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>> laura: it was only four days ago that president biden assured the american people of this. >> president biden: if you take a look at the number of people who are coming, we are sending back the vast majority of families that are coming. >> laura: the vast majority of the families, really? according to his own border patrol, however, all that data, the biden administration expelled just 41% of the families entering our country illegally. joining me now is julio process, joins us from the front line in the border crisis in mcallen, texas. you're saying that, what, there's a common theme to where these folks are flooding in or a common characteristic? explain that. >> so in this one area of la joya, texas, about 20 minutes from where i am right now, there was the borden wall system that was being built under president trump and that was being built in that area, but obviously has since been stopped
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because the biden administration has put that to a pause, and that's why in that specific area others just miles of open space and because there's no border wall system, because there's no barrier, it is very easy for family units, for unaccompanied minors and small children, as we saw last night, about 120, just cross over their day in and day out. some of my friends were out there just this afternoon and i saw about 30. so that's why it's very easy for small children -- mothers carrying small children to cross, because there's no barrier there. >> laura: julio, the arizona republicans reporting that starting in february, border agents began releasing migrant families under this thing called humanitarian parole and what happens is that agents basically just drop them at bus stops in these smaller, you know, farming cities like yuma and then they started releasing entire families over the past week and some of these other small communities. forcing these local governments
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to declare an emergency. are you hearing the same thing or are you witnessing any of this? >> well, what i can say is in these border towns, they definitely feel the strain, because there are people in brownsville when i was here about three weeks ago. i saw migrants being dropped off that were family units at the greyhound bus station there, so there were local charities helping them out, but no, the border towns are forced to feel the effects of the search but the thing that is important to note is they are not playing dumb exiting places -- they are going further the united states. so it's not staying just at the border. >> laura: they are going wherever they have friends. any other illegal immigrants are now able to be sponsors, so it's kind of -- it's going to continue rolling right through. julio, this is an ongoing outrage and travesty and thank you for being there reporting it. and joining me now is one of the victims of this mass illegal
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immigration, angel mom who was killed by a twice-deported illegal alien back in 2007. they say that of immigration, legal immigration is a victimless violation. they don't even want to say it's a crime. do you feel like it was victimless? >> absolutely not, laura, thank you for having me. we are a family, an american family and our son deserves to still be here. it was 21 years old, they talk about dreamers, he had a dream, he wanted to be a veterinarian. he was engaged to be married, he had his whole life ahead of him and a twice deported illegal decided that it was more important for him to drive around recklessly without ever having a u.s. issued driver's license and he took our son's life and our son was on his lunch break going to cash his check and was hit and killed in his car. such a tragic way that it caused
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his car to flip and then the illegals denied that he was even driving and no one else was in the car with him and that forced the state to not prove he was behind the wheel. which now is a family we have to endure not only the loss, the sudden loss of our precious child, but now we have to endure a trial and listen and look at this person that took his life and knowing that he was behind the wheel and the one that caused the wreck and disregarded our laws. >> laura: when you look at this video of people streaming across, most of them obviously quite poor, they have friends who are already here and basically wide open, they are just walking in. what is your message to president biden tonight, given what your family and so many others have gone through in this country? what is your message to him tonight? >> i would say to him that his lack of plan is a disaster. it's just not going to work and
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he has disregarded his responsibility as a president to protect american citizens and it's not a matter of if we will be joined by other families, it's a matter of when, and because of his lack of leadership, what he is doing is putting our borders at risk even more. without borders, we are not a nation. without borders, we don't have an identity as a culture. >> laura: no, and kiyan, my heart breaks for you. and everybody has got to pay attention right now. kiyan, you are brave to come on, thank you very much for sharing your story. when we come back, the last bite. it's going to be hard after the segment.
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crisis. what was it today? >> affordable child care is a big deal. more parents are seeing the value of education -- [laughing] -- >> [applauding]. >> they say we are not paying them nearly enough. [laughing]. >> laura: what is that? i don't know what is worse. when we saw from biden or that? it's a toss up. is she okay? that's all of the time tonight. shannon bream and the fox news @ night team take it from here. >> shannon: a busy breaking news monday night. >> ♪ ♪ >> shannon: black lives matter marching on the streets of minneapolis after the first day of the george floyd murder trial of former police officer derek chauvin. we will take you live there in a minute. violent crimes in big
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