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tv   FOX and Friends Sunday  FOX News  April 18, 2021 3:00am-7:00am PDT

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thank you. be sure to follow me on facebook, instagram and twitter. "justice with judge jeanine" is next. ♪. will: straight to a fox news alert. a manhunt underway after a gunman opened fire in a bar in kenosha, wisconsin, overnight. three people are reported dead. two others are hurt. we'll continue to update the story as it develops. another major story. anti-police clashes erupted across the country, congresswoman maxine waters joins protesters in brooklyn, minnesota. jedediah: breaking the overnight curfew. hundreds gathering outside the city's police demanding more confrontation. reporter: protesters got support
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from a member of congress. maxine waters joining the crowds and demanding justice. listen. >> question have to persist calling for justice. we have to let people know we'll not be satisfied unless we get justice in these cases. reporter: waters said if ex-minneapolis officer derek chauvin is acquitted we got to get on the street, get more active, get more confrontational. they have got to know we mean business. anti-cop sentiment spreading nationwide. sacramento police declared an unlawful assembly after protesters threw rocks and hurt officerses with a irritant liquid. same in new york city. >> what are you doing for? >> you can open the door. oh. oh [bleep] reporter: suspect throwing a chemical on an officer after being pulled over for running a red light. he threw a molotov cocktail
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before being arrested. even the city's emts are being targeted with a union chief telling the "new york post" a crew had a brick thrown at their ambulance. in d.c. several protesters were arrested. they were throwing fireworks and bottles at police. back to you guys. will: ashley, thank you so much. it is impossible, lawrence, jedediah, good morning watching from home this morning. i amable to overstate how irresponsible the comments by maxine waters are, absolutely how incendiary. she is breaking curfew. calling for open confrontation with police officers. ramping up confrontation. she is setting up an impossible standard. she is not saying acquittal the confrontation to be conflict. whether derek shevin is
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convicted for murder, not manslaughter charges. if it falls short she is saying confrontation on the streets. >> not just being responsible as an elected official. it is disrespecting that community because she didn't even live there. i'm a community guy. i'm used to being out there on the ground. people made it very clear they don't want outsiders that causing nonsense. armed people are protecting their businesses. protesters in the day saying the outsiders are coming in to stir up trouble. i'm sure at that they didn't expect an elected official that is from california to bring her nonsense there. i think it is so disrespectful to the people there. it is incendiary. guess what? it is a tough case to prove on many fronts. you know, there is one thing to go down there and say look, we have a problem, and we want to i about the community together, we want to talk about different
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police reforms. we want to talk about bringing the police and community together. it is another thing saying, if we don't get the outcome that we want, let's burn it down. jedediah: someone should ask maxine waters exactly what she means by confrontational. what is she suggesting? put her on the record saying exactly what she is suggesting that protesters do. it is important to know. this isn't just police officers at this point being targeted. you have emts in various locations around the country. you have ambulances. you have fire trucks. a whole host of services every single day those individuals wake up, they put their lives in danger for us, for our safety. now they are concerned about their own safety, getting molotov cocktails thrown at them. getting windows bashed in. so when you have someone deeply irresponsible as maxine waters out there making these comments, someone needs to get claritity from her put her on the record exactly what she is saying.
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the defund the police movement gained ground if some areas of the country. a lot of republicans cautioned against it for obvious reasons. you have a lot of democrats getting very, very uncomfortable with this language, not only because it is hazard does to the community, and hearing from members of the community, if something happens there, is no police, police are not funded adequately there are no services who am i going to call? you have politicians thinking politically, thinking about potential re-election. knowing a defund the police movement certainly will not help them in any way. representative josh gotemiire talked about it in great detail there is always rooms for reform and do better defund the police makes no sense. put more training and camera something law enforcement supports, the idea we should gut budgets for the sake of it is absurd. you will hear a lot more moderate democrats saying yes we
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believe in reforming the system absolutely but gutting these projects having police officers not want to get on the street is an enormous problem for our community and citizens. will: defunding the police flies in the face, as we talked about yesterday on "fox & friends" blm movement leaders hiring private security asking police departments in their communities to be defunded. kim klacik was on "watters' world" or justice judge janine and she said this. >> you know what is funny, mr. ben, ben and jerry, mr. cohen, is worth $150 million i'm sure he feels safe in his gated community. if you live in a city like baltimore you do not want to defund the police. you want funding. we're down police officers now. it shows. we have 10 times the national homicide rate. for people protected at all times like the squad, protected by the u.s. capitol police they love to talk about defunding the
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police because it doesn't affect their lives. i wish they would quiet down, let people that live in the dangerous neighborhoods take control of this narrative. >> i would note because it is important that we be factual here. the people started the movement of defund the police in minneapolis, they're refunding the police now because it didn't work for the people there. it may be con vent for activists that don't live in communities. you have sandra bland's mom, at that mere rice's mom, look, blm, we believe in people protesting for justice but the movement, the movement and the organization is totally separate because the consequences that they are at, are causing by advocating for this nonsense, it doesn't affect them because they don't live in these communities. will: absolutely. jedediah: no one else knows better than you. you go into the communities.
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get on the ground going there. you talk to business owners, talk to people that are scared for their lives every single day, scared for their children's lives. that is what some people should do, plan to be outspoken activist for a cause, get in there to see what is going on. will: president biden is finally admitting there is a crisis on our southern border. jedediah: another heartbreaking video shows another child abandoned at the border. >> griff jenkins is at the border. what have you got. reporter: good morning, he is finally the border a crisis after getting hammered by he signed paperwork for 15,000 and democrats were not happy. he was asked about it in wilmington yesterday, watch. >> [inaudible] >> problem was the refugee i was working on with the border of young people, couldn't
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[inaudible]. now it -- reporter: get yet another heartbreaking reminder of the brutality of the smugglers a 10-year old boy found terrified and you farm tractor near the same area another 10-year-old child was rescued two weeks ago in the rgv. the administration racing to open more child shelters the latest one at san antonio lacklin one closed run by the national association of churches. no reason given for the closure. daily unaccompanied report, 22,313 in the custody or care of the government. meanwhile, still no plans for vice president harris to visit our southern border. national border patrol council president brandon judd says it is intention. >> if she goes to the border people expect her to fix the
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problem and she. reporter: harris announced she will soon travel to guatemala and mexico to discuss root causes of the migration in the northern triangle. lawrence, will, jed. will: thanks, griff. jedediah: thank you so much, griff. i think it is pretty obvious at this point kamala harris, the vice president is not going down there because she knows she will have to do something about it. you can't just go down there to look at all the conditions which happen to be horrific, with respect to children, see a humanitarian crisis, people ask you what is the next step and you don't know? that is the bottom line. they don't know what to do at this time, given how they incentivized this problem and will have to answer for it this will be part of the biden legacy like it or not. senator lindsey graham weighed in on all of this, particularly president biden finally coming out acknowledging yes, this is a border crisis this is from justice. take a listen. >> it is not a crisis, it is chaos. i was down there just a few weeks ago.
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we had 172,000 people come into the country illegally in march alone. we're on track to do two million. the border patrol told the biden administration during the transition if you reverse trump policies, there will be a run on the border. they were right. i never been more worried than i am about the world writ large. you have the russians threatening to go into ukraine. you've got the chinese threatening taiwan. the border is completely out of control. we'll withdraw completely from afghanistan, make sure the taliban take cares of al-qaeda and isis. >> it is so interesting to me that during the transition the biden administration begged for these briefings during the transition and they were briefed on the consequences of the rhetoric during the campaign trail. they told them a surge was going to happen because the president-elect at the time was urging people to come to the u.s. without going through the process. the president of the, president-elect at the time was
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saying look, we'll break up the treaties that we had with other countries to have them apply for a asylum there. and then after all of those briefings, they still went along with it. they didn't prepare. they decided on day one, that they were going to stop the building of the wall. and there has been no consequences of this. and the media is still not allowed in these facilities. it its important to note, these photos we're seeing every single day are being leaked by members of congress because the press is barred. i went to the border four times under president trump. how many times have i been under this president? not once. not once. because i'm not allowed to. will: you know you're right, lawrence, rhetoric helped cause this problem. rhetoric will not solve this problem. it is a very low bar to cross to begin to call it a crisis. next point do something about it, take action to solve the
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crisis, chaos, whatever you want to call it. to your point about the border. i will go this week to take a first hashed look for "fox & friends" the arizona border upcoming this week. it is absolutely a mess. what we need is action. jedediah: this administration obviously felt the need to come out to reject everything that the former administration did. i think they felt that was their path to victory. maybe it was. maybe that is why they won. they are facing harsh reality, some policies like remain in mex can he policy was for a reason. you're seeing consequences getting rid of everything for political purposes. will: coming up, i'm afraid this will be the start of a very difficult week. coast to coast unrest as protesters rye i don't have and damage businesses all in the yale of quote, justice. our next guest has been reporting on the ground since last summer. he joins us live next. ♪.
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the bowls are back. applebee's irresist-a-bowls all just $8.99. ♪. lawrence: business owners left to pick up the pieces after days of riots in portland. police releasing photos of damage after widespread arson and vandalism. in minnesota, state patrol updated guidance how they interact with reporters during protest after a week of unrest in brooklyn center. "daily caller" reporter, jorge ven sure a has been ventura has been on the ground in brooklyn center and he joins me to tell us what is on the ground. jorge, tell me what you've seen on the ground. >> when the unrest kicked off at the brooklyn center police department we saw clashes every night. you as these, as the civil
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unrest continues throughout the weekend and moves ahead we've seen these crowds kind of change their tactics between having, first they show up with shields and gas masks and they throw bricks and rocks, other objects over the fence to the brooklyn police center. we also seen law enforcement respond with crowd control munitions, tear gas, pepper balls, flash grenades. one thing makes this really difficult for law enforcement at the brooklyn center press department, right across the street from the police department there are apartment complexes. so that is one thing making it difficult controlling the crowd. they're trying not to use as much tear gas as they usually do. constant clashes throughout the night. a lot of residents have been complaining they're honestly tired of it. a lot of business owners in that center had businesses damaged or looted. since sunday brooklyn center police department at least 200 calls came in related to business damage or burglary just alone. lawrence: i've been talking to some of my sources from my
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reporting on the ground and they have been sending me of video, after video locals telling people to leave the area that don't live there. what have you experienced on the ground with the actual people that are there want justice, but don't want outsiders coming in to burn down their city? >> the residents and business owners i interviewed, including business owners with businesses damaged, they say, hey, we support the movement we don't support the violence. they really don't understand it at all. because you know, during this time, the businesses that are damaged and looted most of the time are actually black and brown businesses. they are mine another owned businesses that are damaged. residents are tired of it. we have kids that live in the apartment complexes right in font of the police department. they're dealing with the constant clashes throughout the night. tear gas is getting into the apartment buildings. i spoke to some of the residents say their kids are coughing all night. some are putting bed mattresses
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against the windows, because they are afraid anything coming in to smash the windows because of constant clashes. the residents are tired of it. they lived through it last summer. they thought it was the end of it. we're starting again because as you know, lawrence he is have the derek chauvin trial around the corner. lawrence: unfortunate this continues to happen. antifa are openly in the community. i hope they get people off the streets so these businesses don't get burned down again. who are say, thank you for your reporting. >> thank you. lawrence: more than a year into the pandemic and some new york businesses are still not allowed to reopen. will cain went to a a marshall arts studio and that is next.
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♪. jedediah: we are back with some quick headlines. prince philip is laid to rest following a small, somber ceremony at windsor castle in england. only 30 people attended the funeral because of covid restrictions. queen elizabeth sat alone at the service mourning the loss of her beloved husband after 73 years of marriage. look at this. a high schoolgirls basketball game turns into and all-out brawl in indiana. referees throwing a punch at a spectator and a player before being body slammed to the ground. after one of the teams protested a ref's call and gave their coach a technical foul. not good. lawrence: some states claim they loosened the covid restrictions but small businesses are saying they still feel the pinch like in new york where fitness has resumed but full contact sports
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are not al hundred. will: this affects places like the staten island, jujitsu dojo shut more than a year. i talked to the owner about his struggles, what he is facing. take a look at this. rewind the clock for me back to all 2019. what did this place look like? >> this place would be full with students. you see a lot of smiles on people's faces. business was great. will: march, 2020, what happened? >> march came along. we started to hear about the virus. the mayor got on tv and immediately shut down fitness studios. still over a year later still unable to open. will: you have been shut down for a year, what has that been like? >> my business is decimated. absolutely decimated. facing more than $10,000 in commercial property tax. will: government shut down the business, says you can't operate, but expects you to pay the taxes? >> the city wants us paid taxes
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for the year that i was closed. will: how does that make us feel? >> some people think a business is a light switch, turn it oaf and then turn it back and thing go back to usual. but this has been a death sentence for my business. will: here in new york, some businesses are not just shut down but decimated by government restrictions. the people hurt, not just business owners, but students as well. >> our oldest joined when she was seven. she is 18. our youngest when she was five. she is 14 now. >> this was the second home. they grew up here. >> so it was very disheartening for them. they were not able to come back. >> my kids want to do jude yo, when are we going back, when are we going back? i don't know. will: what do you miss? >> seeing my friends and exercise. will: what happens if the place doesn't open again? >> i will never see my friend. all the fun stuff that happened here we'll never get to do anything here again. will: how many student did you
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have before the pandemic? >> i had 136. will: how many do you have now? >> zero. will: will you survive? >> doesn't look like it. i have hope. but ultimately none much it lies within my control. will: believe the rules for indoor fitness are in new york state you can open to 33% capacity. but that doesn't help you, right? >> unfortunately judo is a full contact sport. so in order for us to have a business, to be able to teach we need to close the six foot gap. right now we're not mandated to do that. we can't open up. will: we can't do full contact. show me a few things. >> i do my best. very little we can do without being in physical contact but i will do my best. will: joe. i'm ready. >> today i will show you how to do have a role. will: okay. >> start this way one knee, one hand like this. one over the other. turn it to 45. put it down on the florida. put your chin own your left shoulder. push off the back leg and roll forward, roll forward, roll
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forward. there you go. ♪. you got it. a natural. judo is a full contact sport. people are required to engage in physical contact. in judo we have throws, pins, chokes, arm locks. will: all right there? >> precisely. will: can you show me what to throw, can we do this without touching? >> impossible. will: i don't know how you would do it. >> let's see this, you can hit the pad without breaking the six foot rule. it is impossible to happen without contact. jedediah: nice job, will cain. what. lawrence: you are a fast learner. will: he said he was a natural. saw my geek there. it is really sad. we talk about how it doesn't make sense all day long, but in the end this is cruel. it is cruel and i am punitive.
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you're putting people out of business. you're anti-science, these government regulators, the mayor bill de blasio, you're crushing people's livelihoods for anti-science, nonsensical, irresponsible policies. it can't go on across the country. jedediah: the kids too. these kids, you meet children, they're so stressed out. they have no outlet for everything they have been feeling for the whole year. they're not in school. in-person learning so many cases. now they can't do activities. they're losing their minds sometimes being claustrophobic in houses everywhere. that will have impact -- seen it behavioral issues. i seen it with my own sown. he wants to get outside around other kids. it is problematic. people need to think of the long term consequences about this. lawrence: eventually we have a state, power, and civil liberties we gave up to them. will: i hope so at some point, lawrence, in the future we look at the past year, say oh my good can you believe we did that to
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people. i hope there is that retrospective at that point. i'm afraid there will never be accountability. lawrence: i'm afraid if we give it up we'll never get it back. americans are conditioned to take it. will: for what it is worth, you can do that safely. you have can have contact sports. my kids are doing full contact sports in texas. multiple times a week. you can be safe about it. you can help staten island dojo. go to gofundme, gofundme.com/help my dojo survive. people need your help. jedediah: they sure do. of coming up where is kamala? she is the mt. 's pick to fix the migrant crisis. she is actively avoiding the border. going 26 days without having a press conference. joe concha on the media blackout ♪.
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♪. >> the problem was the refugee law was working on -- [inaudible]. border with young people. we couldn't do two things at once. lawrence: joe biden finally
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admitting there is a crisis at border as he defends initial moves on refugee cam. will: after 26 days, 2days without a press conference for kamala harris supposedly in charge of the border surge. joe biden called on her to fix it. we'll see. jedediah: our next guest says she never should have gotten the role in the first place. fox news contributor, "the hill" media columnist, joe concha is with us to explain. joe, why shipment she have gotten this job to begin with? >> jed there are several reasons. i would not call this a crisis but is a catfy. per of the pass statements should have disqualified her. she compared i.c.e. to the kkk. illegal border crossings should be legal and said this as a candidate and if those are your positions how do you fix a situation like this? it is painfully apparent you
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will see not kamala harris at the border. you will see detroit lions at the super bowl. as lawrence and will know, you know you have never seen the lions there. she will have to answer questions on her policy positions. even though she is in charge of the diplomacy side of in terms of guatemala, nicaragua and mexico she has not traveled there. don't tell me because of covid restrictions. at last check she is fully vaccinated. the cdc says it it is fine for her to travel to meet people indoors without a mask. that. will: sounds like a segment on the will cain podcast. which goes to the super bowl first. kamala harris as you pointed out has a shift showing no interest in a secure bored, leads to the question do they want to fix it? >> that is the question, right. think about kamala harris personally. there are more than a few people
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who believe that she will be the democratic nominee in 2024 and not joe biden. you're talking about an 80 something joe biden. maybe he wanted to serve one term. he hasn't completely, totally definitely said he will run for president again. people will look at, okay, in terms of your accomplishments, kamala harris what did you do with the biggest responsibility you had as vice president in terms of fixing our border catastrophe? and she won't probably have many answers because again you look at these facilities, dangerously overcrowded. you hear reports now of sexual assault of young girls. this is the same candidate in harris, by the way, who compared these facilities that you're currently seeing, not seeing because there is media blackout, pictures that get out, concerning babies in cages she called it. she is not doing so much to help the babies in cages. this will be the signature failure and any republican that runs against her like ron desantis or even donald trump will be quick to point this out. she will not have answers to
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talk about. lawrence: did they really need to appoint someone to do this job? mayorkas, he knows. he was a deputy before. joe biden knows. weigh was a vice president. they know what they feed to do to get a handle on this. are they just refusing to. >> it seems they are. i think mayorkas is set up to be the fall guy, lawrence, point to him, he is in charge of dhs. this is his responsibility. but it just seems like they hope this will go away eventually. here we are in april. the weather will get warmer in may, this will only get worse. you have to have a media demanding accountability here. that means access to all facilities, access to all border patrol agents. interesting covering on major places like the evening news, they're still get 25 million viewers a night add up abc, cbs, nbc. fox is covering it. cnn and msnbc do have an interest.
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until "the washington post," "new york times," everyone gets in unison like with donald trump they call a crisis, i think they can get away with it, because they have accomplice it media not interested in solving the problem or covering it. lawrence: administration says we'll give you access when we're ready. i don't hold much hope. >> good to see you as well. jedediah: turn to headlines now. the family of the gunman in the indianapolis fedex shooting apologizes to the victims and pham families. we're devastated at the as a loss of life as a result of brandon's actions. our most since searest heartfelt apologies go out to the victims of this senseless tragedy. the indianapolis community held a vigil to support the eight lives lost and the families impacted by the shooting. a plane goes down in the ocean right by crowds in cocoa beach, florida. it was participating in the cocoa beach airshow when a
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mid-flight mechanical issue forced it to make a landing. the pilot was okay. no one else was hurt. the oldest american has died. hester ford was born in 1904. she got married at 15 and moved to charlotte, north carolina. she has 12 children, 48 grandchildren, 108 great grandchildren and 120 great-great granchildren. her family says she died peacefully at her charlotte home surrounded by loved ones. she was 116 years old. wow, a beautiful life right there. will: 116, i believe you said oldest american passed away. who is the oldest person on earth right now? i can't believe we make it to 116, have the capability. lawrence: i bet she has so much wisdom. jedediah: absolutely. adam klotz will you make it to 116 or go even further than that? >> i hope it make it through the morning show. jedediah: you will.
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you will do great, adam. take it away. adam: no way i make it to triple digits. this system we watch throughout the weekend. heavy rain throughout the gulf coast. rain and flood watches lower mississippi. all the heavy rain and high water, this rain will continue to move off be more of a problem in north florida. if you live along the central gulf that clears off. temperatures in the eastern half of the united states, temps back in the 30s in western half of the country. we'll talk about more snow next couple days. typical seasonal highs in some cities would be up closer to 60 degrees. we'll have day time highs in upper 40s and 30s. we'll be cold enough to support snow especially in i here elevations. this system works through tonight and early tomorrow morning. snow in denver, wyoming, farther
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north. it is spring, still very heavy snow in some places out there before we get into tuesday. back out to you guys. will: you're not only one, adam. we're not making triple digits getting up at these hours. i guarranty hester was sleeping, got her beauty sleep. ted cruz growing number of lawmakers done wearing a mask at the capitol. why? because he is fully vaccinated. what are the rules for those who had the shot? we're separating fact from fiction next. ♪. ♪ (ac/dc: back in black) ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ back in black ♪
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leaders immunized as well. has this become come metally political? dr. marty makary johns hopkins school of health and foxx news contributor let's please talk about the science which wont to do. why are we wearing masks approaching 50% of the population is vaccinated? if you in particular have been immunized why should you be wearing a mask? >> look people have to lynch their lives after they get vaccinated. you have got to give people a reason to be vaccinated. get your vaccine. wait a month. live your normal life. with two conditions. you have almost no immune protection for first 10 days. wait until you have a month after the first dose. we have got to respect business owners. they're asking people to wear masks. i'm a little torn, will. on one hand you don't need to wear a mask a month after vaccination.
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on other hand i am not sure fighting about it right now. next month will be a great month i'm torn on this issue. will: i'm not torn on this issue. i refer to you as the doctor and medical expert. the data seems to suggest, i understand your timeline, i appreciate the timeline you gave us, it is important to understand when the vaccine kicks in. what is the science backs up dr. fauci and others, no, no we have to continue. not just about the mask, dr. makary, dr. fauci saying no indoor dining with other friends after you have been immunized? i don't understand where we are. we don't seem to be following sighens. we're following something else very different? >> you touched on a key point. the mask is symbolic of a lot of other restrictions public health officials are asking people to do, that make no sense, and are inconsistent with the science. i guess my question is the case more compelling next month, do we wear mask indoor in public
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settings right now? outdoor masks make no sense. we have to go get consensus around that. you're right, people are frustrated out there. you've got to give people something to look forward to. will: you know why, doctor? let me give an illustration for somebody watching at home. here is the nonsense being perpetuated. this is dr. fauci along with joy reid, a msnbc propogandist, watch. >> at this point it is political. there are there paranoia about you, they think the government is trying to take over. this is not rational. get a cute mask. will: there she goes, not rational to say you don't have to wear a mask after being vaccinated. before i lose you, dr. makary, this is another example. it is so important to talk about, when we talk about divorcing ourselves from science. i don't understand the cdc putting a quote-unquote pause, be real cancellation even if only temporary on the johnson & johnson vaccine. i will be clear with the audience. i had the j&j vaccine.
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i had it two weeks ago. the numbers on people getting the blood clotting issue is minuscule, beyond minuscule, one in one million at this point. why is the cdc pausing a very needed vaccine for many people out there? >> right, it is very needed. we're still in short supply of vaccines right now in the united states. although it won't have a big impact, because only 4% of americans got the j&j versus other ones, the rest of the world is looking at the fda and the defacto fda for many countries they're like wait a minute, we're planning, we have a roll out to getth vaccine to hard reached populations. it doesn't require cold storage this has a lot of implications. people need to understand we wouldn't have antibiotics if they started canceling things for one death in seven million. this is not botox. this is a life-saving vaccine during a health emergency or don't call it a health emergency. will: i wish we had a full screen of all the things we do in our daily lives, the
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medicines we take, one in seven million or one in one million risk factor. i don't know if we're led by power hungry people divorced themselves from science or totally risk-averse bureaucrat but we're not being led by data and science. appreciate you shining some light, dr. marty makary. >> thanks, will. will: still ahead senator elizabeth warren renews calls to cancel student loan debt but our next guest with a lot to repay disagrees. he joins us live to explain why after the break. a cfp® professl can help you build a complete financial plan. visit letsmakeaplan.org to find your cfp® professional. ♪♪
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♪. jedediah: >> about 43 million americans owe 1.$7 trillion in student loans. leader schumer and i have urged
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president biden to address this economic problem by using his existing authority to cancel $50,000 in student debt for each borrower. jedediah: there you have it, senator elizabeth warren renewing calls to cancel student debt. our next guest a college grad with lots to repay disagrees others should not be burden by his choices. political consultant albert eisenberg is with us. thanks for being here. you feel canceling student loan debt is the wrong thing to do, the wrong way to go. tell us why? >> yes. there might be a small number of earners are struggling right now but at the end of the day the average college grad outearns their peers by a million dollars. they didn't take things as basic economics. you're not canceling debt. you're spreading it on to every other taxpayer. the question every taxpayer, including working people who cannot afford to get college degrees opt not to take on college debt or college
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graduates going to state schools or get scholarships should be forced to subsidize the decisions of those who did not. in my case, i went to the more expensive college of my dreams. i took out over six figures of debt for my undergraduate degree. it was a decision i made consciously at the age of 18. i was 18. 18-year-olds go to war. they can be police officers. some of us are lucky enough to go to college. i chose to go to college. i chose to take on the debt. i still have a lot to pay. i worked my butt off during undergraduate for about eight years afterwards to pay off the debt myself, with my family's support. i don't really feel the average working people should have to subsidize my decisions. jedediah: i'm glad you shared your story. why was that do you feel that was important to your growth, process of growing up to building values? why is it so important for someone to be responsible for their own decision making like that? >> well i think you just nailed it. i think it is building values and being responsible.
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we have the entire left of this country aims to make-as easy as possible for everybody and that is really not the key to fulfilling, to a fulfilling life, to building a civic society full of responsible people who can, you know, do well for their families and do well for your communities. you have to work. you have to earn. in college i was by far the most burdened person in my immediate surroundings as far as debt. i worked multiple jobs throughout college. i graduated magna cum laude at georgetown. getting a married-based scholarship, being on financial aid, starting my first company, as well as getting paid for internships and working at a restaurant. that was meaningful for a way some people do not experience because they don't have to work for it. jedediah: this is important messages for someone who worked hard and paid the debt all by himself. i'm sure a lot more people feel the way you do. thanks for being with us this morning. >> thanks, jedi.
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♪. jedediah: live pictures of el paso, texas. the guys to the left and right of me got excited. welcome to the 7:00 a.m. hour of "fox & friends weekend." lawrence jones in for pete hegseth and will cain. i am. will: we should be playing marti robins song, el paso. i love songs tied to the city. willie nelson, arlo guthrie,
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new orleans, jay-z, el paso, marti robbins. lawrence: jay-z? that's what i'm talking about. we'll have some motown later on in the show too. jedediah: renaissance man. i like that. will: us up to date with other great cities with great songs directly attached to that city's identity throughout the morning on "fox & friendses." >> good start to the morning. we begin this hour of "fox & friends weekend" with heartbreaking video showing a migrant child abandoned at the border. lawrence: after president biden finally admits there is a crisis at southern border. will: griff jenkins is live. reporter: you started with the shot of el paso, let me give you this, 594 apprehensions in the last 24 hours in the he el paso second tore, up 20% from the fiscal year 2020. we're getting heartbreaking individual joe of smugglers and inhumane cruelty.
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a 10-year old boy found terrified in the dark under a farm tractor near the same area another 10-year-old child was rescue ad few weeks ago. the dhs reported on friday, they have 22,313 unaccompanied children in the custody or care of the government and still racing to open more emergency child shelters. the latest yesterday opened at joint base san antonio lochlin. they should one down run by the national association of churches, giving no reason for the abrupt closure that 450 girls were transported to other facility as are united with sponsors. president biden is finally calling it a crisis at the border after getting hammered by progressives after underdeliverring on his promise to increase the refugee cap at 62,500, signing off at 15,000. he was asked about wilmington. >> what about the the refugee
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cap? >> the problem was the ref few deworking on crisis at the border with young people. we couldn't -- [inaudible]. reporter: despite the president calling it a crisis still no plans for vice president harris to visit the border as national border patrol council president brandon judd says, that's on purpose. >> if she goes to the u.s. border people are going to expect her to fix the problem so she avoids it. that is disgusting. that is putting politics ahead what is best for this country. reporter: harris announced this past week she will soon travel to guatemala and mexico to discuss the root causes in the northern triangle. lawrence, will, jed. jedediah: thanks so much, griff, we appreciate the reporting. you heard president biden saying we couldn't do two things at once, interesting admission from him. talk about the role of the vice president and all of this, if she is in charge of looking to the source of the migration and why so many people are
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indeed coming what they are fleeing, what not, perhaps she should go down to the border to see what the implication of those policies, implications what is going on actually looks like when it manifests. she decided not to do that. we spoke with quo concha last hour who talked particularly about this failure on harris' part and what implication will be for the administration at large. take a listen. >> kamala harris, what did you do for the biggest responsibility you had as vice president in terms of fixing our border catastrophe? she probably won't have many answers because again you look at these facilities dangerously overcrowded. you hear reports now of essential all assault of young girls. this is the same candidate in harris by the way who compared these facilities that you're currently seeing where you're not seeing because there is media blackout pictures get out concerning babies in cages she calls it. she is not doing much to help the babies in cages. this will be her signature failure. will: meanwhile take a look at this, move on to this story
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because it is absolutely stunning. last night congresswoman maxine waters was in minnesota, brooklyn center, minnesota, past curfew, the city has a curfew based on trying to tamp down any protest that evolved into riots in that city. maxine waters was out past curfew, suggests that the verdict in the derek chauvin trial does not meet her liking, she used the pronoun our, whatever our liking might be, well then, how about more confrontation on the streets? here is the full screen quote. here is her exact words. i would like to see a bill in congress passed on police reform, the right-wing, racists are opposed to it. i don't know what will happen to it. we got to stay on the street. we got to get more active. we have to get more confrontational. they have to make sure they know we mean business. lawrence, jed, she went own to say in the chauvin trial, she wants to see first of all first-degree murder. first-degree murder has not been charged under chauvin.
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she was asked will manslaughter be enough. absolutely not. it needs to be murder. he was charged with second and third-degree murder. i will talk about it more in depth to the will pain broadcast. living up to the state has beyond a reasonable doubt to get murder charges is a very, very hard standard, she is sitting there, confrontation. i read as violence, violence on the street if we do not get will be a very difficult verdict to get. jedediah: she should be forced to clarify. that is how i interpreted it as well. someone ask her get more confrontational, what exactly do you mean by that because she is on the record. if you remember representative maxine waters has a pattern of behavior here. look back, from 2018. this is her calling on people to harass the trump administration june 2018. take a listen. >> let's make sure we show up wherever we have show up if you see anybody from that cabinet in a restaurant, in a department store, at a gasoline station,
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you get out and you create a crowd. you get on them, you tell them they're not welcome anymore, anywhere. lawrence: why i say, if this is the way it is going to be, especially since the city has made it very clear that they don't want people like her there, the businesses are crying out, the people are crying out. she is taking advantage of the heart break in that community, there has to be some competing ideas. if the democrats are going to do this, republicans have to go to the community and serve some type of liberty message for the people. protect these businesses. go out there tell them like about the second amendment to protect those businesses because this cannot continue to be the new normal. it is not just this city. it happens over and over and over and people like her don't care because they don't live in these communities. they don't have to rebuild after all of this is said and done.
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will: this is so deeply irresponsible. this is so dangerous. this is a person whose language can light the nation on fire this week. this nation is on razor's edge as we speak. what is her accountability? what will be the accountability for speaking like that? there won't be any. because, and this is up to her constituents in her district, she is ultimately accountable to the voters f they continue to endorse this kind of stuff we're going to pay the price. we'll pay the price on this week in the united states of america. lawrence: it is not just we. black and brown communities that will pay. will: absolutely. small businesses. people that will suffer from the violence. lawrence: do you realize in ferguson some of those businesses, that was years ago, they still haven't rebuilt. will: right. lawrence: it was already hard enough, you expect businesses to rebuild when the state told them they couldn't open? they have no revenue. no ppe. none of that exists. it is just sad. jedediah: she repeatedly manages to get away with such incendiary
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language. some people are held accountable for language like that, people should ask questions. if they are violence, if you hold one political leader responsible for using certain types of language then you need the other. pick your poison. there are a lot of questions what the country will look like not only in the coming months but coming years, not only when it comes to violence that erupted in many cities and businesses that close he had and may eventually reopen, but when it comes to covid-19 restrictions you have some states following different protocols than others. some wonder if my two-year-old have to wear a mask? some wonder if a mask mandate lives in perpetuity. people in florida living freely, able to open their businesses. able to have their kids go to school. able to have their kids go take part in social development. governor ron desantis has been a leader on this issue.
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he ruffled quite a few feathers as he knows. he talks about mask mandates for vaccinated americans. listen to what he has to say. >> my view, if you get a vaccine, the vaccines are effective, you're immune. so act immune. i think the messaging on this has been horrific. the messaging should be, get a vaccine because it is good for you to do it. it works. you're not going to have to be doing anything like abnormal. you can live your life. that has got to be what the message is. jedediah: so common sense. i don't understand why people would get vaccinated truthfully if they felt their life wasn't going to change at all? what would be the reason? if you were still going to have to wear a. if you were, everything would stay the same what was the purpose of getting vaccinated? a lot of people are asking that question. lawrence: rand paul hit it on the head. this is all theater. you don't need a mask anymore if you have gotten the vaccine.
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what is the purpose of getting a vaccine if you are not going to spread the virus? if you're immune once you get it. everybody always knows that there is subtle chance, small percentage what insent tiff? i think that is what dr. marty makary was getting too earlier. people need incentive to get the vaccine. take a look. >> well look, people have to live their lives after they get vaccinated. you got to give people a reason to get vaccinated. the mask is symbolic of a lot of other restrictions public health officials are asking people to do right now that make absolutely no sense and they're inconsistent with the science. i guess my question is the case more compelling next month and do we just wear masks indoor in public settings for now? outdoor masks maybe no sense. we have to get census on that. you're right, people are frustrated out there. you have to give people something to look forward to. will: lawrence, you dropped an important phrase i think there in what you were saying, you said there is always a small
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chance. that is what we're operating now. is there some small minute fraction, obviously tiny minute fraction after chance you can get it? yes. dr. fauci will continue to reiterate that every time he is asked. why are we living our lives with small mine newt chances? why are we living with fractions? every choice we're making with total, total risk aversion. i don't know if we're deferring good judgment, leadership to bureaucrats who are totally risk-averse or handing it over to people who do not want to give up as you pointed out the power you granted in the past year. jedediah: there is never going to be zero risk. that is not an achievable outcome. if we can acknowledge that, you can never get to zero, does that mean life never resumes, is that what you're essentially saying? someone needs to ask the question like that. it doesn't make any sense what is going on at this point. you're essentially telling businesses they will never be able to operate normally? some may never be able to open? this is --
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lawrence: we're not allowed to ask the question to the top paid person in the federal government. we pay his bills. the moment we start to ask these questions, oh, fox news is fear-mongering. they don't care about people. they want people to die. it is nonsense. will: we have a few additional headlines. manhunt is underway for the gunman who opened fire at a popular college bar in kenosha, wisconsin. that community has been hit so many times. three people shot and killed inside of the bar summers house they're carthage college. the shooting appears to be targeted there is no threat to the community. we'll keep you updated on the story throughout the morning. the journalist association is demanding governor andrew cuomo open up events to the press. the only taking a few questions on the phone an eattempt to bolster the positive's image at the same time attacking public's
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right to know. he said because of covid. he started taking select questions about nursing home and inappropriate behavior. i'm sure they weren't connected. budweiser giving americans another reason to get the covid-19 vaccine. offering virtual gift cards who offer proof of the vaccination to the company's website before may 16th. around ad campaign, your first round is on us if you have been vaccinated. other promotions were announced by companies like krispy kreme. those are your headlines. jedediah: krispy kreme. with unemployment benefits extended the incentive to work is dwindling. a viral tiktok video facing employers, no one wants to work. 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!
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but even if your teen was vaccinated against meningitis in the past they may be missing vaccination for meningitis b. although uncommon, up to 1 in 5 survivors of meningitis will have long term consequences. now as you're thinking about all the vaccines your teen might need make sure you ask your doctor if your teen is missing meningitis b vaccination.
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♪. lawrence: tiktok video show as texas mcdonald's drive-through pleading for patience, because, quote, nobody wants to work anymore. brittany logan, i'm sorry, jed. jedediah: she is the nurse who posted that video. she joins us now. brittany, welcome to the show. did you have any idea when you took the video it would go so viral? >> i had no idea. i was shocked by the brutality, honesty of it. i wanted to share it with, just shocked me. i figured everyone else would think the same so. will: brittany, i think what you touched on is something everyone seems to be understanding at a
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deeper level. right now, there is work to be had for those that are willing to go find the work. here is unemployment. here is employment, easting drinking establishments. we're still 1.8 million jobs below prepandemic levels. that is eating and drinking establishments. at the same time you see places like mcdonald's in your video saying hey, we would love you to come out. we would love some help. what do you think is going on? why is there demand for labor and seemingly high unemployment but we can't marry the two? >> well, i mean, i don't think anybody is wanting to say it, but with unemployment, stimulus, tax income, everyone is kind of saying, you know, i make more at home. they make more on unemployment, make more with the benefits. they're not wanting to go to work. lawrence: does that trouble you, brittany? you're in texas, it is pretty open and they can't get people to work those jobs? are they hurting the progress of
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texas now? >> oh, absolutely, absolutely. i think it put us behind. it put us in a crunch but those that are showing up at work, trying to keep going and pushing through, you know, just doing, best we can do in the situation so. will: that is in texas. i think we have this. i think put it on the screen, the unemployment rate in texas is down to 6.9%. you can only imagine what it would be, unemployment, if you as you said, brittany, would not be incentivized to stay at home. nobody wants to say it but you did thankfully. getting paid a lot of money to sit at home, unemployment, stimulus checks, places like mcdonald can't get you to work. >> i agree. jedediah: brittany, have you heard from people, reactions from people who are concerned about what they saw or what kind of responses have you gotten as a result of posting this? >> i guess on both sides of the fence. there was a lot of controversy.
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i try not to -- too much but basically some saying mcdonald's doesn't pay enough you know. these companies don't pay us enough to show up during a pandemic. the other side of course was saying, well you know, i make more on unemployment. there is no sense me going to work. others of course were concerned of the risk of covid and spreading that in the pandemic. you know everyone is just going back and forth, back and forth with it, defending themselves in those situations. >> you certainly left a mark. a lot of people have viewed that tiktok. that is the power of tiktok. brittany logan, thanks for being with us this morning. >> thank you so much. jedediah: sure thing. lawrence: she keeps it real. parents are pulling their children from elite private schools following a shift toward woke education. who is influencing these changes in the curriculum? we'll talk about that next. ♪.
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♪. jedediah: time now for your news by the numbers. first, $20 million, that is how much a company demanding boeing pay for its new work on air force one. it is accusing boeing slowing down production on the plane after boeing sued the company for missing deadlines. next we have one million dollars. that is how much this pair of yeaskys expected to go at auction. the first pair worn by kanye himself.
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54 years how long the beatle held the record for most albums to reach number one for the shortest amount of time. taylor swift has got the title, with three number one albums in less than one year. wow, taylor. lawrence: i love kanye but not paying will million dollars. a new york dad took his daughter out of the greeley school, slamming indoctrination motivating his decision is going viral. will: one heck of a letter. it is a mile away from the headmaster at the dalton school announcing his departure as the private school paces parental fury over obsessive focus on race and identity. author of the book, woke inc. find this letter from this parent. his name is andrew gut man. here is a little piece. if greeley's administration was
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concerned about so-called equity it would be discussing cessation of admission prefaces for legacy siblings and families with especially deep pockets. if the admin disoperation was genuinely serious about diversity would not single them to a mind-set reminiscent of the chinese cultural revolution. takes to task as the anti-racism as racism. the question, will we see more of this? >> i think and hope we will see more reactions like this, look, diversity is a good thing, when it is about diversity of thought. what we have scene especially in the schools, take notion of diversity and sacrificed true diversity itself. we sacrificed the idea of excellence. in my mind diversity is not an end, it is part of a means towards the end of excellence itself. when we get of excellence our
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tubes are going down the schools. our culture used to be about challenging the system, that is okay 20 years ago. it is becoming the new system, it is infecting our schools an infecting our cultures what is some seeing downright illegal. parents are standing up. it will take more to stand their ground. jedediah: one thing i loved by children, children don't see the world through lens of race, they don't see race at all. you have schools coming in trying to force them to look at their race, someone else's race, see the whole world through the lens of race. what are the implications of this for these kids future? >> i think it will be really damaging. we're moist sonning the minds of our next generation -- poisoning. we're not like many other countries in human history defined by a single eggs necessarity or single language, a single monarch. america is part of an idea. part of being an idea in our country means this, the way we
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describe america affects the way america actually works. we call it the american dream. it's a dream for a reason. something we aspire to. notion of epluribus unu. a set of ideas bind us together. we're obsessing our diversity, our differences decade, forgetting ways we're the same. it is getting transmitted to the next generation. the way we describe this country to them will affect the way the country works in the next generation. that is something to be frightened of. lawrence: why isn't there an emphasis on history? you know it troubles me that there is so much focus on wokism, instead of teaching all the stories of america in these books? when i go on air, i hear people say they learned about black wall street last year or you know, juneteenth, that is a failure of our education system. that is an american story. so why not the emphasis on that instead of wokism?
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>> i love that point. i actually think that we have spent so much time bashing our founding fathers as though they were one monolithic group when in fact this was a diverse group of people. instead of tearing down our monuments and statues, build one for john adams. the second president of the united states. he was somebody who actually did not own slaves on principle. he was be a low legsist. we have monument for washington and jefferson. i'm not saying we should tear those down. build one for john adams. that should be the content of american history both the wokists and rest of us can all get behind in a unified way. i love what you said. our history has the answers. we have been imperfect. we will always be imperfect. we're about the pursuit of affection. that is what mist teaches us. will: this is a 54,000-dollar a year in new york city. andrew guttman sent the letter to all the parents whose children attend the school and administration. here is the school's response. our students noted as this
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letter which denies the presence of systemic racism across their doorways the evidence of ongoing racism, systemic other otherwise is daily present in our headlines. read guttman's letter, he addresses that type of language, that vacuous, ambiguous response, that type of thing is exactly what he is tired of his children being taught. he is no longer willing to pay $54,000 a year to have his children brainwashed. vivek, you are insuring no one is brainwashed this morning. giving us a new perspective everyone needs to hear. jedediah: thank you. coming up materials to build the border wall wasting away left to rust, you heard that in the desert after biden halts construction of the wall. two gop congressman who went to the border saw this first-hand, they join us live next.
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♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ back in black ♪ ♪ i hit the sack ♪ ♪ i've been too long... ♪ applebee's irresist-a-bowls are back. dig in for just $8.99. now that's eatin' good in the neighborhood. ♪. >> it cost money to get them all here. costs money to haul this stuff out of here. if we spend money to do something about this, pay them to build the border. so we can protect the farmers and ranchers down here. >> this is exactly what is wrong with our government. look around, we have millions of dollars in materials that can be used to complete the wall. they have been paid for. the contracts were there. but the biden administration decided in a political move to shut it down.
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lawrence: gop congressman calling out president biden for haltinged border wall as construction materials rusting in the desert as the migrant crisis grows worse by the day. we have congressman franklin and keller join me now. i will go to you first, congressman keller. how does this happen? >> well the, the wall was being built and when president biden -- signed an executive order halting construction while still -- i don't fault the contractors for not putting up the wall and still getting paid. they signed a contract but president biden stopped construction and if we're going to pay tax dollars invested in materials, that protect our border, we met with ranchers, heart-breaking stories. one ranch family, farming over 100 years their family farmed the land. they're afraid to be on their property. they tell us what the people from the customs and border
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patrol tell us, the wall worked. they were pleading with us to get the biden administration to begin construction of the wall again and finish the job that was started, that is protecting americans on their own property. lawrence: congressman franklin, when i talk with you, i talk with american citizens at airports, traveling into different districts they're frustrated by this, they realize this is impacting the congress. president, former president trump was able to get a lot done through executive action, taking some of that money to build the wall. they never got funding from congress to get this done. this is why the biden administration was able to stop this. what will republicans do to get back in power to make sure we have funding for the wall? >> i'm sure if i have any part of the solution to get the wall built right away. that is the number one thing to close down the border in areas away from the detention
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facilities. really what this is is a big distraction created by the cartels. if the public sees this at all, they're seeing children in detention facilities, as tragic that is, the bigger problem with long-term impact for us literally hunch thousands of really bad people coming across the borders that don't want to be caught. these are not wearing biden for president t-shirts, showing up with their hands in the air. coming across in camouflage, ski masks, automatic weapons, smuggling drugs and children, terrorists, illegal weapons. there is nothing to stop them without the voila -- voila law maxine waters was there on saturday. i would like to see a bill in congress passed on police reform. i know what the right-wing, racists are opposed to it. i don't know what is going to happen to it. this is guilty for murder. i don't know whether it's the
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first-degree but as far as i'm concerned it is first-degree murder. we got to stay on the streets and we've got to get more active, get more confrontational. they got to make sure we know we mean business. congressman franklin, what is your quick reaction to that? >> just hypocrisy, the dangerous rhetoric she is spewing. it is not helpful. doesn't help the country. not helping us heal. i'm ready to see the rest of the mainstream media call this out for the hypocrisy this is. lawrence: congressman keller, there has to be alternative for this message. what are republicans going to do? businesses are suffering. people are dying in the street. there has to be a balance between justice, peace, accountability. what is your message? >> the message first to representative waters, there is a bill out there, senator scott has a reform bill that would do what we need to do and provide
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law enforcement with the tools they need in the communities and community policing. it does all of that. her talking points, encouraging people to lash out at others is not a message of unity if that is what they're about. we need to talk about what is great in america. are there things we need to fix? absolutely. but there is legislation out there and senator scott's bill is certainly an answer, the way to start getting to us that point. lawrence: thank you so much. i appreciate it. jed? jedediah: thank you, lawrence. we'll turn to headlines for you right now. police releasing bodycam video of a gunfight between an officer and a man wanted for attempted murder. we want to warn you, this may be hard to watch. [siren] >> [bleep] [inaudible]. >> shots fired. shots fired. jedediah: the officer barely
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avoiding multiple gunshots before shooting the suspect dead. the officer was not hurt. two passengers are suing united airlines over this boeing engine blowout back in february. the passengers say they have suffered personal, emotional and financial damage. the engine exploding during a flight from denver to honolulu just minutes after takeoff, forcing the plane to make an emergency landing and debris falling in residential neighborhoods. no one was physically hurt. hundreds of people gathered seeing 3,000 sheep cross-eyed hoe highway. this is the annual sheep migration which dates back to the 1880s. the sheep will be relocated to grazing ground and spend months on feasting on grass, which cuts down fires in the area. fantastic. look at them traveling to get their food. i love that. will: i glad you collarfied. i thought upper westsiders following the latest mandate to get take-out. jedediah: that was good will.
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how long did you think about it he have before you said it. lawrence: he thinks on his feet. jedediah: adam, i don't know what to say here. we got sheep and mandates. adam: all i can do is dive into the forecast. the big story in the weather world has been the rain sweeping across the gulf coast here the last couple days. we had a lot of flood watches and warns louisiana, central gulf coast, those are in some of the streams. there is still high water. heaviest rain is shifting to north florida. look at temperatures across the country. kind of a defined line in the center of the country. there are spots falling down to 30 degrees in denver. winter-like weather unfortunately is on the way. day time highs would be typically closer to 60 degrees in those areas. only topping off in the lower 40s, some cases the middle 30s the next couple days. with that, a winter system is sweeping through the area. in higher elevations that will
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mean snow. when you see the pinks that is heavy snowfall north of denver, up through wyoming off into montana and idaho. heavy snow on the way. spring should be here. still feeling like winter for some folks out there. back out to you guys. jedediah: adam, we appreciate it. the world saying their final good-byes to prince philip as the royal family comes together for the first time since harry and meghan's bombshell interview. what we're maring about their interactions and how kate middleton may have played peacemaker. that is next. bike shop please hold. bike sales are booming. you need to hire. i need indeed. indeed you do. the moment you sponsor a job on indeed you get a shortlist of quality candidates from our resume database. claim your $75 credit when you post your first job
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luiza james joins us. thanks for joining us this morning. i'm interested in getting your take what happened after the ceremony, when you saw the two siblings speaking, kate middleton part of that as well. what was your impression? >> perhaps we thought the relationship between them was quite difficult because the first time we saw them, they were walking behind their grandfather's cousin separated by their cousin and on separate sides of the chapel during the service. not making much in the way of eye contact. you have the moment after the service, unexpected really, we had anticipated the royal family would go into the cars to go back to the castle. they decided to walk t was a beautiful day. as you say we saw katherine, duchess of cambridge between the two brothers. looked like she held back to let them chat. they looked like they were comfortable with each other. like the old days personally chatting. i personally can't believe that
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is the first time they spoke face-to-face after a year with everything gone down in the meantime. you wouldn't want to, managed to catch a few minutes much the morning of the funeral. i think that moment was publicly put it out there at least for that day putting differences aside, remembering their grandfather, and putting that first, whatever may or may not be going on between them or otherwise. jedediah: many talked about the what the role of kate middleton will be. she was obviously referenced interview. who made who cry story of the that week. could she potentially being serving as a peace maker in this incident? would that make sense? >> i think it would make sense, before harry got meghan, before she was with meghan, you saw three of them together, kate, william, harry, headed up the heads together foundation, mental health charity. they had a great time together, laughing, joking comfortable with each other's presence.
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william and kate spoke how they would love to see harry settle down to get married. before that happened, the three of them were very close. when you saw the moment outside of church, katherine, duchess of cambridge, really happy to see him and speak to him. perhaps she will be the one who is able to bring them back together because i think she will know how important this is for william to have harry by his side as especially with his role -- when his father becomes king and he has to step up. he will need as much support as he can get. jedediah: obviously, we don't have much time for this one, the question on everyone's mind, was that real? was that interaction real in terms of they were getting close or something they wanted to show the world a united front for that day. quickly your thoughts? >> i don't think we'll ever know. even if they have to put it on, it is still important. still a step in the right direction, give us a little bit of hope. jedediah: i would agree. it was good to see for all of us. thank you so much for being here this morning. we appreciate it.
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♪. will: like father like son, thighs adorable photos after 3-year-old and his hero dad are taking the internet by storm. the pint-sized officer sporting a uniform made from lieutenant dad's old uniforms. even has a matching set of wheels as well. joining me now, lieutenant patrick frazier of escambia county sheriff's office. mom, and photographer, kelsey frazier. there he is, the son, 3-year-old
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caisson. caisson, you're the star of the show, let's start with you. tell me about your uniform? tell me about your dad, caisson? >> what is that? police uniform? >> police car. will: police car? i was warned ahead of time caisson is a man much few words. more a man of action type of guy. on that note, caisson on the police car you do a mean impression. do you do a good siren impression? >> what does the police car say? >> weeo. weeo. will: caisson likes the uniform. he considers you his hero, lieutenant. this has to be special to see him be so proud of you? >> yeah. it's awesome. i knew i wanted to have a uniform made. and i searched several places for deals that would match and i just had a hard time finding it. i wound up using one of my old
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uniforms t turned out really good. this is amazing the support we've gotten from the community, all over after this went viral. it has been an awesome feeling. will: i heard on social media you guys received the ton ever heartwarming messages. kelsey, you took the photos. what made you decide to do a photo shoot. >> i'm a stage mom. anything to bring some positivity in life. i'm obviously pro-law enforcement. when it comes to my business, it is important that we are pro everything across the board. when it came to them, of course patrick's work and our family es a work, putting into the uniform, all the stuff we did, it was important to show some happy stuff. it was super cute, so. >> good stuff to go along with all the negative going on right now. will: i think that's the point for many of us watching at home. there is so much negativity when it comes to law enforcement, the relationship often times between
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law enforcement and community. it is not reflective. i think that is what you're experiencing as well, right? the relationship you have i'm sure with your community, what you've seen on social media is probably more reflected over the past couple days. >> yes. >> we have gotten a lot of positive feedback a ton of it. will: yeah. caisson, one more time on the way out, can you give me that siren one more time? >> weoweeo. police car. >> police car. will: you look sharp in your uniform, lieutenant frazier, growing up you always want to make your dad proud. as a father i know now how special more important to make your son proud. congratulations on that honor. >> thank you, sir. we're looking forward to see him look back at the photos one day to have some proud memories to share. will: thank you for sharing with us. >> thank you. take care. will: why some democrats in florida are attempting to silence conservative voices in the area. we'll have more on that in the
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what i can't deal with new york city or california anymore, let me get out of here. nashville, got a lot of those people. will: tennessee has seen an influx of people, as has nevada as well. nashville, tennessee, the sun coming up. we're glad you're up with us. grab your coffee. let's take a ride through the news this morning. let's start with this. absolutely stunning statement from maxine waters, she was in brooklyn center, minnesota where there have been protests and riots taking place. there's a curfew in the city, attempting to bring peace and calm to the streets. maxine waters has no interest in peace or calm. she wants a specific verdict when it comes to the trial of derek chauvin in minnesota. she wants a bill passed, she wants police reform. she wants at times defunding the police. she called for it all. she said what's at stake if she doesn't get it, this is what she said last night. i would like to see the bill in congress passed on police reform but i know had that the right wing, the racists, she used those terms interchangeably are
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opposed to it and i don't know what will happen to it. this is guilty for murder. i don't know whether it's the first degree, which derek chauvin is not charged with, but as far as i'm concerned it's first degree murder, she said. we have to stay on the street and get more active. we've got to get more confrontational. we have to make sure they know we mean business. that's not just irresponsible. that's inflaming racial tensions in the country and beyond that. that's inflaming the potential for violence, it's asking for confrontation. if you don't get a verdict. as i pointed out, it's an impossible verdict she's asking for. there is no first degree charge. it's not possible. in terms of second or third degree murder for derek chauvin, that will be difficult for the state. if they don't accomplish it, maxine waters said consistent confrontationon the streets. >> the city is on edge right now. when i had the republican congressman on earlier, i said
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you have to get there, you have to get on the battlefield of ideas. i think we have some of that sound. you've got to do something because if it's only the democrats' message that is out there, the cities are going of to burn. let's play it. >> her talking points and encouraging people to lash out at others is certainly not a message of unity if that's what they're about. we need to start talking about what is great in america. >> the hypocrisy and dangerous rhetoric she is spewing it's not helpful, doesn't help the country, not helping us heal. i'm ready to see the rest of the mainstream media to call this out. jedediah: i'm getting tired of maxine waters and these games of her inciting people. i don't know what she means by get confrontation. i think she should be forced to on the record clarify that. i think it's important to note this is a pattern of behavior from her we have seen before. we saw it in june of 2018 with respect to the trump administration and how she felt
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that people should harass them. let's get a reminder of what happened here. >> let's make sure we show up wherever we have to show up and if you see anybody from that cabinet in a restaurant, in a department store, at a gasoline station, you get up and you create a crowd. and you push back on them and you tell them they're not welcome anymore, anywhere. jedediah: if you'll remember, that's exactly what happened. you had republican officials, you had republican politicians, you had outspoken republicans showing up, just to eat with their families in restaurants in those places and they were harassed. people did exactly what maxine waters said to do. so my question then today is, if she is out on the streets saying get more confrontational when talking about anti-police protests, now what happens? how are people going to he recee
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that information from a woman in a great position of power making pretty bold statements. will they follow through and will there be accountability for her in terms of her own language? will: let me talk about the law for a moment. there are analogies or correlations drawn between what president trump said leading up to january 6th and what you're hearing right now from maxine waters. let me tell you this. that is much closer to the legal definition of incitement than anything that was uttered leading up to january 6th. it's a difficult standard. it's a difficult bar. you have to have said something that directly leads or of calls for someone to do an illegal activity. i don't know that maxine waters has crossed that bar. it is high. it should be. free speech is important. what we're looking at is something very close to incitement at a very, very sensitive moment in our nation's history. and lawrence, you said what can republicans do? what can republicans do to counter this stuff? i'll say this. the long-term project for republicans and the african-american community, the black american community, those be addressed. all that people can do right now
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to counter this, though, is talk about the specifics, the law and justice and help the nation understand what is righteous, what is justice. without facts, without specific justice, all you're left with is this incitement. >> we have to have the facts of the case and then we have to have the ground game. what they're doing is taking advantage of people's emotions and when people don't see you there, right, advocating for them -- we can preach facts all day. ben shapiro says facts don't care about your feelings. it is true. voters do. people do. because we react based on our emotions. we shouldn't as much but we do. we're humans. we have you humanity. and i think if people see republicans taking the lead on this -- no one wants to see their city burn down. and that's what's going to happen. jedediah: yeah. that is one of the many issues facing the country right now. another issue we talk about all the time is the issue of education. we talked about school closures, lack of in-person learning.
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there's another problem that's taking root in many cities around the country. new york city is one example. we're going to cite that example now. there's a problem in the elite private school system in new york city, some of the schools are dalton and others. recently a parent spoke out. he noticed that there was an obsession with race in brearly. he wrote a letter to fellow parents. this is some of what it says. if the administration was concerned about equity it would be discussing cessation of admissions process for those with deep pockets. it would not insist on indoctrination of students and families to a mindset reminiscent of the chinese cultural revolution. it's about time these parents -- these parents feel like they have no choice. in many cases they're asked to sit and down race based training that they don't agree with.
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they're seeing curriculum change rapidly in the schools. they're spending $54,000 a year in some cases for their kids to go to first grade. so they've had enough. i think it's really sad, lawrence and will, but i was going toes this to lawrence if you don't mind. one of the things that bothers me, because you made a great point earlier about it, is i am concerned about kids being taught from a young age to see everything from the lens of race. one of the things i love about kids is they don't do that. they have friends of all colors. they appreciate diversity in all of its forms instinct wally and they learn bad behavior from adults. this is learning bad behavior from a school system and it scares me. >> we want our kids to see race in the context of being able to appreciate different cultures and all that. we don't want them to be blind to what's happening in the culture right now. but i think it's important that we teach our kids the history, and that's the point i made in the last segment. you know, there's twitter traffic going on, i saw during
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the commercial break, of frederick douglas, the portrait on my right arm. that is an american hero. the story needs to be told. we have shady things that happened in our history as americans. we have frederick douglas, booker t washington, counsels to president lincoln. that's the beauty of the country. i'm afraid those stories aren't focused on. will: you spoke about that earlier. here's the author of okay, inc. on this subject. >> appointing the minds of our next generation, america as a country, we're not like many other countries through human history defined on the basis of a single ethnicity or language or monarch. america is an idea. part of being an idea as a country means this. the way we describe america affects the way that america actually works. that's why we call it the american dream.
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it's a dream for a reason. it's something we aspire to. our notion of what we aspire to, that's what we should be teaching our kids, the set of ideas that bind us together. we have been obsessing over diversity, our differences, forgetting all the way that's we're the same and now that's getting into the next generation. will: i agree, lawrence, we need to be able to appreciate our differences. we need to understand our history. we've gotten so far away from judging each other as individuals according to our character, our merit, our actions, we're teaching children how to be racists and i would encourage you to find this letter by this parent, like al pacino, he takes a flame thrower to the school. you should check it out. it's enlightening. turning to president biden, finallied admitting there's a crisis on the southern border. >> this is another heart breaking video, shows a migrant child abandoned at the border. griff jenkins has more from
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washington. >> reporter: good morning. first it was called a challenge. now after painstakingly a avoiding a term, president biden is calling it a crisis. he did it after being hammered by progressives after not capping the refugee cap. he was asked about it in wilmington yesterday. watch. >> refugees are -- [ indiscernible ]. now in increasing numbers. >> reporter: another heart breaking reminder that cartels' brutality, this 15-year-old boy was found terrified in the dark under a farm tractor, another 10-year-old child was rescued two weeks a ago. dhs reports 22,313 unaccompanied children are currently in the custody or care of the government as they open more
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emergency shelters, the latest in san antonio, while shutting one down in houston, giving no specific reason for the closure, simply saying all 450 girls were transferred to another facility. republican senator lindsey graham saying this is even more than a crisis now. >> it's not a crisis. it's chaos. we're on track to do 2 million. the border patrol told the biden administration during the transition, if you reverse trump policies there will be a run on the border, they were right. i've never been more worried than i am now about the world at large. >> reporter: he despite the president calling is a crisis, still no plans for he or vice president harris to visit the border. harris did say she will soon travel to guatemala and mexico. will: thank you so much. turning now to a few additional headlines for you. starting with a fox news alert. a manhunt is underway for the gunman who opened fire at a
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popular college bar in he kenosha, wisconsin. three people were shot and killed inside the bar named summers house. police gave us an update moments ago. >> we believe that our suspect knew who he was targeting here tonight and we're actively searching for this person or persons. will: two others were seriously injured. police say the shooting appears to be targeted as you heard right there and there is no greater threat to the community. a man is arrested for throwing chemicals and a molotov cocktail at nypd officers. the attack was caught on camera. >> what are you getting out for? could you open the door for us? [bleep] will: police pulled the man over for running a red light. after throwing the chemical he drove off but stopped then to throw the molotov cocktail.
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he tried speeding off again but crashed. police say more mol of of the mf cocktails were found inside the car. one officer went to the hospital with blurred vision. now might be the time for a trip to alaska. the governor says the state will begin offering vaccines to visitors. he hopes the offer will boost tourism in the state. the shot will be offered at airports in anchorage and fairbanks starting june 1st. there you go, a little incentive, as if there's not enough with the beautiful mountains and the great outdoors. jedediah: i've never been there. will: i haven't either. i would really like to. >> i'm totally cool at looking at it, i don't like to freeze. jedediah: that's a good point. thank you for bringing me back to reality. coming up, democrats are reportedly pressuring the fcc to block the sale of a south florida radio station out of fear it will give conservatives a louder voice. more on that coming up next.
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lawrence: welcome back. after the gop increased the share of the hispanic vote last year, congressional democrats are pushing the fcc to block the sale of a miami radio station, fearing the new owner will turn it into a conservative one. they told newsweek, quote t media silencing progressive voices is contrary to public good and importance of vair i didding viewpoints -- varying viewpoints. it could make south florida to a misinformation campaign perpetrated during the 2020 election. congressman joins me to react. i was there on the ground in florida. you guys really targeted
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hispanic communities. but the message that resonated with them, it worked, you got the votes there. now the democrats are like let's change things up since you guys got the vote. what's your reaction? >> my reaction is that they're trying to, like everywhere else in the country, they're trying to shut up conservative voices. look, this radio station has very low ratings. that's why it's being bought for very low price. there's only been one comment commentator fired by the current ownership because he was criticizing the new ownership. again, this is just another example of the democrat party that their message is failing and, therefore, you have to dissenting points of view up. it's another indicator of what's going on around the nation. lawrence: when you can't win, let's change things up to prevent -- instead of doing the hard work. >> exactly. lawrence: i want to shift gears.
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ron de santis detailed legislation to strengthen police protection and he prevent riots. what is your reaction on the new legislation and how is it going to protect not only cops but the citizens in florida? >> well, look, in florida, in miami when i was the mayor and we had the disturbances in july, or they tried to have disturbances in july, we were very firm in our approach. we will allow you -- we will protect your first amendment rights to protest but we won't allow any kind of rioting, looting, burning. that wasn't allowed. and so they tried us for a couple days and they went off somewhere else. i think the legislation is spot-on. we will protect your right to protest. but that's the right that we will protect. we will not protect your right to loot and burn in the state of florida and i think it's a great message. lawrence: i tell you, america's governor, that's what the conservatives call ron de
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santis, keeps racking up victories. thank you very much. coming up, while most states are loosening mask mandates, oregon and michigan are actually adding more restrictions. we'll explain after the break. from prom dresses to workouts and new adventures you hope the more you give the less they'll miss. but even if your teen was vaccinated against meningitis in the past they may be missing vaccination for meningitis b. although uncommon,
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will: we're back with quick headlines. first, fashion designer mass mo genuli was released one day early. he was serving time for his role in the college admissions scandal. the mastermind behind the failed fyre festival was released from solitary confinement. i spent more than five months in
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confinement for giving a podcast interview while behind bars. he was sentenced to six years for planning the festival that never came to fruition, costing $26 million. jedediah: these a lot of money. starting tomorrow, michigan's mask mandate will go into effect for children as young as 2 years old. the mask requirement previously exempted children younger than the age of 5. here to react is fox news medical contributor, dr. marc siegel. thank you for joining us this morning. i'm about to lose what little sanity i have left with this one. can you tell me, is there any medical justification for imposing a mask mandate on a 2-year-old? >> absolutely not. no advantage, no medical science behind it. children as young as 2 years old are very unlikely to be carrying and spreading the virus. they're not high risk groups. they don't get very sick from it generally. then there's the issue of how
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you're going to impose that. i was in michigan this week. the biggest problem in michigan is people wearing masks around their chin or not covering their noses and the place is a ghost town. detroit is a ghost town. all of the super imposition of regulations just scares people and frightens people. what are you going to do to a 2-year-old if they're not wearing a mask? are you going to take them to jail? this shows how government is not touch with what's going on with the people. in michigan, the variant is spreading wisely in michigan, causing mostly milder cases and we've got to get people vaccinated. jedediah: i want to ask about the other topic that caught our attention. the u.k. researchers are planning to deliberately infect covid-19 survivors to see what happens. that strikes me as odd. is this important? should they be going this route? >> no, this is horrifying.
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we used to talk about challenge studies before we had a vaccine. we said what if we can't prove the vaccine works, do we have to infect people with the virus and see? jed, we do this in primates, in monkeys and apes. we have a vaccine and it's really effective. what happens is -- the question is about reinfection and the study just this week showed that there might be a significant risk of reinfection. maybe as high as 20%. they looked at that in marines. that's for people that have gotten covid, that have natural immunity. you have covid, the natural immunity doesn't last forever. 20% chance you can get reinfected. you know what prevents that, getting at least one dose of a pfizer or moderna vaccine. we have to study whether they need two doses or not, but for sure one dose gives you a durable immunity. that's what they should study, not the idea of deliberately infecting people with a virus that are getting over covid. that can cause serious
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complications, really bad idea and unethical in my opinion. jedediah: i could have another conversation today about what it means to develop immunity from a vaccine versus antibody immunity. i am going to have you back to talk about that. it's a big question on my mind. thank you for being here, as always. >> thanks, jedediah. have a great day. jedediah: coming up, a new york daughter slams his daughter's private school over its woke curriculum. we have a discussion about the shift in education, next. ♪
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lawrence: as we've been reporting, an elite new york city prep school facing backlash over the social justice agenda as a fed-up dad yanks his daughter out. jedediah: we have no -- are we ready to bring in our guest. our prompter is not functioning properly. do we have our guest? bill bennett is here. welcome to the show. we've been talking about this this morning and what is going on in the elite private school system, particularly in new york city but elsewhere as well. what are your thoughts on this new race baiting that's going on and the fact that parents are finally coming forward and saying we have had enough, we're
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paying $54,000 a year in some cases for schools of this nature, we're not taking this anymore? >> well, mr. gutman, andrew gutman is one of the parents at the brearly school, $54,000 a year, lit a fire storm with his letter saying i'm tired of all this garbage, all this a accusations of racism and counting by race and seeing everything through a racial lens. he got a lot of support and also got some blowback. why is it important what happens in an elite private school in manhattan? this is where the elite are trained. this is where they grow up and they go to the elite colleges and then as you know, the institutions, universities, government are in the hands of people who go to these he elite institutions, disproportionately. that's why it is so important. the other point i would make about this school is that it's in direct defiance of what martin luther king taught and
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aspired to, a day when our children will be judged not by the color of the skin but by the content of their character. everything at brearl, harvard, west lake, the elite schools, i know them all a, i visited all of them, is counting by race. it's thinking in terms of race. and direct defiance. that's why king is not honored, is not taught in these programs. martin luther king was a great teacher of our constitutional message. he is nowhere to be found in these curriculum. will: bill, i think you're absolutely right. let's share with the audience some of what the father had to say. he said i cannot tolerate a school that not only judges my daughter by the color of her skin, as you were talking about, bill, but encouraging an instructor to prejudge others by theirs, by viewing every element of education and history and every facet of society through the lens of skin color and race, we are violating the movement
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for which civil rights leaders believed, fought and died. that's what you were saying. you point out the influence the elite private schools have, how they produce people that end up in positions of power. the truth is, i don't think you escape this mentality in the public school system now. if you're a parent that doesn't want your child exposed to racist ideology, where do you go? >> no, it's in the public schools, north carolina, raleigh, in public schools all around the country. this battle is being raised and this is the battle. this is the one that will determine our attitude towards things like these riots in the streets. our attitude towards the border. they may not produce these problems but they tell us what people's attitudes will be because of what happens in the schools. this is the real war that's going on. plato said the two most important issues for society are who gets to teach the children and what do they teach them. and mr. gutman, the parent who wrote this letter is a general in this war, launching a counter
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attack. will other parents join him? will parents in the public schools and the private schools join him? this is the battle of our time. lawrence: dr. bennett, i've been a even if guys out there, un-- been a fan of guys out there. you guys got an episode, crisis at the border. you will discuss the growling crisis at -- growing crisis at the border. it will air tonight on fox at 10:00 p.m. we have a clip. >> when you look at what we're doing with misplaced children and families, what schools will they go to? they'll go to public schools. they'll need special services to get them caught up with other kids. they'll need free lunches. they'll put a strain on the taxpayers. they'll be competing with lower income families who are already not getting the resources that they need. now they'll have to share them and it's just -- it continues until, like i said, it's not going to affect nancy pelosi. she's not going to go into her
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fridge to get her $12 ice cream and illegal immigrants are taking half of it. lawrence: as i said, you can watch the wise guys tonight at the border at 10:00 p.m. on the fox news channel. thank you dr. bennett. will: we'll be watching. jedediah: thank you. >> will, real quick, out in the west texas town of el paso, marty robins. will: you got the whole thing, two episodes in a row. you gave me hook them last time, now you're giving me country music lyrics. i think we became best friends. jedediah: we're going to turn to headlines this hour. an illegal immigrant who was ordered to deported but never removed was found guilty of child rape. he was convicted of abusing a young family member in california. i.c.e. ordered him to be removed two years before the abuse started. california's sanctuary city
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policies may have contributed to why he was never captured. and the u.s. and china commit to tackling climate change with urgency. the state department releasing a joint statement with beijing affirming they're firmly committed to working together to strengthen the paris agreement and reduce emissions. john kerry reached the agreement during two days of talks in shanghai. and jimmie johnson is changing lanes, coming from nascar to indy car. he will compete today at the barber motor sports park in alabama, a bigger change than you think with everything from pit stops to lingo being different. johnson will miss out on today's toyota owner's 400 in richmond. you can catch it this afternoon on fox. jeans are making a comeback as more americans are getting vaccinated. levis telling fox news loose and slouchy jeans are seeing a surge in sales as more americans are
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getting vaccinated. levis saying the trend is seen among men and would menace the fastest -- women as the fastest growing style. you were in sweat pants at home. i've always been a fan of the comfy. i stick with the comfy. lawrence: me too. jedediah: what about you? comfy jeans or -- will: wranglers. i moved from levis to wranglers in the past 12 to 18 months. lawrence: he needs the boot cut for his cowboy boots. jedediah: let's find out what adam klotz is wearing, is it sweat pants or have you brought out the denim and gone fancy with us. >> i'm wearing sweat pants right now. jedediah: i love it. [laughter] >> they're the same sweat pants i was wearing yesterday. i'm not going to hide that. yeah, just keep waking up, putting on the same pants day after day for the last year. as i do -- lawrence: you are a --
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->> style's my passion. heavy rain is continuing across portions of the gulf coast. it has been centered in the central gulf. today's heaviest rain will be in north florida. across the southeast it should stay dry. the story across the country continues to be a little warmer here in the eastern half, the western half of the country really chilly. folks waking up around 30 degrees, freezing or below in denver t same in rapid city. there will be a winter system that picks up this evening, runs into tomorrow morning. with that it's going to keep some of the cold air lingering. even though it gets mild this afternoon, these temperatures are 15 to 20 degrees below the seasonal average and we are going to see snow at higher elevations for some of these spots. this is our total snoal. i think really -- snow physical. fall.it is still feeling like wr for some folks out there. back out to you guys.
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will: all right. thanks, adam. still ahead, a pro-police flag is taken down after hanging in the window of a new york high school for decades. decades. who said it was a symbol of racism? who did that. that's coming up. new details emerging into why federal prosecutors held off on initially charging jeffrey epstein. nancy grace believes those in power turned a blind eye at the very least. she joins us live, next.
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visit that was common in the past but covid restrictions aren't allowing the league to visit. reports say the team is planning of to make up the trip at a later date. will. will: thanks, lawrence. new details about the fed's decision not to pursue charges against jeffrey epstein back in 2016. 16. when a number of lawrence warned he might be abusing girls. he had pled guilty to prostitution charges in florida. they contacted the fbi to ask if justice had not been served. they didn't get a response. our next guest accusing them of turning a blind eye. crime nation's host, nancy grace joins me now. what happened in 2016 with epstein and these prosecutors? >> now, keep in mind that in 2007 as you said there was a secret deal where epstein basically got a slap on the wrist for raping little girls. there's really no good way to
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put it. fast forward. 2016, victims' lawyers go to the southern district of new york, u.s. attorney's office, they meet with them with evidence including a nude photo taken allegedly by ghislaine maxwell and gifted. what was is, framed? long story short, they presented that and other evidence to the u.s. attorney's office, southern district of new york, lower manhattan and begged for an investigation and they turned a blind eye and don't try to just blame it on the assistant u.s. attorney. amanda kramer. because a case like this would have gone all the way to the top. they did nothing. and it was only when the miami herald busted epstein that they were shamed into prosecuting.
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they gave him three years to continue to molest little girls. will: three more years, free to continue to do what he was doing. i had to follow up on a phrase you used there, this would have gone all the way to the top. the jeffrey epstein story is always about connections to power centers, who else is connected, why was this case passed upon in 2016? tell me more, nancy. what does that mean, go to the top? >> i can tell you this much. will: it seems more malignant than turning a blind eye, doesn't it? >> you're not kidding. another thing that the southern district would have you believe is that they called the fbi down in florida but they didn't get a return phone call. how many times did i have to get in my car and go out to a witness and bam on the door until somebody came or i would wait until they got home. you don't wait for a return phone call. you do the right thing. now, apparently this went up to her boss, dan stein, and they say the appointed u.s. attorney
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for the southern district didn't know anything about it. he was later fired by trump unshare money justly. he went--uncreremoniously. somehow he never heard of the case. jeffrey epstein with all the connections, forced to be molested. will: there's too many coincidences, too many passes to power. >> can i tell you one more thing. as a prosecutor, i was almost always -- i would almost always handle cases on my own. when i had a sensitive or difficult case, i would go to my boss, the elected district attorney, and talk to him about it.
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nothing was done without his knowledge. and there was no way in h-e-l-l the higher ups didn't know what was happening. will: that's the story right there. you know what else is the story. crime nation. you sign up and get exclusive access to events and personalities like nancy grace on any device. great to see you this morning. thank you. still ahead, a thin blue line flag is taken down after hanging in the windows of a new york high school for decades because it allegedly made someone feel uncomfortable. a retired police officer and parent in the community, they sound off next. ♪ ♪ (ac/dc: back in black) ♪ ♪ ♪
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lawrence: this pro police flag displayed in the window of one new york high school has been taken down after critics argue the symbol was a symbol of racism. will: the principle of greece odyssey academy writing we understand that this situation caused harm and we are committed to doing the work. there's that phrase. to repair that harm. jedediah: our next guest is a retired police officer in rochester, new york and a parent who says the flag is apolitical, supporting law enforcement and america. david simpson joins us now. thank you so much for being here today and for all of your service throughout your 20 years. when you hear things like that, thin blue line flag, is racist. what do you feel? >> well, i think it was said that the word racism, it's like
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ketchup, you can put it on anything. i think that fits here. it is something that stands for two things, which is america and law enforcement and they turned it into something bad and when i saw that happen, i had to speak out because when i was on the job for 20 years, i wasn't able to speak out and a lot of the people that work in the line of work now can't speak out. so i found it incumbent upon me to say something about it around that's what i did. i think it's wrong. lawrence: you dedicated your life to law enforcement. obviously you're retired now. you're not as involved. so you know that there's relationship issues between the community and the police. now that you're no longer a cop and looking at it in hindsight, 20/20, what would you suggest to law enforcement officers to merge that relationship? >> well, i think having empathy towards the community is key.
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i think honestly i think they do a really good job of it, honestly. i think most police officers in america are on the job for the right reasons, they signed up to protect people and to keep people safe and i think they do a great job of it and i think the biggest advice i could give the law enforcement members today is to keep doing what you're doing and try to be above the noise because i still think that a majority of american citizens respect and love the police. they just feel they can't speak out and say that. because of how strong the noise is on the other side, putting the police down. will: i think you're absolutely right. i think what we're doing is arguing from exception at all times. there's a few fractional points of risk when it comes to covid so therefore we all need to mask. somebody somewhere is offended by something so we all have to accommodate that, that fear, that offense. as you point out, the relationship with law
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enforcement is often great. we see incidences where it goes back. in this instance where the flag had to be taken down, what do you know about the person who complained and was of fended and manage -- offended and managed to dictate the conditions for everyone else? >> i don't know the person or persons who complained. i just know it was a small group of people who complained an instead of educating and teaching what this flag means, it was just taken down. and i feel like as a school, they're there to teach so let's teach the truth and the truth is, this flag stands for law enforcement and supporting america and how about we teach that instead of get rid of it. jedediah: thank you for joining us today and thongs as i said before -- thank you again as i said for your service. we did reach out to the school district for comment. we did not hear back. we'll let you know if we hear any updates. coming up, days after anti-police clashes evidence erupt youacross the country, mae
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waters calls for black lives matter protesters to quote, get more confrontational. we'll tell you what else she said at the top of the hour. new projects means new project managers. you need to hire. i need indeed. indeed you do. the moment you sponsor a job on indeed you get a short list of quality candidates from our resume database. claim your seventy five dollar credit, when you post your first job at indeed.com/home.
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♪ letting it go. will: we're back. a flash for a second of nashville, tennessee. welcome to "fox & friends" on this beautiful sunday morning. will cain, jedediah bila and a lawrence jones in for pete hegseth. the city of new orleans, empire state of mind, new york, i forgot my favorite, amarillo by george strait, songs directly tied to the city they're named. lawrence: will's a diverse man. he does news, sports, the man
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knows music. jedediah: did you know who sang the song that we sort of danced into? will: this one. my renaissance man image only knows so -- goes so far. the answer is no. jedediah: that was my girl, kelly clarkson. did you know that? lawrence: i did not. she's from texas. we should know that. will: there's a lot of people from texas, lawrence. we don't know them all. lawrence: there is. jedediah: welcome to everyone who is just waking up and joining us, if you've been here for the last few hours, thank you for spending your morning with us. he we're going to begin with a pretty big story which is that we have witnessed several anti-police protests erupting throughout the country. we've seen that, we've covered it for the last few months. it's not going away any time soon. there is one particular one where maxine waters has begun to weigh in. maxine waters in brooklyn center, minnesota last night, now we don't have rights to the video of this so we're going to have to read a quote of what she said. let's share that. i would like to see the bill in congress passed on police
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reform. but i know that the right wing, the racists are opposed to it and i don't know what's going to happen to it. this is guilty for murder. i don't know whether it's in the first degree but as far as i'm concerned it's first degree murder. we've got to stay on the street and we've got to get more active, we've got to get more confrontational. we've got to make sure that they know that we mean business. so obviously she's talking about what she deems should be a guilty verdict in the case of derek chauvin, that's a trial that's being held right now, all eyes are on that. the question is what is she talking about when she says let's get more confrontational, is she asking about violence. people should ask her to go on the record with what she is encouraging people to do. will: you talk about the riots taking place in this country as we speak. the last several nights. and the week we have ahead of us promises to be or threatens to be a very dangerous week for the united states of america. we're expecting a verdict, closing arguments tomorrow in
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the derek chauvin trial in minnesota. what you witnessed with maxine waters is a racial arsonist showing a match on a tinder box of a nation. she is inciting bad behavior and perhaps violence on the streets. she is divorced from facts. derek chauvin is not charged with first degree murder. he can't be convicted of it because he's not charged with first degree murder. he is charged with second and third degree murder. it is possible they will meet the burden for those charges. there's a heavy legal burden tied to statutes, asking for intent when it comes to these crimes. right now, i would tell you i believe they'll probably come back with a manslaughter verdict. it's possible they could come back with second or third degree. but the question is, what will happen if they don't, the jury, come back with a verdict that satisfies the demands of people like maxine waters. lawrence: the cities of america
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are already on edge. i made my feelings on the george floyd case very clear with our audience. there's a legal process that has to take place and i think that's what we're preparing ourselves for. she talked about legislation. many of these things that are impacting communities cannot be solved on the federal level. it requires local communities to handle this, which begs the question, why is a federal official that represents california on the ground in minnesota? it's very problematic when she doesn't have to deal with the city that is on fire after her comments. what do we do? all i can say is republicans have to show up and offer a different message than she is presenting to the people of minnesota. because this is going out of control. jedediah: maxine waters should be held responsible. this is a repeated pattern of behavior of incendiary language. remember back in june she called for people to harass the trump
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administration and that wouldn't up happening. you had people, republicans, ted cruz, people in high profile positions, members of the trump administration going out and getting harassed. they were following her orders. she needs to be held accountable. lawrence: she should be asked why her friends in democratic party sunk tim scott's bill. right? he had federal legislation up there. they decided to play party politics with that and sink the legislation. jedediah: that's an excellent point. another big story on the southern bore of deer, president biden -- border as president biden admits there's a crisis as a heart breaking video shows a migrant child abandoned at the border. griff jenkins joins us with washington with more. >> reporter: appears we're using more words at the white house to describe the situation at the border. just last month they sought to avoid the term that border states say democrats have long been using. >> do you believe right now
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there's a crisis at the border? >> i think that the answer is no. i think there is a challenge at the border that we are managing. and we have our resources dedicated to managing it. >> reporter: that was march. well, now more than 200,000 apprehensions later president biden now calling it a crisis. he did so after getting hammered by progressives for not delivering on a promise to increase the refugee cap. he was asked about it in wilmington yesterday. >> -- working on the crisis at the border. [ indiscernible ] >> reporter: this as we get another tragic reminder, a little blurry but of smuggler's cruelty. this 10-year-old boy was found terrified under a farm tractor, the same area another child was rescued two weeks ago. 22,313 unaccompanied children
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are currently in just dior care of the -- in custody or care of the government as they rush to open shelters, after shutting one down in houston, giving no specific reason for the closure, simply saying 450 girls were being transferred to other facilities or unified with sponsors. despite the acknowledgement of a crisis, still no plans for the president or vice president to visit the border. harris did announce she will travel to guatemala and mexico but not our southern border. jed, will, lawrence. will: thanks so much, griff. lawrence, i think you do a good job of pointing this out from time to time, talking about the divorce from wash son dc to -- washington, d.c. from main street america. we talk about what's happening between hudson river and pacific ocean. life is sometimes reflected in what happens on social media. there was a video that went viral this week on particular te
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a sign was posted outside of mcdonald's. it said we're short staffed. be patient with the staff that showed up. no one wants to work anymore. there are policies passed in washington, d.c. we debate them very far away from life on the ground. things like unemployment benefits, stimulus checks, take a quick look at that, $1,400 stimulus checks, $300 a week unemployment supplements through september 6th. we can have debates. on the ground, there are people that need that help. there are others who it has created a disincentive to go back to work. you're seeing the effects when you can't get people to show up for jobs at places like mcdonald's. lawrence: it's dumb, especially when you have places like florida and texas that are back to work. you're stifling their economy. this is my favorite part. you're going to put it of on the backs of states like texas and
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florida to bail out people that can't manage their own state properly, who still want to be locked down, who had a deficit and debt that was massive before the lockdown ever happened. they are so disconnected from reality and my favorite part of this, all of this, is to bash the people of texas and florida and tennessee when their numbers are going down, meanwhile all over the country where you look at the states that are locked down, their numbers are going up. explain that for me. jedediah: we have britney logan, the nurse who posted that viral mcdonald's sign, tiktok video, she was on earlier and she talked about the benefits and why she thinks no one may want to work. take a listen to what she had to say. >> i guess i was just shocked by the brutality and the honesty of it. i don't think anybody wants to say it, but with unemployment, the stimulus and tax income, everyone's kind of saying, you know, i make more at home, i make more on unemployment, more with these benefits and they're just not wanting to go to work.
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i think it put us behind. it has put us in a crutch. but those of us that are showing up at work and trying to keep going and pushing through, you know, just doing the best we can do, you know, in the situation. jedediah: so it's just common sense that if you're making more for not working, then a lot of people won't be incentivized to go to work. what she is illustrating is common sense. will: unemployment is higher than pre-pandemic levels and yet businesses can't find help to come work. clearly, there's something off in the math equation there. jedediah: absolutely. lawrence: and this is a nurse. obviously, she doesn't want people to die or anything like that. she takes health -- she's in the profession. but what's obvious is obvious. i'm sure the people that are watching that are in the mainstream and liberal media will focus she didn't have a mask on in the middle of her interview, she's by herself. will: can't put it past them. lawrence: watch.
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watch. just watch. will: turning now to a few additional headlines. there is a urgent manhunt underway for a gunman who opened fire at a college bar in kenosha, wisconsin. thee people were shot and killed at a bar named summers house, tavern. two others were seriously injured as well. police say the shooting appears to be targeted. there's no greater threat to the community. prince philip is laid to rest following a small ceremony at windsor castle. queen elizabeth sat alone at the service, mourning the loss of her husband after 73 years of marriage. prince william and harry were there. prince william's wife kate was the first to speak to harry as they left the service. like father like son, this 3-year-old is going viral for sporting a police uniform to match his dad's. patrick fraser saying he made his son the outfit out of his
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old uniform. >> it's awesome. i knew i wanted to have a uniform made. i searched several places for material that would match him. i just had a hard time finding it. i wounded up using one of my old uniforms. will: he's proud of his dad, big-time. fraser is lieutenant of the escambia county sheriff's office. he says his son wants to be a police officer when he grows up. i said it to the officer when we had him on earlier, as a dad, you grow up wanting to make your dad proud. it's something special when you make your son proud. jedediah: it's amazing. look at him in that uniform. he was so cute in the interview, he was doing the siren sound, he was so into it. what a beautiful moment between father and son. all right, coming up, as we mentioned, with small businesses across the country remaining closed, somehow planned parented is receiving pandemic relief money. we're going to talk about that next. you love your pet...but hate wearing their hair.
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jedediah: the pandemic forcing roughly 200,000 u.s. businesses to permanently close and as many still struggle to stay afloat, gop senators demanding a probe into whether planned parented wrongly received $80 million. jessica anderson joins me now. thank you for being here this morning. let's dig into this, should planned parenthood have received that money? >> the reality is they should never have received this money in the first place, going back to when the ppe was first created by the cares act. it was meant to provide a temporary bridge for small businesses to get through the coronavirus lockdowns. planned parenthood should not have been able to get the funds in the first place because they have over 500 employees which is the standard that the small businesses administration has set, under 500 employees are eligible, over are not.
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it includes affiliates, how many employees does planned parenthood have? 16,000. they should have not received grants, or requested additional grants. taxpayers don't want to subsidize the largest abortion provider. jedediah: we have a statement. the independent organizations who were awarded ppp loans met eligibility requirements established by congress and the small business administration. it's time for everyone to come together to address this pandemic, not for uninformed political attacks on access to essential healthcare. they're saying this is strictly a political attack. your reaction? >> well, they're falsifying the information, by the standards they don't meet the threshold for employees and then you add in the fact that taxpayer dollars are continuing to be back channeled to the nation's
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largest abortion provider which doesn't provide comprehensive healthcare in the way that other comprehensive women's healthcare providers do, like the organization ovaria which the biden administration just revoked their title 10 of grant for political purposes this year. everything is upsidedown. the government is supporting planned parenthood instead of propping up small businesses to get them back on their feet or allowing schools to reopen. jedediah: some businesses have permanently closed. interesting to imagine their reaction to hearing this information will be. we appreciate you being here this morning. >> thanks for having me. jedediah: concerns are growing that more and more violent ms-13 gang members are crossing the border and walking into the communities. our next guests who witnessed the crisis firsthand say biden's weak policies are to blame. how great is it that we get to tell everybody
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will: we're back with quick headlines. take a look at this, high school girls basketball game tunes into an all-out brawl in indiana. the referee threw a punch at a spectator and player before being slammed to the ground. one of the teams protested the ref's call and gave the coach a technical foul. and youtubeer jake paul dominating in his third ever boxing match. paul knocked out ben askrin in less than two minutes. he's 3-0 with former victories over of nate robinson and another youtubeer. he may be good enough to start
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fighting pro. lawrence: we've been showing the heart breaking video all morning of a migrant child abandoned at the border. our next guest warns this only highlights the cartel and gangs exploiting border policies after smuggling a suspect with ties to isis and ms-13 was caught at the border last month. here with an inside look is congressman michael clout and sheriff justin marr. can you paint the picture for the audience of the criminal enterprise that's at the border. i've been to the border about four times you don't get across unless the cartel says it's okay. >> you don't. you don't. and that applies to many trades, much of the trade as well. we know the human crisis that's going on at the border, we know the drug crisis that's going on at the border. the cartels control the entire southern border. there's reports there's handing
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out wristbands to keep track of who has paid to cross which sections. the way they put it, they are doing that so they don't accidentally kill the wrong person. the cartels, it's about profit of. human life means little to them. it's all for the money. the policy has aided and abetted them. lawrence: how does this impact the community at a large, the people that live in your county and the counties surrounding the border? >> it impacts us greatly. you know, regionally we've had a large increase in stolen motor vehicles and other crimes. then when the deputies get involved with what usually turns into a vehicle pursuit with the smugglers, they have no regard for life, liberty or property. they'll damage anything in their way to get away. they'll drive through multiple ranches, just destroying property and like i said, there's no regard on that.
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lawrence: congressman, let's get into ms-13 and we talked about the criminal enterprise. that's one thing. but we've got terrorists coming across the border. >> exactly. and we know ms-13 they're one of the most violent criminal cartels that are operating along our southern border. they are working along with cartels -- i should say terrorists organizations to get special interest aliens is what they call them into the united states. here in victoria, recently, and the sheriff knows this, someone was captured recently who had affiliation or -- when they went through their information, they had ties to ms-13, to isis, and after going through the -- being handed over to federal authorities, was released into the public in the corpus christi area. this is affecting our communities on a daily basis,
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here, throughout texas and throughout the country. lawrence: sheriff, the governor of texas a, greg abbott is stepping up, dps is backing you guys up. have you heard from the biden administration? kamala harris is in charge of the policy there. are you hearing from any of the federal officials? >> no, not at all. lawrence: so what's your next move? if you don't hear from them, if left to you, your offices, your deputies? >> yes, sir, we're just going to keep fighting the good fight and doing what we can and working with our state resources to stop this. the federal government needs to listen to this and come down and pay a visit to our border. lawrence: sheriff, congressman, thank you so much for joining me. a lot of talk about hearts and minds and all of that but what about the american citizens, that's what a lot of people are saying. thank you so much. >> exactly. thank you. lawrence: coming up, more than a year into the pandemic and some new york businesses are still not allowed to reopen. will cain visited a martial arts
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studio and talked to the business owner about his struggle to open his doors. that's next. ♪ it's too late now to say sorry. ♪ never run dry of... killer attitude. or hydration. neutrogena® hydro boost. the #1 hyaluronic acid moisturizer delivers 2x the hydration for supple, bouncy skin. neutrogena®. 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) ♪ and here's mine!
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from prom dresses to workouts and new adventures you hope the more you give the less they'll miss. but even if your teen was vaccinated
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against meningitis in the past they may be missing vaccination for meningitis b. although uncommon, up to 1 in 5 survivors of meningitis will have long term consequences. now as you're thinking about all the vaccines your teen might need make sure you ask your doctor if your teen is missing meningitis b vaccination. ♪ new york, concrete jungle
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where dreams are made of. will: that's what i'm talking about. that's iconic. music tailored to the shot of the morning, to the state, to the city. lawrence: do you know who it is. will: of course i know who that is. lawrence: that's the part where you say who it is. will: that's alicia keys. lawrence: and jay-z. will: that song gets a silver medal to frank sinatra. jedediah: you made the discussion early on, producers tapped into it and we've been providing the audience with amazing visuals and corresponding music ever since. now we move to another state, we'll talk about the differences going on here. some states are claiming they loosened covid-19 restrictions. small businesses say they're still feeling the pinch. lawrence: in new york, indoor fitness has resumed but full contact sports are not allowed.
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will: these rules are forcing some places to be shuttered. i spoke to joe kiniso, the owner of a dojo in staten island, about the struggles he's been facing. take a look. rewind the clock for me back to fall of 2019. what did this place look like? >> this place would be full with students. you'd see a lot of smiles on people's faces, business was great. will: in march 2020, what happened? >> march came along. we started to hear about the virus. the mayor got on tv and immediately shut down fitness studios. fast forward over a year later, we're still unable to open. will: you've been shut down for a year, what's that been like? >> my business is decimated. we're facing $10,000 in commercial property tax. will: the government shuts down the business, says you can't operate, expects you to pay
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taxes? >> the city wants to be paid taxes for the year i've been closed. will: how does that make you feel? >> some people think a business is like a light switch, you can turn it off for a year and turn it back on and things go back to normal as usual. in my instance, it's a business death sentence. will: in new york, some small gyms, business has not just been shut down but absolutely decimated by government restrictions and the people hurt, not just business owners. students as well. >> our oldest joined when she was 7. she is 18 now. and our youngest joined when she was 5. she's 14 now. >> this was a second home for them. they grew up here. >> it was he very disheartening for them that they weren't able to come back. >> my kids are asking when are we going back? i don't know. >> what do you miss? >> seeing my friends and getting to exercise. will: what happens if this can't open again? >> i won't see my friends again. the fun stuff that happened here, we won't get to do
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anything here ever again. will: how many students did you have before the pandemic. >> about 132. will: how many do you have now? >> zero. will: are you going to survive? >> doesn't look like it. i have hope. none of it lies within my control. will: the rules for indoor fitness, you can open to 33% capacity. that doesn't help you, right? >> unfortunately, judo is a full contact sport. to be able to teach, we need to close the six foot gap. right now we're not mandated to do that so we can't open up. will: you can't do full contact but you can show me a few things. >> i'll do my best. there's not much we can do without being in physical contact but i'll do my best. will: i'm ready. >> you start this way on one knee. let's have you take your hands like this, one over the other. you turn it on a 45, put it down on the floor and then you put your chin on your left shoulder. you're going to push off the
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back leg and roll forward and roll forward and roll forward. there you go. ♪ >> you got it. judo is a full contact sport, requires two people to engage in physical contact. we have throws, we have pins, we have chokes, we have arm locks. will: it's all right there. can you show me what's a throw? can we do this without touching? >> it's impossible. will: i don't know how you would do it. >> let's see. you can hit this without breaking the six foot rule. it's impossible to happen without contact. will: there you go. jedediah: i know i speak for the audience when i say we would have all liked to see a live reenactment of what you learned at the dough joe right--the dojo right here. will: that's my thing.
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you're supposed to slap the floor. he told me that's how you transfer the power so it doesn't concentrate in one area. jedediah: well done. will: i was really good. lawrence: you know why he picks up a racket ball. will: i was really good at judo. jedediah: it's important what you show caved there, a -- showcased there, a business that's been struggling for so long, they don't know if they can ever open again. will: it's cruel what's happening to businesses in new york. i want to say where people can help that business out real quick. you can help them out, that's the staten island judo dojo, you can visit their website. these are good people that are out of business for going on 13 months by mandate. jedediah: we're going to turn to headlines this hour. the family of the gunman in the indianapolis fed ex shooting apologizes to victims and families. they released a statement saying in part we are devastated at the loss of life caused as a result
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of brandon's actions. web tried to get him the help he needed. our sincerest and heart felt apologies go out to vicks tips -- victims of the sense tragedy. there was a vigil for the eight lives lost. this pro police thin blue line flag is taken down from a high school after critics called it a symbol of racism. a retired officer joined us earlier, defended the flag, saying it stands for law enforcement and america. >> the small group of people that complained instead of educating and teaching what the flag means, it was just taken down. as a school, they're there to teach. let's teach the truth. jedediah: the principal wrote a letter to the community, saying they're working to repair the harm done by the flag. a million dollars for a pair of shoes, that's how much a pair of yeezys are expected to fetch at
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an auction. if sold at that price they will be the most expensive shoes ever. they say it comes from the cultural impact. i like the shoes but that's a lot of cash. lawrence: i'm a sneaker head. i love kanye. but that looked too steep for me. i mean, they're fashionable. a sneaker like that you don't wear after kanye has worn them. will: they're used shoes. lawrence: they're used shoes. i'm not against it. i grew up going to goodwill. will: when rich people spend ridiculous amounts of money on those types of things, it's relative. when you spend that much on those shoes, you have to -- if i gave you $100 million. would you buy the shoes? lawrence: no. will: if you're worth a half a billion dollars, would you spend that on those shoes. lawrence: it has to be worth it. it has to make sense for us. jedediah: let's ask the only
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one of us who could afford those shoes and that of course is adam klotz. will you be buying those shoes? >> that's like me buying chuck taylors for a really rich person. that's what those are like. those are $50 shoes for a really rich person. i'm like i don't know. i can wear the ones i've got for a lot longer. jedediah: take it away. >> we have heavy rain across portions of north florida. there's a slow-moving cold front that swept across the gulf coast. the heavy rain will continue now really centered over portions of north florida. otherwise the story is calmer, milder as far as temperatures go in the eastern half of the country. the western half of the country still very cold, 31 degrees in denver early this morning. our daytime highs not so much today but the next couple days are going to be 15 to 20 degrees below the seasonal average. real cold air is settling in across the northern rockies and with that cold air is coming a system that will bring heavy
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snow into denver and that will run up through wyoming, montana, idaho. cold winter weather continues at least for some of the folks in the western half of the country. back out to you guys. will: coming up, florida's governor getting fired up over mask mandates for vaccinated, fully vaccinated americans. >> if you get a vaccine, the vaccines are effective. you're immune. so act immune. will: maria bartiromo joins us live with a preview. ♪ i was born in a small town. ♪ and i live in a small town. ♪ probably die in a small town. ♪
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lawrence: back with quick headlines, a journalist's association of new york is demanding governor andrew cuomo reopen public events to the press, blasting cuomo for taking selective questions over the phone. cuomo insisted if restrictions are due to covid. he limited questions amid accusations of inappropriate he behavior and the nursing home coverup. lance armstrong comes of to his son's defense after he was arrested last week. posting this picture with a caption, head up, heart full. you're minority, luke. i love you. luke was arrested and charged with assaulting a 16-year-old in 2018. he has denied the charges. jedediah: the cdc revealing roughly half of u.s. adults have received at least one vaccine dose as florida governor ron de santis rails into the agency over its messaging on vaccination. >> my view is, if you get a vaccine, the vacation seens are effective -- vaccines are effective, you're immune. so act immune.
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i think the messaging has been horrific. the messaging should be get a vaccine because it's good for you to do it. it works. you're not going to have to be doing anything like abnormal. you can live your life. that has got to be what the message is. will: sounds like common sense. also sounds like it's backed up by the science. governor de santis will join maria bartiromo exclusively just a few minutes from now along with that lineup you see on your screen. one person not on your screen, but of course is the star of that show, is maria bartiromo. she joins us now for a preview. maria, good to see you. nice booking, excited to see governor de santis who has become a real leader in this nation. one leading not just by common sense by quite honestly by science and that's rare, maria. maria: yeah, he really is, will. thank you so much. i mean, this is such an incredible contrast when you look at what is going on in florida and the rest of the country, or florida and even texas and the rest of the
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country but texas has another major issue which is the border right there. so that's also muddying the story for texas. but we're going to talk with the governor about just that. it is a muddled and mangled message. what do you do if you're fully vaccinated? why get vaccinated if you're going back to the same way you lived before the vaccination? it's all the questions that people are asking because of this messaging that has been unclear. also unclear, what is the solution for the border? we're talking about massive, massive, thousands of people showing up at the border every day. what is the biden administration doing? they create and build more facilities to house them. so they just keep building more facilities which are over-crammed and crowded and they are not sufficient right now but instead of going to the cause and stopping the flow of people showing up, i mean, the track is obviously dangerous, there are sexual assaults, there are babies being thrown over the
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border wall. it's absolutely a mess and we still have not seen president biden or vice president harris go to the border to actually take in what so many people have said, this is a crisis, this is a catastrophe. we're going to get into it. he's one of the few out there who is literally fighting back against this radical agenda by suing the administration. florida just filed suit late last week on another lawsuit about i.c.e. we're going to talk about that then we will get into border issues even deeper with steven miller, former white house advisor to the president who really is an expert on immigration. so we'll talk about that. plus, we're talking with devin nunes because all throughout what we have been seeing in the last 100 days, something else is happening. there is massive domestic surveillance going on, on innocent american citizens. devin nunes will talk to us about that. he of course is the ranking member of the house intel committee. plus, charlie kirk and candace
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owens on the race theory that is being taught in ours schools. we have a letter that has gone viral from a parent of a student at brearlye, an upper east side school which charges 50 plus thousand dollars a year for their students. they're making the assumption that all of the girls are racist and have to be taught otherwise. we're going to get into that with charlie kirk and candace owens. a big show coming up. will: what a privilege to pay $54,000 to be taught that they are racist. we'll be watching. up next, drivers are gearing up to race at one of the oldest tracks on the nascar circuit. former champion joins us live with a preview of the cup series. ♪
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♪ will: richmond raceway, one of the oldest tracks in the nascar circuit, hosting its first race in 1953. today, it's the next stop on the nascar cup series schedule for the toyota owners 500. you can catch it live on fox. here with a preview is bobby levoni. 21 victories. i don't remember, short track guy? i know you were a super speedway kind of winner. short track guy? richmond is short track. >> that would be a no. i never won and richmond. richmond is a great race traik.
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i was not the short track guy. will: what makes a short track racer. i imagine this being the third in a row, that helps. you can get the car consistent to some extent. i think martin truex is one of the favorites. what makes a good short track racer. >> i grew up racing short tracks. like most everybody did. for some reason or other i ran good but i wasn't as good as a lot of these guys are today. but short track racing is just, you know, a lot of tight racing, it's a lot of -- you've got to work your feet right with the brakes and gas pedal and know how to maneuver the corners and get your car set up right like you want them. short track racing is a lot of fun, it's a little bit tougher than maybe speedway racing but -- in some ways, but good short track racers come about with a lot of talent and a lot of skill racing tight corners and just get it done. will: and crowded, right, bobby? it tends to be crowded and so
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that leads to -- it's not rubbing, we rubbing is racing. it leads to incidences. there have been a couple? >> there have. i've been thinking about this before the show. i was thinking i want to look back too. this is the third short track race in a he row. as far as drivers go, you never remember a lot of things that you do right but you remember what happened to you and so you remember like when i was racing there was a lot of guys that cut me off and did something to me. i would always remember that. so going back to martinsville last weekend, there was 15 cautions. i think going into this race today at richmond it's like, you know, these guys probably don't forget what happened last weekend. so there might be a little bit of cutting people off or not giving people the room. which might lead to some more rubbing and some more good racing so i'm looking forward to that. will: real quick, i'm going to ask you for -- tell me who we should watch to make their way to victory lane. also tell me who we should watch for pinching that could be bubbling under the surface. >> i'm going to say denny
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hamlin's my guy. i think today he's got a great streak going, a 4.5 average this year in finishes and home track so i think denny hamlin is the guy that i think will stay out of trouble and could win this race. martin truex, brian blaney is one. i think kevin harvick and kyle busch, i don't give them any love because they haven't won this year, they can do it. they've amassed a lot of wins there. when you think about the guys that have run into each other last weekend in bristol too, i don't know, i think there's about 30 guys that are probably remembering something that happened in the past two weeks so i'm not going to name names, but i think you've got to watch that because there's going to be some tight racing, some close racing and could be a little pushing and shoving. will: you mentioned bush, kurt and kyle busch brothers, championship brothers, the only other pair of championship brothers to you and your brother terry. that's something everyone should know about. always enjoy talking to you. thanks, we'll be watching. >> thanks, man.
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>> very important link tomorrow when dropping the derek chauvin
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trial. >> i'm going over there to see pictures, i'm not going to lie the dog is adorable. >> he goes down to the nitty-gritty. >> we need facts this week. glad to have you back and have you with us is morning. happy sunday and go to church. maria: good sunday morning everyone thank you so much for joining me welcome to sunday morning futures, i maria bartiromo, freedom and prosperity in florida, ron desantis on the economic engines firing up the sunshine state in his latest lawsuit against joe biden rational agenda. plus america on the world stage, the president vp to the welcome japan's prime minister as china lays down its law and hong kong encircles the wagon in taiwan and russia and ukraine the house

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