tv FOX and Friends Sunday FOX News May 9, 2021 3:00am-7:00am PDT
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happy mother's day. to my mom and happy first mother's day to emma. be sure to follow me on facebook and instagram and twitter "justice with judge jeanine" is next. i am waters and this is my world. ♪. jedediah: hello, everyone, good morning. happy mother's day to ault moms out there, 6:00 a.m., ma'am. happy mother's day to my mom. happy mother's day to your wife, your mom, all the moms. we want everyone in the audience to send us pics of the special moms in your life. my husband made me a mother's
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day cake yesterday. i ate the entire thing. lawrence: one of my favorite holidays. i'm definitely a mama's boy. she is watching the show. i want to know how much i love her. my mother got pregnant with me at 16. decided to choose life and my dad married her. pete: friends@foxnews.com. bonus to get it on hair with the show in the background. send us anytime with mom. if you have the show, we know it is real from now. we love to share it. >> if there is a pet you always know you get plus points from me if there is a cat or dog in there. lawrence: got to have the background. jedediah: exactly. thanks for being with us this morning everyone. pete post thanks for being here. but we start with the new scandal surrounding the biden administration. republicans and i'm reading
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jed's line. jedediah: all good. republicans are calling into question the president's ethics after he reportedly waived rules for some staffers. lawrence: a lot of hypocrisy going on. griff jenkins joins us from washington with former staffers that were union boasts. reporter: shame on you stealing a line from jed on mother's day. help mother's day, jed. the story you're talking about, lawrence, you can be happier with a return to the old ways of washington with the powerful labor unions. white house waving federal ethics rules for top union officials in senior administration posts giving labor unions a very powerful voice in administration decisions. now back in march a senior official in the office of personnel management. alithi. a perdue was allowed to facilitate communication between the federal ghost and american federation of government employees. just last week president biden tapped celeste drake to lead in
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the made in america office, relieving restrictions barring her from communicating with the former employees, afl-cio and directors guild of america. these waivers drawing criticism from the snags republican senatorial spokeswoman katherine cooksey, quote, since the first day of the biden administration every single democrat echoed the same approved talking points to keep schools closed and jam a job killing agenda through congress. as we learned the the aft, powerful american federation of teachers regularly communicated with the cdc after giving 1.$6 million. something they're defending at the white house. here is jen psaki, watch. >> the cdc is longstanding best practice for the cdc to engage with organizations and groups that are going to be impacted by guidance and recommendations issued by the agency. reporter: white house has not
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commented of gop's concerns with coziness of democratic controlled congress there is little recourse for republicans. pete: wish a happy mother's day for kathleen for us. what are your plans? reporter: working all day. go home buying flowers. perhaps dinner. lawrence: can't go wrong with flowers. jedediah: griff, appreciate it. pete: the news unions had some of the first meet national the white house no surprise, that waivers were given, so that access could be given. it should surprise nobody. even on the campaign trail, joe biden said very overtly i'm here to bolster unions. i want unions to be bigger, stronger, more powerful. boy have they wielded that influence. lawrence: on the campaign trail, i'm against corruption. i will return to normalcy.
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the normalcy is unionses taking the lead. guidance from the emails showing there was coordination going on. now there was coordination going on. insure waivers granted all that. but it shows you that the business as normal is the fact that big government likes the insiders controlling everything. this is shows you why you don't see the president taking a lead on a lot of things. you see a lot of former obama staffers, clinton staffers, the old way of doing things is the unions run everything. jedediah: always been talk about the democrat party and its allegiance to unions but i think it its hitting people differently this time. it involves school reopenings. it impacted people in a very personal way this time, they felt, i can rely on the school system to help me out when i needed it most. this is an ally of mine. hold on a second, they are paying homage to the unions and political party, i'm being left out of the equation completely. me and my family don't count.
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people are looking at this with different eyes for the first time. jason riley, fox news contributor, talked about you who the pandemic highlighted the real power of teachers unions. listen to what he had to say. >> it is business as usual. the problem is that the biden administration is taking dictation from the teachers unions as democrats have london, paul, that is the problem here. they're not following the science. they're following orders from a labor leaders that give a lot of money to democratic politicians and democratic causes. >> teachers union long pretended that their interests are perfectly aligned with those of the children. the behavior during the pandemic, the resistance to go back to work and harm we know it caused children shows their interests are not aligned with those of the children and families. pete: there are 20 million reasons why, just in 2020 this white house is listening to the unions. the amount of money across the
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country they were given, the biden white house were given. lawrence: only saving grace, those of us education reformed a very cats want school choice to happen, we're going to get it now because parents are waking up what we've been saying for a long time. it took something tragic leak this to highlight the teachers union really are. the argument we do what is in the best interests of the kids. when the kids needed you the most you straight up abandoned them. pete: the only interest a union has to protect the members, that's it. the only members of the union are teachers. their interests specifically. bad teachers protected by the unions. good teachers. jedediah: great point because peoples eyes are on education. they are looking to alternate educational systems. that is a great point, lawrence. the other big story we're following a manhunt underway after three people including a young girl were show in new york city. ashley slow meyer is here with
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what we know. reporter: good morning, he had why. a 4-year-old girl was out shopping for toys she was shot in the leg after a fight with group of men. officers saw her rushing to ambulance so she was taken for surgery. two other people, including a tourist from rhode island were hit after late afternoon shooting. all are expected to survive. this is photo of a person of interest. saying he would call shortly. blaming it on bad policy and the spread of illegal firearms. >> how many more kids do we need to be shot before we realize bad policies have consequences. if we had been taking guns off the street in new york city at an alarming rate over the last two years. time now we have consequences for those. reporter: according to the department data there have been 416 shootings so far this year. that is up 83% last year when there was only 227 shootings to this point.
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critics blamed the surge on city leaders slashing the nypd budget by $484 million, shifting more than 500 million to other agencies. mayor bill de blasio insists the crime numbers will fall once criminal courts fully reopen but critics say bail reform law made it to easy to send criminals back on to the streets. back to you. pete: ashley, thank you. we can spend too much time focusing on new york city and we do sometimes but in this case it is emblematic. you defunded the police. you have a new sense in the city. now everyone knows times square, crossroads of america. a four-year-old shopping for toys shot in broad daylight in the middle of a scuffle or whatever, this is, this is certainly the feel of the city. that video, lawrence. lawrence: we have to talk about this. look at this female officer here, running toward danger with the child in her arms, trying to get the child to safety. they don't get enough appreciation. we can talk about the bad apples.
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we have to highlight the 99% out here doing their job. i'm struck by the commissioner's words if we can get back to that. he talks about the guns being on the street. well commissioner, why did you get rid of the anti-crime nyunt, people out there getting the bad guns off the street? you caved to pressure from city hall. i reported months ago from my sources they were talking about bringing the anti-crime unit back but they couldn't figure out what the new name was going to be. shows you the priority of city hall is. they're not supporting the people out there going out there and protecting citizens. jedediah: a lot of people left new york city because of the pandemic and restrictions. they were in close quarters. they're not coming back in large part because of the crime f they have families, children, they read the stories, there was a story about a carjacking. a lot are happening in neighborhoods, particularly prepandemic, predefund the
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police were considered safe neighborhoods. i can't walk times square with my child. maybe new york city is not for me. pete, you bring up a great point. we talk a lot about new york city. it is cities, chicago, los angeles, we happen to be here. this is a pattern everywhere where the defund police movement has been remotely successful, those budgets have been cut and police are disincentivized from doing their jobs, they're looking at the scene, how can i even do and am i appreciated. that pattern is incredibly dangerous in all those cities. pete: what do they think is going to happen? lawrence: they fostered the environment. not just defund, d.a.'s backed by george soros. he has been funding them. let violent criminals on the street as if that is going to help. pete: will not prosecute as well. they let people out. defund the cops. lawrence: young people do their dirty work so they can't be prosecuted. what a mess. jedediah: sounds like a lovely form la.
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lawrence: pete: speaking of new york city, i don't know where do they broadcast saturday "saturday ni? jedediah: look at me. something i -- rockefeller center. 30 rock, yeah. pete: there was controversy about last night's episode because some "saturday night live" episode, how dare we host with elon musk, he is so rich. turns out he is funny. elon musk last night. >> i post strange things. that is how my brain works. to anyone i invented i reinvented electric cars and sending people to rocket ship, did you think i was going to be a chill, normal dude? [laughter]. one time i smoked weed on joe rogan's podcast. now all the time i hear, elon musk, all he ever does is smoke weed on podcasts. like i go to broadcast to podcast lighting up joints. it happened once. like reducing oj sim sown to
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murderer. >> i'm excited about my mother's day different. i hope it is not dogecoin. >> it is. jedediah: he is funny. pete: he did a great job. jedediah: the rest of the show was kind of dull. lawrence: i like rich guys, average day people. just chill. why the audience, i'm interested to see the ratings. i guarranty they will love it. pete: i'm first person who host "snl" with asperger's then he said, at least the first one to admit it. he got a good laugh. he played it well in all the skits. jedediah: it is like hit or miss for me. he did pretty well. pete: he did. we'll turn to a few additional headlines, starting with a fox news alert. an urgent manhunt is underway in denver after a police officer is shot responding to trespassing call. just an average trespassing call, what could go wrong. the officer is shot in the leg.
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he is in the hospital as a critical condition. officials identified him as five-year veteran of the police force. the suspect has not been identified. think about that officer. china claims debris from its rocket ship returned safely to earth. space media, consider the source, it landed in the ocean near the maldives. u.s. space command confirmed it reentered over the arabian peninsula. but they did not give a landing spot. experts fear it could have landed in america after it cast caught in an uncontrol orbit. lawrence: we'll have to -- pete: i think so. lawrence: city ahead the white house is eyeing a shuttered north carolina school to house hundreds of migrant children. north carolina sheriff joins us next. ♪
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♪. lawrence: welcome back the biden administration now looking to house hundreds of unaccompanied migrant children at a former school in greensboro, north carolina. the city's democratic mayor may even welcome the idea after of illegal immigration because it boosts job numbers. here to react the county sheriff, bill johnson. sheriff, i got to get your quick reaction. have you talked to the mayor there to see if this is a go? >> no, i have not. as a matter of fact i didn't hear about it until just a short time ago and, i'm not totally happy with it. we have a major problem here with the criminal element that crosses the border. i would certainly like to see a lot of these people are come,
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we're going to accept that they are properly vetted before allowing them to come into our communities. i feel like we have an open door policy right now at the border. to me, this is, this should not be a political issue. it's a homeland security issue. that is what concerns me about being a law enforcement officer and a sheriff here in alamance county. we're seeing increase in overdoses here. we're seeing a great increase in the seizure of narcotics, cocaine, methaphetamine, and heroin and a lot of crime is occurring because of this and that's all over the nation, not just here in alamance county. lawrence: the biden administration says they have this uncontrol and this is not a crisis. >> this is definitely a crisis
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and it is the president will really look deep, let's take the political party situation out of this. this is a homeland security issue affecting the american people with the high increase in the rate of crime right now. go back and look and see from january to now how much the crime has increased in every area of this nation. lawrence: do the citizens approve this? because last time i checked citizens pay property taxes there, they own that school, so were the citizens considered? >> well you know, i can't speak for the people that own that property. you know, i'm sure they had to give the okay for this to be done but it does concern me because i mean, if people, if
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the kids are being brought to that school, eventually parents, or people in that family is going to cross that border, either legally or illegally and with that some may be criminals. they come into our communities and we don't always know who is in our communities and, then we have murders. lawrence: i think, sheriff, i think you hit it right own the head. this is all part of the plan even with the cartels. get the kids there. get the parents connected. there you go, that is our immigration system. sheriff, thanks so much for combing on the program today. more "fox & friends" when we come back. we're good. the remarkable gx and lx. get 0.9% apr financing on the 2021 gx 460. experience amazing, at your lexus dealer. new projects means new project managers.
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♪. jedediah: want to wish a happy mother's day to all moms across the country, including our own "fox & friends" mom. here is senior producer kelly with her mom christine and grandma sharon. here is our technical director, brandon with his mom nancy. and lorraine with. writer ben and his mom kathy right here in new york city. happy mother's day. what amazing pictures. pete: our producers have moms? they're robots. turns out even they have moms. we love our moms. lawrence: now, this fairfax county parent, journalists off on the school board officials this week after they have sent out a survey urging parents to help shape the district's woke curriculum. >> this survey, it is just a loaded survey and who is it by indeed? new york's leadership academy and, what has that survey done?
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they asked us the questions for the -- >> thank you for your time. >> that 4:00 your time. >> that al allow them for the. >> your time is up, ma'am. >> you all need to have a -- >> your time is up, ma'am. your time has expired. >> you all want us shut up. >> next speaker. next speaker. >> continue to shut us down. >> that is it what you love to do. >> please, go to your seat. pete: clearly they were thankful for your time. the parent joins us. parents defending education. man, do we need that. thanks so much for being here. >> thank you so much. pete: suite put up some. questions in the survey. what tipped you off to the fact that your school district is going down the sort of critical race theory path? >> well, at the top of the survey was a seal of public schools and right next to it was a seal of the nyc leadership
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academy and, i just new -- knew we brought in outside consultants to basically rig a survey to create business. indeed what the board chair was doing at that moment was cutting me off as i about to talk about this lovely contract that fairfax county public schools has signed with the leadership academy. and it is a five-year, almost five years contract. it goes to about four 1/2 years and it has in it 21 items that are essentially reeducation camp for everyone from the principals to the parents. it's frightening. final thing i wanted to say, she cut me off of saying, add up all the items on the shopping list, the price tag is going to be
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minimum $700,000. jedediah: when you say a reeducation, i think sometimes it is hard for parents to imagine what this looks like. how does this manifest in a curriculum. when you say reeducation of faculty, administration, what does that look like in terms of content, in terms of policy? >> you know what really triggered me also what also superintendent, scott raymond, told us what they intend to do revise a policy, controversial issues policy. a lot of parents might not know we have the protection in school districts. it means whenever a controversial issue arises the teachers have to present it fairly. what they are doing now, is they are putting in this buzzword for critical race theory, called anti-racism. they are taking away that controversial issue policy so that the teachers can actually indoctrinate. they literally put that down in writing now. it is really frightening. we have to show up at the school board meetings, speak up.
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i will tell you hundreds of people written to me because it touched a nerve. folks are really frightened what is happening in their school districts. i want to encourage them to overcome your fears, and please speak up. lawrence: asra, i want to get so some of these survey questions. here is one of them. fcps curriculum should give students opportunities to recognize injustices that systems create, agree or disagree? here is another one the curriculum in in the fcps teach children how to challenge power and privilege in society. agree or disagree. curriculum focus on being anti-racist, antibiased support student academic excellence and support learning, agree or disagree? >> no place for you to say this is nonsense. we don't buy any of this. pete: true, look at the first two questions. you cannot say agree. they want to push you, boxes you
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straight in. then the kids are told there is a victim and oppressor is class eventually. >> this is classic political corruption. that is what this is. that is where we have to take the following the monthat is whn fairfax county. we're following it across the country. district after district. what this amounts to them this is state-sponsored indoctrination. we have to save america. on this mother's day i want to give a shoutout to all the mama bears, papa bears, your fears, i'm one of them standing up in my school district. we're all together. we will win america. jedediah: we have a statement from the fcps on this survey sent to parents. this is what it reads. this survey has been issued in order tore fcps to engage all stakeholders to create input to create a new policy, antibias
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and anti-racism, challenging inequality, and consciousness are not neutral matters. this is ought thenally belonging in our schools that all families fell welcomed valued and scene. your quick reaction? >> when i asked them for a copy of the contract they made me file a freedom of information act request. you can bet i filed it. they are keeping secrets about what they are doing and we have to ask the tough questions. literally at my son's school they told the kids mostly asian that salsa dancing amounts to cultural appropriation. that is not moving forward. that is regressive. we have to stand up against this kind of tyranny of ideas and really stand up for freedom and critical thinking. pete: you hit on it, their progressivism is regressive. god bless you. jedediah: happy mother's day to you. >> happy mother's day to everyone.
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thank you. pete: up next a massive cyberattack on a major pipeline could mean a major spike in gas prices. our next guest owns hundreds of gas stations and says this could have a serious long-term effect for everybody. [sfx: bikes passing] [sfx: fire truck siren] onstar, we see them. okay. mother and child in vehicle. mother is unable to exit the vehicle. injuries are unknown. thank you, onstar. ♪ my son, is he okay? your son's fine. thank you. there was something in the road... it's okay. you're safe now.
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believe we have some photos to share of celebrating mother's day. that is my little, that is my hartley. i love it. lawrence: your husband doesn't do any work. jedediah: i love him. my second mother's day. that is daisy. ism i'm also a puppy mama. look at him in his raincoat. i can't stand it. i didn't show a picture of my mom. happy mother's day with my mom as well. what is he doing? my husband has something for valentine's day. on a little wagon. lawrence: mama bear. jedediah: oh. thanks, lawrence. lawrence: pick me up. pete: that is my penny and general any. my mom penny and my wife general jennie my mother to my ourself
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wonderful kids. dads may be sleeping or helping. lawrence: probably terrible. the moms eat it anyway. pete: enjoy it. we have another story for you as well this morning as well. the nationest largest gasoline diesel pipeline abruptly shut down being hit by a cyberattack with a transporting 100 million gallons a day. the shutdown could affect gas prices if goes on. john catsimatidis is a chairman of a refining company. thanks for being with us this morning. you understand how these dynamics play out. there has been a spike in gas prices. what's this attack going to mean? >> oil has gone in the last 120 days approximately $50 a barrel to 65, 66. i think right now it may i can it to close to 70, over $70 a barrel. that means, at the gas tank, you are paying $2 a gallon.
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now you may be paying 3 $3 a gallon, maybe even more. it's a significant problem because the cyberattack could hit any one of our industries. it hit the pipeline industry sometime on friday. it interrupted the supply which goes, supplies 50% of the east coast's gasoline. and, you know, we have back up products now but if it lasts more than two, three, four, five more days, then you're going to have interruption in consumer availability for gasoline. that means a shortage. and, that would be terrible. pete: wow, should be. speaking of shortage, i have to give your take as well. you own a chain of grocery stores as well here in the city. many businesses say they can't find workers. there is a shortage of actual workers because of unemployment
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benefits. what's been your experience? >> well, unemployment is the highest it ever has been. the government is paying a bonus to be unemployed. people could earn as much as equivalent of 23,000 a year or 35,000 a year. people say, well, i'm earning more staying home than going to work. i had a few people that quit, boss, you know, i don't have to work. i'm getting unemployment. and there is no checks and balances in the system right now. you know in the old days, in the past, you had to prove you couldn't find a job. pete: sure. >> right now it's, people just are staying home. it makes, i heard my friends from restaurants can't find labor to go to work. pete: sad state of affairs. it really is.
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thanks for enlightening us on the energy side. people not going back to work, scary future. john catsimatidis thank you very much. >> thank you. pete: jed, to you. jedediah: residents of l.a.'s venice beach community are calling for action over growing homeless encamments and crime in the area. hundreds of people sent a letter to city officials saying shooting, fires, drug use are common around venice's fame bows boardwalk where 200 tents popped up. bill de blasio block as group of veterans marching on long island for memorial day. a request for the parade permit was filed back in february but denied days later. since then the city lifted some restrictions. the group is asking officials to reconsider the permit. the parade would have marked the gulf war 30th anniversary. a new study finds 73% of men
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rather die early than give up. >> i'm going to have that third steak after all. go ahead and put that order in now. please and thank you. jedediah: study by a non-profit, no meat may, 3/4 of men in the survey were not convinced after health benefits after meat-free diet. the more meat a diet contains more masculine it is perceived. pete: yeah. jedediah: a full challenge of full weekend with no meat. i did not trust you to be honest. i told the producer, you would sneak the bacon. pete: action absolutely. i had steak last night t was amazing. the study said if you can't have meat right now you die a little sooner. live to 80 with no meat when can go to 77 with meat. jedediah: pete decided it is a three-year difference. pete: i'm good with that. rick is with us, rick. come on, you can't, you're with
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me, right? rick: of course. i don't like the numbers you pulled out. 80 with meat, 77. you have to go higher. pete: i don't think i will make it that far. rick: 90 without meat or 87 with meat. pete: add alcohol on top. tough to factor. rick: you have to start higher, pete. start at 90, work our way back down to like 86. pete: then 83. rick: closer to those ages, those numbers. all right, guys, here is your temperatures waking up this morning. still really cool across a lot of country. in fact another day with almost, at least a lot of this, probably more than half of the country below average right now. here is a look at the radar picture. one big storm is coming in will cause big problems across the southeast. waking up looking real good. florida, you're looking great. will see a few showers later on. a storm north of this will start
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to move off towards the south. as it does, bring us weather across parts of the lower mississippi valley. look at this, big thunderstorms across parts of missouri, the up towards the chicago area, getting doused with heavy rain. a bit of localized flooding. here are the testimonies. 80s in florida. aside from that temps are cool. cold air stays with us into tuesday and wednesday. look at this, by the time we get in towards the day on wednesday, we have temps only into the highs of 59 in atlanta. sorry, no summer just yet. jedediah: thanks, rick. pete: coming up from california dreaming to california leaving, the states sees its first population decline ever. our next guest lives in the golden state and says there is a
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each with a time and a place they've been promised to be. a promise is everything to old dominion, because it means everything to you. ♪. pete: happy mother's day to all the mothers out there. this is associate producer montana with her mom colleen. she -- montana travels with us to diners across the land. lawrence: that's right. pete: here is writer kerry and her mom jed after a visit. beautiful. this is tactical director matt with his mom carol on his wedding day. if i don't say beautiful for every mom, beautiful. and associate producer and booker christie with her mom linda on their recent trip to disney world. no masks at disney world. i love it. beautiful. jedediah: mouse ears. i love it. lawrence: mother's day means
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even more this year as we celebrate working moms juggling virtual schooling and careers and more. jedediah: samuel adams saying thank you to all the moms brewing the american dream by providing 50 moms in the food and beverage industry with training and monetary support. pete: very cool. joining us with more, jennifer from samuel adams and kate russell, the winner of the 8th samuel adams brewing experience. she is co-owner of the hopkinsville brewing company in mop -- hopkinsville, kentucky. how are you helping moms to get in the industry? >> we started brewing the american dream in 2008. our founder jim cook wanted help that helped support women with samuel adams. we have given $50 million to entrepreneurs around the country. our 8th an oomph brewing
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experience this year is kate russell. speaking with her, learning her story, resiliency, dedication as a mom and entrepreneur really inspired us to create a special promotion this year to really celebrate moms. we know women and moms have been hit incredibly hard during the pandemic like many and we wanted to provide a live bit of relief and support for these moms working so hard. jedediah: kate, a happy mother's day to you and tell us about this experienceship and what that experience was like? >> so, i had heard of it vaguely years ago and, you know, i opened facebook, saw a link and applied. i never thought anyone would pick us here in hopkinsville but yeah, we got the call one day during a brew day and jennifer explained the whole concept, that we had won and so far, just been an amazing experience being able to with everyone at samuel adams we ever wanted to speak with. we're looking forward to the
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collaboration later this year. pete: were you in the 101st airborne? >> yes i was. pete: what unit. tell me? >> g-2 operations. pete: thank you very much for your service. that is what tipped me off. lawrence: kate, any mom nervous about this what would you tell them? >> go for it. if we learned nothing else in 2020, the experience of last year, just go for it and get creative and try everything. something will work out eventually. lawrence: thank you so much for your service. any mom that is interested in pursuing their own american dream can apply via the brewing, brewing the american dream facebook or instagram page by may 20 third. thank you so much, ladies for joining the program. pete: thank you both, jennifer, kate. thank you. >> thank you. pete: up next california sees its first population decline ever. other next guest lives there. he says it is no surprise. ♪.
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♪. jedediah: a man accused of stabbing two asian women in san francisco has reportedly been granted early release from a 25-year prison sentence thanks to the city's left-wing criminal justice diverse program. the suspect is due in court tomorrow after refusing to appear for his original hearing on friday. here so react the center for american liberty founder harmeet dhillon. thanks for being here. there is something really bad happening in california when it comes to criminal justice, when it comes to prosecutors not doing their job. this is a repeated pattern. what is going on exactly? >> well, both san francisco and los angeles have really bad district attorneys. this is part of a national trend we have of very far left people, sometimes like our san francisco
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d.a. coming from the public defender's office, switching sides, pushing radical policies letting people out before serving anytime or no bail and the concept of protecting the public, protecting victims specifically which is enshrined in our california constitution goes out the window and that is exactly what happened here in this situation. it is only blocks from my office in the most expensive office area in san francisco where these two asian-american grandmothers were stabbed in broad daylight at a bus stop. the person stabbed people three years ago in 2017. he was diverted to a mental health treatment program. then, allowed out last year. and interestingly the current district attorney, boudin was in the public defender's office as the number two man there when this lapse of the prior prosecution happened. because this is getting national publicity he is personally vowing to prosecute this crime. i have my doubts.
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it seems like a conflict of interest to me for somebody to have been on both sides of that, to be prosecuting this. i don't think these families are going to get justice. jedediah: yeah. >> this is why people are fleeing the state. jedediah: let's talk about that because california is now in population decline for the first time in a very long time. more than 182,000 people between january 2020 and january 2021 have left. i think this is the first time in the state's recorded history actually you have had that population decrease so what are the main reasons? >> well, gosh, there are so many i just named one but we have other natural disaster issues not being addressed. we have water shortages. we have wildfires. we have high taxes. high rates of, you know, high gasoline prices and overall it is unliveable in this state so that is why you're people are leaving california. jedediah: harmeet, we can talk about this more. we'll have you back to do that
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thanks for being with us this morning. >> thank you. jedediah: we've been wishing you a happy mother's day all morning long. the left wants you to say something else. we'll tell you what they're saying. that's next. so then i said to him, you oughta customize your car insurance with liberty mutual, so you only pay for what you need. hot dog or... chicken? only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪
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that is golden too. you don't need to take us out to dinner. whip something us. bring us a tray in bed. here, darling, that is enough for me. lawrence: my mother taught me how to cook. she didn't want women to use it against me later in life. she taught me how to cook. don't let them use it against you, son. love you for that, mother. pete: wise words. email us as well, friends at foxnews.com. if you have the show in the background, bonus points. it is mother's day. thank you your mother. lawrence: tag us into it too. we'll try to get it on air. a big story. a cyberattack is forcing the largest fuel pipeline in the country to shut down. fears are growing that gas prices may soar the longer it stays closed. griff jenkins joins us live as authorities begin investigating the hack. griff? reporter: that's right, good morning, lawrence, jed and pete. there's a chance if they can't reopen this pipeline we could
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peel some pain at the pump and here's why. the colonial pipeline runs 5500 miles from texas to new york, delivering 100 million gallons a day, 45% of all the fuel on the east coast. gasoline, diesel, jet fuel, home heating oil. operators shut it down friday after a ransomware attack. the president was briefed. the white house releasing this statement saying that the federal government working actively to avoid disruption to supply and help the company restore pipeline operations as quickly as possible. now the fbi, dhs, the department of energy are all investigating and the government's cybersecurity and infrastructure agency is warning quote, this underscores the threat that ransomware supposes to organizations regardless of size or sector. we encourage every organization to take action to strengthen their cybersecurity posture to reduce their exposure to these types of threats.
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when could americans get hit in the pocketbooks? a petroleum analyst says the clock is ticking. >> every day without this pipeline returning to service is a day that those storage tanks that hold gasoline delivered from the pipeline are drawing down. reporter: who are these attackers what are they demanding? colonial has not said and not yet offered a timeline when the pipeline might reopen. lawrence, jed, pete. pete: griff, thank you very much. appreciate it. there are already other attackers on our oil and energy industry, the biden administration. they're going at traditional sources of energy. what will happen when that happens? we're already seeing it. prices go up. lawrence: that's right. it will hit us the consumer. i think that is the real issue. i want to know more information about the cyberattack? why are we not prepared for this? who is actually behind it. honestly even people that disagree with donald trump always said, when we had donald trump in office we felt safe, if we were attacked there will be a strong response.
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i'm interested to see jed, what the biden administration is going to do. jedediah: i'm interested as well, i hope it doesn't hit people so hard. people are struggling, coming out of the pandemic. so many people have lost jobs. struggling to put food on the table. the last thing everyone needs is increase in gas prices. pete: already happening. jedediah: when things like this happen, you suddenly say wow, this is the value of people who work in that industry who provide these services. it becomes front and center for all us in those moments. we spoke with john catsimatidis, chairman around ceo of united refining company on the financial impact of the cyberattack on "fox & friends." this is what he said. >> oil has gone in the last 120 days from approximately $50 a barrel to 55, 66. right now it may take it close to 70, over $70 a barrel. that means at the gas tank you are paying $2 a gallon. now you may be paying $3 a
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gallon, maybe more f it lasts two, three, four, five more days, then you will have interruptions in consumer availability for gasoline. that means a shortage. pete: we already killed the keystone xl pipeline. you get attacks -- lawrence: getting hit both ways. pete: absolutely. we'll take to you fairfax county virginia, where the parents on l board, some parents are because new york consultants arrived down in virginia with their fancy new curriculum, which is critical race theory curriculum. their way of introducing it to parents in the district was to ask them to fill out a survey that parents -- this is how they do it. we need parental involvement in the new curriculum we imposed on you. lawrence: we ordered the books. pete: as she pointed out we already sign ad five-year contract with a new york consulting firm. here is the survey you parents get to fill out. this survey landed in the in
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boxes in parents in fairfax county, and could land in your in-box eventually in your school district. agree or disagree, a curriculum teaching method focused on being antiracist, anti-biased would support student academic excellence and accelerated learning. that is one of many questions. the others guys, very ambiguous. do you want kids to succeed and reach their potential, agree or disagree. all a pathway to introduce a radical new theory. lawrence: we were having a debate about this during the commercial break. i believe it starts in the home. you have to teach kids history, so when they go in the classroom, they're prepared for this warfare that will happen because it is too late. it is everywhere, elementary school. i covered colleges for a while. it infiltrated when left the battle there. pete's, said you should take the kids out of the school. they will get it from the culture as well. where do you stand? jedediah: i think it starts at home. so many parents we teach our kid
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so much at home. now we send them off to school, whether a public school, private school, elementary school, a high school, a college, it is everywhere. they feel a lot they teach is undone. there is revisionist history. the challenge, not every parent can take their kids out. they don't know what to do. i can't afford to homeschool or afford these other options. under privileged families suffering at the most, looking at schools system, my kids are not learning anything. i feel hopeless, i don't know what to do. that is a huge problem. it's a little bit of both. pete: a little bit of both, i absolutely agree. if you can afford to reorient your life, you absolutely should f you can't, your kids are in the school, do what she did, one of our previous guests. watch the video of her going to the school board in fairfax county. watch. >> this survey, it is just a loaded survey. and who is it by? indeed new york leadership
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academy. and what has that survey done? they have asked us the question for things that -- >> thank you for your time. >> that you have now signed. >> thank you for your time. >> that will allow. >> thank you for your time. your time is up, ma'am. >> you all -- >> your time is up ma'am. >> your time has expired. >> yes. you always -- >> your time has expired. next speaker. >> continue to shut us down. because that's what you love do. >> please go to your seat. lawrence: this is the state saying parents you don't agree with you, you will shut your mic off. she says this is why she was cut off. watch. >> what the floor chair was doing at that moment was cutting me off as i was about to talk about this lovely contract that fairfax county public schools has signed with leadership academy. and it is a five-year, five-years contract. it goes to about four 1/2 years.
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and it has in it 21 items that are essentially a reeducation camp for everyone, from the principals to the parents. it's frightening. jedediah: reeducation, which makes the assumption that everyone needs to be reeducated. which also makes the assumption your parenting is wrong. what you're doing at home that is not working. we'll need to do it better here. now they're becoming parental, all issues of parental rights, brief sy in some cases. this is getting complicated. parents don't know what to do. pete: video looks like the united nations. fairfax county school board is shouting you down, sit down. you don't have the choice. lawrence: most parents don't have time to go through the contracts to see all this stuff. good for her taking it into her own hand, fighting for parents. pete: let peace get through another topic. it is happy mother's day but if you're a lefty it might be happy
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birthing peoples day. democrats, the new phrase they want to use, you're not a mother. lawrence: or mom. pete: done. you're a birthing person. here are a couple democrats talking about that. >> i am committed to doing the absolute most to protect black mothers, to protect black babies, to protect black birthing people and to save lives. >> thankfully black women leaders here in the halls of congress and across the country have developed policies to systematically shift the way we approach health care for birthing people of color. jedediah: birthing people? representative nancy mace weighed in on that on twitter. birth i people, you mean women or moms? the left is so woke they're stripping from women the one thing that only we can do, leave it to libs to botch highlighting an important issue. people in both parties can agree on, catering to fringes. i birthed a baby. i'm a mom.
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i'm proud of myself. i'm always astonished at my body. you know what? we're superheroes. we women are super heroes. i want property credit. pete: pete you should get credit, you when you were pregnant i tried giving birth. i did the best i could. this is what it looked like. >> actually going to conduct labor type simulation today, the kind of get you feeling a little bit of what the women feel when they're giving birth. pete: officially the worst idea i never had. no, i feel it in the back. oh, my gosh, turn that down. oh. oh, my gosh. make it stop. ow. i need an epidural. okay, that is good. oh, boy. i'm good. i'm good. you can turn it down now. make it stop, please. god bless all you women out there. all of you.
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jedediah: no joke. lawrence: i wasn't been the best boyfriend at one point in time. my girlfriend wanted to experience this to understand the pain. i got to say, thank god for women, god designed them to give birth because, whoo, i can do a lot of things. i don't think that for me. jedediah: we have higher pain tolerance. pete: for sure. jedediah: no drugs. no drugs. oh, yeah. go big, go home. pete: i would have taken drugs. i turned to the technician. this is at a 10, right? no. it is at a six. but i am officially a birthing person. jedediah: you are a birthing person. you did great. pete: no drugs. birthing person. jedediah: happy mother's day. pete: next time someone tells you that, you're insane. they are moms. wow. now we're going to try to turn to some headlines. starting with a -- fox news alert. a serious one.
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a manhunt underway three people including a young girl the age of 4 shot in times square in broad daylight. investigators say it began after a argument between a group of men. officers are seen carrying a little girl to a ambulance after being hit in the leg toy shopping with her parents. >> how many more kids need to be shot before we realize the bad policies have consequences? we have been taking guns off the street in new york city at an alarming rate over the last two years. it is time now that we have consequences for those. pete: the department released this video of a person of interest. communist china claims debris from its rocket ship has returned safely to earth just as they planned. state media, consider that source, says the debris landed in the ocean near the maldives after most of it burned up in the atmosphere. u.s. space command confirmed it reentered over the arabian peninsula but did not give a
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landing spot. they feared the ship could have landed anywhere or in america after it was caught in a uncontrolled orbit. nfl superstar ron gronkowski shows he is big man with a big heart, donating $1.2 million to renovate a boston playground. >> perfect location because it is where the duck boats come in and out of the charles river. you know i love duck boats. who knows, maybe we might have a duck boat in the playground too. i don't see why not. pete: that is happy gilmore size check. gronkowski says despite leaving the patriots he still has a special connection to new england and those people. hard not to love ron gronkowski. lawrence: tiktok crackdown, republicans sound the alarm as drug cartels use the site to organize smuggling.
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does it worry me? absolutely. sensodyne sensitivity and gum gives us a dual action effect that really takes care of both our teeth sensitivity as well as our gum issues. there's no question it's something that i would recommend. ♪. jedediah: "fox nation"'s latest docuseries the valley of sin, examines the mid '90s witch-hunt that pitted residents against each other in a small town in washington. >> surprises even me how traumatizing it is to have a flashback experience. >> two years, 43 people were charged with 29,726 couldn't of child sex abuse. >> if it is true, one of worst section crimes i heard of. >> if i could tell me 1-year-old
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self one thing it, would be, run. jedediah: our next guest says she was pressured at age four to make accusations against her parents who were eventually acquitted of all charges against them. rebecca osborn, rebecca, thank you so much for being with us this morning. for those who don't know share a little bit your story? at 4 years old you were telling people the truth, you knew the difference between a truth and a lie yet what happened? >> we were taken away from our parents and families and we went, underwent different moments of brain watching and so we were coerced, told what to say. it wasn't we were allowed to tell the truth. we were only allowed to tell what they had dictated for to us say. jedediah: do you remember what that brainwashing looked like? were you sitting in rooms where people were telling you to repeat certain things? what did that look like? >> it actually had a lot of
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different looks to it. a lot of it included the chief of police and head detective at time, bob perez. a lot includes cps workers. and a lot included foster moms and dads at the time. they put us in particular homes they knew these people would continue the brainwashing while we were in therapy care. so we would go through segments where they would, we spent 20 minutes, an hour going over what i had to say, painting this ugly grew some picture of my parents and everything else at their church. if you didn't say what they wanted you to say you were ignored, you were thrown outside, locked in a room, different things like that. all of us kids experienced something different depending on our ages. if you did not say what they wanted you to say you definitely received some punishment. jedediah: this is so horrible. i'm so sorry you had this experience. we have sound of reporters discussing these child abuse allegations. take a listen. we'll get your reaction.
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>> the crime, the worst imaginable. allegations of groups of adults meeting regularly from the left and right, over dozens of children. >> these people are guilty. jedediah: can you tell as you little bit about the impact of this on your family and the community? >> it is absolutely divided our community in the wneatchee had a ton of adverse effects for my parents, not just then, but now still today. finding work was always hard for them during all of this and afterwards because of the stigma attached to their name. so having to kind of make ends meet. we lost everything when all this hit. yes, we held on tight to our faith. we kept fighting a good fight but we lost a lot in the process. jedediah: rebecca, you said that justice has not been served on this issue. we're hopeful that it will be, healing can come as a result of this.
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thanks for sharing what can only be a very difficult story to share with us this morning. we greatly appreciate it. catch the unbelievable true story, "the valley of sin". on "fox nation," with a new epseed each day this week. chinese rocket lands out of control. how does something like this happen? more "fox & friends" coming up. . that's how you do it right. usaa insurance is made just the way martin's family needs it with hassle-free claims, he got paid before his neighbor even got started. because doing right by our members, that's what's right. usaa. what you're made of, we're made for. ♪ usaa ♪
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debra, dad jim, sister ashley, here in new york city. very cool. here is line producer alex with her god martie around aunt, marianne and mom susan on vacation in florida. love it. this is associate producer joseph with his mom tina, also on vacation in florida. we know where our staff vacations. at the very least. in the right spots. happy mother's day. overnight a large out of control chinese rocket reportedly landing somewhere on earth according to chinese state media. the 20-ton rocket which flew in an uncontrolled orbit at 18,000 miles per hour after taking off last week landed in think they in the indian ocean. jedediah: moments ago nasa issued a statement it is clear that china is failing to meet responsible standards regarding their space debris. critical that china and space faring nations act responsibly and transparently in space to insure the safety, stability,
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long-term security of outer space activities. lawrence: here is former nasa astronaut clayton anderson. clayton, i have to ask you straight up, do we trust them, did they land in the area around do we have the technology to verify what they said? >> that is a good question. i don't know if we should trust them but i have always been an advocate of the united states trying to partner in some way with china's space program. if you do that sort of thing, just like we've proven on the international space station over the last 20 years, if you partner in space, the transparency is better and we won't be fighting each other i don't think on the ground. so we'll just have to see. i don't think they did it on purpose. maybe they did. i don't have enough data personally to know that but, we do know how to preclude this from happening at least we do in
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america. pete: clayton, i take your point. russians, soviets, there were contentious times in space that were happening down on earth, but is this indicative? are the chinese being reckless? what do we know about their space program, pushing boundaries? they are aggressive here on earth, why wouldn't they do the same in space? >> i think they are doing the same in space. they launched this rocket to carry the next part of their space station up. they have plans to add to the space station over time and stay up there for a while. they are very aggressive. the advantage they have they're learning from the united states and the russian space programs. so they have a leg up, right? we, nasa and russia started it all from scratch back in the '60s but the chinese are able to piggyback -- pete: they always do. >> yeah, well.
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you know, that is the way they operate. jedediah: clayton, you said -- >> partnership might be a smart thing. jedediah: you said here in the united states we know how to prevent something like that from happening. without getting too technical what does that look like? is it something they also should have done then? how easy or difficult is it to put something in place to prevent something like this from happening? >> well the easiest way to say it is, you have to in order to stay in space, you have to reach a stable orbit. that is about 80 miles above the earth. the idea, the way nasa does it, the pieces like the old external tank from the space shuttle, we never let it achieve a stable orbit. so we would dumb it would not make it to orbit but come back into the ocean, the south pacific, a safe place, before, one revolution was complete. so, it can be done.
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it is a standard practice per my understanding. so i'm not sure what happened or why they did it that way that they did but their piece made it to a stable orbit which made it a lot more uncertain. jedediah: interesting. pete: china flaunting the rules. big surprise. clayton anderson, thank you so much for what you've done in nasa, an illuminating it us for us this morning. >> my pleasure. pete: straight ahead house republicans sound the alarm as cartels use tiktok to organize smuggling, another gift from china. congressman miller meeks an congressman stuebe are demanding action. they join us live next. ♪ before discovering nexium 24hr to treat her frequent heartburn, marie could only imagine enjoying freshly squeezed orange juice. now no fruit is forbidden. nexium 24hr stops acid before it starts
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alarm on the threat of cars tells on the border even using tiktok to fuel their criminal activity n a letter to the tiktok ceo 30 house republicans claim it appears via your platform cartel members are openly glorifying and normalizing illegal behavior and violence to recruit new members, mostly recent american teenagers. the company as efforts, whether they're cracking down at all. two of the members who signed that letter, gop iowa democratic republic of congo woman mayor ridge net miller leaks and and kong from florida, greg stuebe. do you have any indication they will take this seriously. >> happy mother's day out there. thank you for having me on. we're hopeful they will respond. this is a serious issue and serious matter, when we were at the border in mcallen, texas
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ranking member of homeland security, we learned from cpb, cartels were using tiktok to advertise for drivers to smuggle people into the u.s. so we know that the cartels are making tremendous amounts of money at the border bringing people across, human smuggling. we hope tiktok will respond. we have had issues with tiktok and ties to the chinese communist party. pete: absolutely. that is what i was going to ask you, congressman stuebe. former president trump said we're ready to ban tiktok because it is chinese owned. what do we know about the status of tiktok? would they have an incentive to actually interdict here? >> i signed on to letters during the trump administration, i was agreeing with the president, at that would ban tiktok in the united states because of their ties to the chinese communist party. with the biden administration you're not hearing anything about that. anything to do with china, we're not going to talk about that,
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kind of disappears. doesn't mean that still is not going on. i would hope that the ceo would respond to 30 members of congress. unfortunately this may have to wait. biden administration wants open borders. actually allowing these companies, that are allowing this to happen to continue not do anything about it. our federal government could shut this stuff down. the biden administration is not doing it. pete: no they're not. on woman, we remember parler. it was taken down after january 6th. later on the evidence it was other platforms that were primarily -- why wouldn't there be, why wouldn't the federal government take seriously the idea that a major platform in our country is facilitating sheer illegality? >> well, exactly and this against the provisions in tiktok. this is against what they say is necessary to be a member of their platform. it should be taken down. we're asking it be taken down. we're asking they look into this
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seriously. again, as representative steube said, given tiktok's ties with the chinese communist party this is a really serious matter and it does put us at risk. pete: do you have any evidence, representative steube, that this administration will take any of its responsibility at the southern bored seriously? that they're really going to wrap their arms around this? what evidence is there that they have would? >> there is no evidence that they're taking the crisis at the border seriously and in fact it is kind of the opposite. it is almost as if they're allowing this to happen. oh, don't come to the border but say we'll give amnesty to illegals in our country which will completely incentivise people to come here. they're prohibiting i.c.e. and cpb from doing their jobs, arresting people, doing deportations. they're actively trying to aid and abet coming across the border. handcuffing our own law enforcement, allowing them to do
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their job sending them to do back. pete: mentioned tiktok to the ties to chinese communist party. and we're hoping to send letters to remove content of cartels. indicative where we are. we're glad you're doing it. congresswoman miller-meeks and congressman stuebe, thanks for being with us. jed, you have headlines. jedediah: a beachside balcony collapses in malibu, california, leaving at least nine people hurt, some suffering serious injuries. the home was being rented out for a large birthday party when the balcony fell 15 feet on to rocks below. officials say as many as 15 people were on the balcony at the time. the cause of the collapse is under investigation. tawny kitaen known for her role in bummer of music videos has died. she was in many videos with white snake, including the video for, here i go again ♪.
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she died unexpectedly at her home friday. the cause of death has not been released. she is survived by her two daughters. kitaen was 59 years old. if you're flush with cash, the minnesota home may be for you. 3,000 square foot plumber pump house is hitting the market following an extensive renovation it was renovated in 1986 to pump water to another estate. it has 3500 feet of caves. can be yours for $355,000. that is so cool. that is sew cool. pete: looks like a bunker to me. what a life-saving materials down there? ammo? 550,000? jedediah: to me it looks like a home amusement park. pete: what would you do? jedediah: i don't know. think about halloween, haunted houses it is amazing. pete: letting a bunch of other
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people in the house. lawrence: can't let them in the bunker. anyway what do you think, rick? rick: minnesota, bunker, pete, like a place to store your ammo? is there anything more than you could want. pete: i know. i know. at that price, bargain. let's do it. go in half with you. rick: not new jersey prices for sure. here you go, guys. severe weather later on today, unfortunately, this is the time of year we start to get a pretty large area, we'll be watching definitely for large hail and some winds. likely even significant tornadoes, you see this yellow here. a lot of areas across the lower mississippi valley, towards back towards parts of east texas. we're watching for that. right now things not looking that bad. a lot of the east coast is looking pretty good to start your day. rain in parts of northeast later today. florida is starting to get showers later in the afternoon when we'll see that. here is the storm system part of
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this system that will cause the severe weather, far off towards the north. we'll see snow across parts of north dakota. that will drive severe weather that snow is the reason why pete doesn't want to move back to minnesota, getting that across parts of the far north. here are the temps. 90 degrees in orlando. 53 for a high in chicago. colder air to the north. we'll be in the pattern much of the coming week. pete: you're right about that rick. lawrence: rick giving us the scoop. thanks, brother. okay, if looking for some last minute mother's day flowers you might be in trouble with a flower shortage. our next guest says a bouquet of roses could cost you double. ♪.
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♪. jedediah: happy mother's day to all of the mothers out there. this is producer jason with his mom marla, enjoying prepandemic new york city. associate producer kate with her mom liz in washington, d.c. this is supervising writer griffin with his mom lisa celebrating his emmy win. yea. here is the associate producer anthony and his mom laura. beautiful, beautiful, "fox & friends" families. happy mother's day to everyone out there watching as well. lawrence: we love you guys. now this, another ripple effect from covid-19 pandemic. america is now facing shortages in flowers and lumber. bring in economist ben kaplan to explain. so, ben, when we think about this, we never think flowers. tell us how this is happening. >> sure. first of all, hi, lawrence. happy mother's day to all the mothers out there. you're doing amazing job with your mom. what is different about the current shortage, right now
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typical bouquet of flowers cost you 15 to $30, it is running 30 to $60. in the last week alone prices increased 40 to 50%. actually a great example of what is happening in the pandemic right now because the issue is that usually our economy, looks like this. what adam smith would call an invisible hand. when we shut doesn't economy, shut down real fast but hard to open it up, harder to open it than it was to close it. what is happening, some growers had to forecast demand. they didn't have any precedent. what did they do? they looked at last year's consumer demand. last year, lawrence, you had canceled weddings, canceled birthday parties, canceled conferences -- lawrence: people want to work. >> so there was that issue that people, they didn't want to do that. then also you might be surprised to know that 70% of the flowers
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that are bought in the u.s. are actually globally sourced. by far columbia and ecuador. so the issue is that you might not think that what happens in columbia or ecuador affects your ability to buy flowers but it does. they had unseasonably cold weather, workers went on strike and all the flowers were abandoned. you have the demand side, the supply side, perfect storm to make you're a last minute shopper. lawrence: what about lumber though? we have a lot of bum letter, right? >> absolutely. lumber prices have tripled. shortages of steel. lawrence: put this on screen. >> how this actually impacts not only mother's day, but actually father as day. because father's day is coming up. the most popular kinds of gifts are personal care, home appliances tools. so these commodity prices actually could create a price
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increase for father's day coming up in june a shortage there. do your father's day shopping a little bit earlier. you can get a better price. what we'll see from an economic point of view, i expect the next three years, there will be little blips, little shifts in demand. the reason it is three years, because no one can forecast what is coming. so the first year, is this data a fluke? the second year is the data coincidence. by the third year it's a trend. we'll see the little anomalies in pricing, shortages, the next three years. lawrence: ben we have to come out of this, get back to work, those americans that really are, i think it will be better for us in the future. our kids are counting on us. thanks for coming on the program. >> thank you to all the moms out there. get this economy going again. thank you. lawrence: we appreciate it, brother. now this, president biden leaves out the word god from his day of prayer proclamation. dr. alveda king reacts to the glaring omission next.
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♪. lawrence: welcome back. one nation under who? jedediah: if you watched joe biden's proclamation for the national day of prayer you may not be sure. biden recognizing the day without using the word god. interesting. pete: here to react dr. martin luther king, jr.'s niece and fox news contributor, dr. alveda king. one of our favorites. happy mother's day. great to have you here. we'll get to that.
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your reaction of president biden not using the word god on the national day of prayer. >> my not mow in america is one nation under god. on our money, is in god we trust. how do you as president of the united states, do you forget god? is it possible president biden thinks you had can run america without god. many here in america believe in god. he intentionally left out god or he forgot god but either one is a very serious situation to have a president, you know, operate from that position. lawrence: hey, dr. king, do you think this is a trend? you have the commander-in-chief not mentioning god but seems like the nation is turning away from our religious values? >> the whole nation is not
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turning away from the religious values. i on purpose as i select a mother's day card get a scripture on my card. many people are still praying. i visited the billy graham library and samaritan's purse, we were packing boxes to people all over the world who needed not only food but god, a toys and gifts for the children but god. america has not forgotten god. so we have not. the media, not you included of course because we're talking about god right now, but wants to erase god. when you erase god, it is not even logical to think that you can do good things without the help of god. jedediah: dr. king, we want to wish you a happy mother's day today. you have something so special for our viewers. alveda king's house, special on "fox nation" of mother's day. we have a clip. >> thank you.
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>> if i have anything we talked about i learn from my mother, i learned to make these kind of biscuits from mama and clean up the kitchen as i go. i would say her love for jesus. she would say, baby, you have to learn to heal on your feet because we don't have time to feel sorry for ourselves. jedediah: we all want to jump through the tv screen and get some of that cooking, alveda. it looks delicious. >> that is my mother at her sweet 16 party. i don't know but she is still gorgeous today. she is just beautiful. >> amazing. our viewers are checking it out, looking forward to it. we appreciate you being here on this special day, sharing that with us. people sign up for "fox nation" to see this special, with alveda king, get exclusive access to other original content, events, your favorite personalities on any device. alveda king, thanks for being with us this morning. >> thank you.
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pete: she is wonderful. elon musk making his debut hosting "saturday night live," how did he do despite the outrage leading up to it? former cast mate joe piscopo next hour. ♪ taking metamucil everyday can help. metamucil psyllium fiber, gels to trap and remove the waste that weighs you down. it also helps lower cholesterol and slows sugar absorption to promote healthy blood sugar levels. so you can feel lighter and more energetic metamucil. support your daily digestive health. and try metamucil fiber thins. a great tasting and easy way to start your day.
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pete: we're going to get lawrence to log in, and you're going to check the inbox -- lawrence lawrence yep, we're going to post it, and we just want to celebrate mothers. without our moms, we don't have life, so happy mother's day to you, jed with. jedediah: thank you very much. pete: no doubt, as you get older you appreciate what your mother did for you -- lawrence: i've always appreciated my mom. [laughter] i love her to death. anyway, we start with a new scandal surrounding the biden administration. pete: republicans are calling into question the president's ethics after he reportedly waived rules for some staffers. jedediah: griff jenkins joins us live from washington as we learn some white house staffers are former union bosses. >> reporter: that's right the, jed, quite a few. i think this may be part of why critics call washington a swamp. the white house is awaiting
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ethics rules, giving unions a very powerful voice in white house policy making. last week president biden tapped celeste drake to lead the made in america office, waiving ricks barring her from communicating with her former employers who are the afl-cio and the directors guild of america. back in march a senior official in the office of personnel management was allowed to facilitate the communication between the federal government and the american federation of government employeeses which represents700,000 federal workers for whom she was formerly a top lobbyist. this after we learned the power of the more than federation of teachers communicating with the cdc on school reopeningsings after giving some 1.6 million in donations to democrats and the administration drawing criticism from the nrsc spokeswoman. quote: every single democrat
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has -- union-approved talking points to keep cools closed, a radical job-killing agenda through congress. but at the white house, they are defending things. >> the cdc is actually longstanding best practice for the cdc to engage with organizations and groups that are going to be impacted by guy especially dance and recommendations issued by the agency. >> reporter: now, the white house has not commented on it. gop concerns of coziness, but they do note that president biden's proud to have labor voices across his administration. pete: griff, thank you very much. we appreciate that last sentence. it's not like they're hiding it. he campaigns on saying let's bring the unions back in. he would be a union presidency. his wife is a union teacher. and you look at the amount of money, $20 million in 2020 alone given to the democrat party by unions, no wonder they're getting labor to talk to the
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unions, and no wonder they're writing the cdc guidance. lawrence: we have all the receipts now, pete and jed. the parents are fighting back now, we see it across the country -- pete: trying. lawrence: the kids are fighting back when president biden went to interview them and they told him how bad this is. the washington press press corps going to ask questions? if donald trump did an ounce of this, there would be so much pushback. jason riley says this pandemic is showing us how much power the teachers union really has. >> the problem is that it is business as usual. [laughter] the problem is that the biden administration if is taking dictation from the teachers unions as democrats have long done, paul. and that is the problem here. they're not following the science, they're following orders from labor leaders that give a lot of money to democratic politicians and
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causes. >> teachers unions' behavior during this pandemic, their resistance to go back to work and the harm we know it has caused children shows that their interests are not aligned with those of the children and families. jedediah: you know, i i think people expected the unions hold all the power and clout in the biden administration. i don't think they expected the aft to be writing, essentially, the cdc guidelines. i don't think they expected to feel like they were alone in the process of getting their kids back to school and that politicians would be more in line with teachers unions than families. i think they thought the biden administration was going to prioritize them and their families. i think there's a lot of disappointment that's being felt by people. and you referenced earlier, lawrence, it's making people look at education with new eyes. i think you're going to be able to talk about things like school choice, charter schools and alternate forms of educating students in a way that you
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haven't herald people perk up about that before because their eyes are wide open now. pete: it just doesn't give me much to optimism even for the next school year. the teachers unions, what is their going to be -- what are they going to be done all summer? plotting? lawrence: they keep moving the bar. they got it all, they change. pete: it's extortion. lawrence: and our kids are the hostages. pete: i like it. [laughter] jedediah: another topic we're talking about is, obviously, the police. today is marking national police week, and unfortunately we see crime surging throughout the nation in many cities throughout the country. we see calls growing to defund the police like in new york city, the one that we're in now. detroit police chief james craig is out this front and center, and he is calling for building better community relations with
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the police. east also scheduled to -- he's also scheduled to resign this week to launch a possible governor run. lawrence lancer i'm going to fly out tomorrow morning and talk about a what's worked, what hasn't worked, and the rumor is he's going to challenge the governor there. this guy is a no-nonsense guy. he literally told all these groups that are coming in, don't come to my town. we're not going to play that in detroit. but he's a guy that also has the support and respect of the community. pete: it's a huge part of it. and here's a portion, here is james craig, the detroit police chief, or talking about it. >> we can't wait for something bad to happen and try to build relationships in the community. you just can't do it. when i got here eight years ago, it was important that we institutionalize in the fabric of our department that we partner with the community. and not just the people who live
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here and not just detroit residents, metro, i'm talking about our community activists. so what we saw last year, as you know, judge jeanine, we saw people, outside agitators who were promoting violence. and, unfortunately, in those communities police departments didn't have a real good relationship. it saddens me to watch my own home of los angeles burn. pete: it's all you want, is leadership. you want somebody to thwart the mob, the madness and say this is how we're going to do it in this town. there's so many police chiefs across the country beholden to mayors who are saying defund or decriminalize or release everybody and no bail, we're not going to work with i.c.e. to honor detainers, all of which means the citizens in those communities are under siege. lawrence: when you look at these liberal governors -- whitmer, cuomo, newsom -- what he said was key. he said you cannot wait for
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something bad to happen to build a relationship. you've got to get out in front of it before anything happens. part of the reason why i'm interested in interviewing him is because he has been out in the communities talking with people, trying to foster that great relationship with them. and now he's saying, hopefully, i'm going to ask him about it, i may want to run for governor now. jed yeah. you always talk about how these conversations need to happen at the dinner table, right in the home. and i think that's so important. and people are starting to realize individuals like him who really want to get out in the community and fix things are far more important than these politicians who don't really doing anything to help the community. if anything, they stand in the way of progress between police and community, in the way of so many things. it's an interesting shift shah i think people are shifting away from political figures and to figures in the community that have a real investment in making the community better. lawrence: jed, that's so important because now is a political incentive. how many interviews have i done across the country saying we
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don't see these leaders. they show up to all the dinners during election time. there is a real -- if you want these communities, if you want to show them liberty, they're just waiting. pete: how great would it be if in the midst of all this defund nonsense, what actually happens is the state of michigan actually elects a police chief to get things back under control. lawrence: hopefully, they don't treat him like carmen best who they got out of seattle, take the pay away. pete: if you hang a right over to rockefeller center, that's where "saturday night live" does their show. take a right at that fancy sign and you're there. [laughter] there was some controversy around this episode because some of the cast members were tweeting, oh, we don't want to be on with this billionaire, we don't like rich people each though we like our paychecks. how did it go? well, here's elon musk from last
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night. >> look, i know i sometimes say or post strange things, but that's just how my brain works. to anyone i offended, i just want to say i reinvented electric cars and send people to mars in a rocket ship, did you think it was going to be a normal dude? one time i smoked weed on joe rogan's podcast. now all i hear is loan musk smokes weed. it happened once. >> i'm excite for my mother's day gift. i just hope it's not dogecoin. >> it is. [laughter] jedediah: he was really funny, and i think that was surprising. he's a really interesting figure, controversial in some ways, but he was the highlight of the night, and i think that goes to hoe you sometimes these guests are a little surprisiing but it's a pleasant surprise. lawrence: doesn't even look like
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he was that political. jedediah: no. lawrence: just a normal guy. pete: absolutely. every generation you have those dynamic figures you can't put into a box. and elon musk is one of them. i mean, he also mentioned he's the first person with as pirger's to ever -- asperger's to host "saturday night live." we're going to have joe piscopo, former cast member, friend of the show, on later on to get his take. he watched the whole thing. jedediah: we hall see. stick with us. we're going to turn to some headlines now beginning with this fox news alert. a manhunt is underway after three people including a young girl are shot in times square. investigators say it began after an argument between a group of men. officers were seen carrying the little girl to the ambulance after she was hit in the leg toy shopping with her parents.
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>> how many kids need to be shot before we realize their policies have consequences? if we -- we have been taking gus off the streets of new york city at an alarming rate over the last two years. jedediah: and china says rocket debris landed in the ocean near the maldives. a former astronaut joined us earlier and says the u.s. should partner with china so this does not happen again. >> if you partner in space, the transparency is better. and we won't be fighting each other, i don't think, on the ground. we do know how to preclude this from happening, at least we do in america. jedediah: experts fear the ship could have landed in america after it was caught in an uncontrolled orbit. and an alarming scene at the ufc weigh-in. ryan benoit having to be
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escorted to the by -- stage by his trainer. he came in 73 pounds overweight -- 3 pounds overweight. he said he did not think cutting down to 126 pounds would be a problem. those are your headlines. lawrence: gotta make your weight if you want to compete. pete: what wrestlers do to cut weight -- lawrence: it's not the healthiest thing. i've been there. jeff swred you wrestled? lawrence: i was a 70-pound champion -- [laughter] coming up, a stink key assignment. while migrants overrun our southern border, the texas national guard is on trash duty. a texas sheriff reacts next to the actual crisis and the misguided resources on the ground. that's next.
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♪♪ jedediah: as the migrant crisis mounts at the southern border, so have the piles of trash left behind by border crossers. instead of handling the influx, border agents and the texas national guard are now a assigned to clean up the mess. the sheriff of jackson county, texas, joins me now. sheriff, thank you for being with us this morning. is so tell me -- >> good morning, thank you. jedediah: -- in particular in your community with the unaccompanied minors expect impact on your community. >> well, how embarrassing, you know, to highlight the biden policies, the current administration, on our national guard. our texas national guard picking up garbage which, you know, i'm
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still wondering why the conservation groups are not outraged over the damage to the ecosystem there in the rio grande valley. you know, i don't -- it's incomprehensible that a national security border, our board with a foreign -- border with a foreign country is in the shape that it is in now. it's a complete embarrassment. and it's so preventable, you know? s this is so preventable. maybe if we could get the president or the vice president down there, they maybe could see for themselves and would have to admit what they caused down there. what they've caused here in texas which is, which is -- i could go on for some time now. whatever you want me to talk about. whether it's car crash, whether it's increased deaths on the border, exploitation of women, environmental concerns, obviously, that we started talking about here today. i mean, where do you want to
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start, where do you want to finish with the policies that have caused this? jedediah: you're talking about, as you're saying all these things, i'm sitting here and saying with all of these serious issues down at the border, how did the national guard wind up being designated as those cleaning up trash? is there -- i don't understand who gave that order, who decided that that's what they should be doing right now given what's going on. what do you think happened here? >> well, if you've with ever been, if you've ever seen a stash house or a location here in texas where migrants come into the border or stash along travel routes into the major cities here, which i'm close to houston here, and this is a major travel route, human trafficking area in the united states. a tremendous hub for human trafficking and narcotics here. so we find these places littered completely with trash, and on the border it's an incredible amount of ton only after
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clothing -- tonnage, water, backpacks, just the entire scene is just littered with things. there are meningty of pictures -- plenty of pictures around. the washington examiner has posted several from value verde county, obviously, in mcallen where ten of thousands have come across here since january 20th. but it's, you know, how do you get to this point, and, you know, and it's -- do we talk about the car crashes? do we talk about the level of fear here in texas and across the united states as an open border policy expands here in do we talk about the cartel expansion? the strength and the power that they now exhibit here in the united states? all these things seem to be completely ignored. jedediah: sheriff, unfortunately, i have to cut you off. we're out of time. we're going to have you back to talk more about this issue as it
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involves. we appreciate your thoughts today. >> thank you very much. jedediah: a chinese dossier says beijing's been preparing for world war iii using bioweapons like coronavirus. we're getting to the truth just uncovered with by the state department. that's next. [sfx: bikes passing] [sfx: fire truck siren] onstar, we see them. okay. mother and child in vehicle. mother is unable to exit the vehicle. injuries are unknown. thank you, onstar. ♪ my son, is he okay? your son's fine. thank you. there was something in the road... it's okay. you're safe now. >> tech: every customer has their own safelite story. it's okay. this couple was on a camping trip... ...when their windshield got a chip. they drove to safelite for a same-day repair. and with their insurance, it was no cost to them. >> woman: really? >> tech: that's service you can trust.
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♪♪ jedediah: we want to wish a happy mother's day to all moms across the country including our own on "fox & friends" moms. this is caitlin with mom kathy the, brother brian and dad tom at a family wedding. this is todd with his wife rochelle and their kids jackson and carter and production assistant bailey at her sister montana's wedding with their mom tammy. this is producer michael with
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his mom and dad. beautiful "fox & friends" families. we're is lucky to have them part of our larger families. happy mother's day at home as well. pete: a document revealing chinese scientists have been preparing for world war iii fought with bioweapons including the coronavirus. here to react, gordon chang. thanks for being here this morning. when you see this revelation that chinese leaders have been planning for a potential coronavirus-type weapon in the future, what does that tell you about how we got here in the covid moment in. >> well, it suggests that covid-19, sars-cov-2, the pathogen, really is the product of a biological weapons program in all probability. there have been so many revelations, pier, about in that this is just one more piece of evidence that clearly says china has a bioweapons program in
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contravention of its obligations under the biological weapons convex. pete: so they have a bioweapons program, which they've admitted through this document, effectively, a dossier that we now have she to. and -- access to. and we also know that they're responsible with the start of what we've been dealing with for the last year. what recourse do we have to hold them accountable? any leadership out there willing to do it? >> no, i don't see the biden administration doing that. matter of fact, the biden biden administration has actually helped china with regard to its biological weapons program in the sense that they're now pouring money into the world health organization which is dominated by china. we know that the number of developments recently, especially china talking about a new type of biological warfare of, quote, specific ethnic, genetic attacks, that comes from the national defense university of china, a 2017 publication, if that means, pete, that the next pathogen from china could be a
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civilization killer because it could leave china immune and sicken everybody else in the world leaving china the only viable society on the planet. pete: do you have any doubt that a society -- a leadership, the chinese communist party that's willing to plan for world war iii, plan for bioweapons would eventually, if they had the opportunity or necessity, would launch that? if. >> there's no doubt about it, because whatever the origin of this pathogen, we do know one thing for sure, this is 100%, that chinese leader xi jinping took decisions in to 2019 and 2020 that inevitably led to the spread of the disease beyond china's borders. in other words, the spread of this past general beyond china was a deliberate act, and that means there's 3.2 million people who have been killed which makes this mass murder. pete: absolutely. something mao tse-tung knew a lot about. let me get your take on this rocket also that has tumbled,
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hankfully -- it appears if we believe chinese tate media -- into the ocean. what does it tell you about their ambition? >> well, certainly they are ambitious. beyond the ambition though, they believe that the moon and mars should be a part of the people's republic of china. remember, you know, they talk about this as like the south china sea, and the mars rover they say is named after the god of fire? well, yeah, the god of fire is also in chinese mythology a god of war, and get this, a god of a south china sea which they believe is national soil, sovereign chinese area. so, clearly, this is an attempt to not only extend its rule over the world, this is an attempt to take the solar system and make it part of china. pete: this is one of the scariest segments i've done on "fox & friends" in a very long time. if people don't wake up to who the communist chinese are, we
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may be singing a new anthem someday. that's not hyperbole. >> china's space program is run by its military which means we'd be transferring technology to the chinese military so they could make the moon theirs. this is really wrong. i mean, i don't see how partnering with china helps us at all. as a matter of fact, it furthers china's advances. pete: well, exactly. all they're going to do is steal it and use it for their own purposes. gordon chang, we appreciate it. >> thanks, pete. pete: after weeks of controversy, elon musk makes his highly anticipated snl debut. >> did you think i was going to be a chill, normal dude? [laughter] pete: how did he do? our friend joe piscopo reacts next. ♪
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rocket ship. [cheers and applause] did you think i was also going to be a chill, normal dude? [laughter] jedediah: after weeks of controversy, elon musk making his highly anticipated snl debut. how did he measure up? pete: let's ask someone who would know, fme snl cast member piscopo. good morning, we always love having you. how are you? >> good morning. so great to see you. pete: likewise, brother. i'm sure you watched. what's your take? >> he crushed it. he crushed it. best monologue i've seen ever. ever. and one of the best monologues i saw was, like, don rickles was hysterical, you know? with elon musk last night on "saturday night live," he was so organic and he started joking about himself. i'm about mars and electric cars, you know, how could i possibly be normal? and then he kept saying -- and i mean that.
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that after he said something, and i mean that. it was organic. best part of the show, pete, i agree with you, best part of the show was elon musk'sing monologue on "saturday night live." i was excited to see that. lawrence: i think we have another clip, let's get your reaction. >> what is dogecoin? >> well, it actually started as a joke based on an internet meme, but now it's taken over in a very real way. for instance, he's a dollar, right? -- here's a dollar, right? it's real. so what is dogecoin? [laugher] >> about as real as that dollar. >> i get that, but what is it, man? >> i keep telling you it's a cryptocurrency you can trade for conventional money. >> oh. so it's a hustle. >> yeah, it's a hustle. [laughter] lawrence: it's so good that he doesn't take himself seriously. >> it was great to see michael che get away from politics and
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just be funny. that was hysterical. you know, everybody knows, i guess, what dogecoin is at fox business. i'm trying to figure out what it is. michael che was very funny, and elon musk, he did this sketch about mars with pete davidson, you know, playing a character that was kind of out of it. it was hysterical, but elon musk was like a regular actor. he melded in with the cast wonderfully. it was really wild to see that, and everybody was complaining about it. everybody's got to relax. elon musk can certainly go on -- jedediah: we want to ask you a little bit about your businesses because we've been talking about the impact of these endless unemployment benefits and what that has done in terms of employers and employees. what's it like for you? you own these gyms, what is your experience at this stage of the pandemic? >> it's very tough, jedediah.
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i called my partner stacy is, who's eden such a -- done such a good job. jersey's all right, people have shown up. pennsylvania, not so much. can't find anybody because everybody's getting pa paid, i guess, by the government, they don't want to show up. around the house too. i had somebody that took care of the house, i called the company, i said, where's the guy? i don't know, we can't find 'em. in new jersey they've legalized weed, and they're giving away free money. you tell me what's going to happen. nobody wants to show up. pete: we hear the same thing across the country. at some point you've got to unwind these things that were supposed to be temporary based on something we made people shut down for which, thankfully, we're starting to rebound. joe discocopoe -- jedediah: thanks, joe. pete: great guy. >> i love you guys, thanks very
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much. pete: all right. additional headlines as well. mourners celebrate fallen police officer christopher farrar. >> this is no doubt in any of our minds that it mattered that you were here and while you were here you made an incredible difference. >> we know where chris is. i grieve for him a little bit remember him with a smile. pete: the 18-year veteran was killed after being hit by a suspect driving a stolen car. he was 50 years old. "the washington post" is once again pressuring justice stephen breyer to retire. the article in the perspectives section is entitled justice breyer should learn from justice ginsburg's mistake and retire now. it goes on to say it would give president biden the best opportunity to choose a successor who shares his value. it does acknowledge that a biden
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a appointee would not flip the court but instead, quote, maintain the status quo. get this one, ever wonder where lost socks go? well, in addition to mother's day, it is national lost sock memorial day. national calendar.com says the day is meant to, quote, say good-bye to all the single socks, the ones whose mates have been lost totten known. i actually -- to the unknown. i actually brought one, from my laundry room, they're clean, but how does this happen? this is one orange sock, this is two orange socks, this is a third orange sock -- [laughter] and a fourth orange sock and none of them match, okay? and that's just the beginning. how about a batman sock? i've got a superman sock. i don't know where they the come -- i've got a blue athletic sock, a couple white socks, i don't know how these got in
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here, two flip-flops. [laughter] one different. jedediah: oh, that's so cute. lawrence: it is a real problem. you always have hope that the other one is going to reappear. pete: always. jedediah: and you know what? you have a little kids' socks, the tiny socks are the worst. you just can't find 'em -- pete: whose sock is this in this is a little running sock. none of my kids run, i don't know. this appears to be some sort of -- jedediah: you have some very colorful socks, i will give you that. pete: i did find one pair in here. there's a pair. babe, i found one. [laughter] national memorialize -- jedediah: you know what you could do? make it a trend and wear two doesn't socks. sometimes it looks kind of cute. rick, do you also have a bag of mismatched socks you'd like to share with us todaysome. rick: no, i don't. what i have is i always buy just the exact same socks, so there's
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nebraska such a thing -- jedediah: so smart and so simple. pete: you buy one of the other -- lawrence: of the same sock. rick: like a pack of 12 -- [laughter] you get, like, the black socks or whatever color you want, and when you have you have a loose one, you know you're soon going to have another loose one, and then you're going to have a pair again. jedediah: the three of us couldn't think of that. [laughter] thank you, rick. that's why you're here. rick: a little bit different with kids' socks. all right, guys, cool air still up across parts of the north. 31 this morning, in my size la, montana. 45 in cleveland, to the cool air is there the, warm air across the south and because of that we're going to have some severe weather today. down across participants of florida, looking pretty good, a few showers later on in the afternoon. but this is all our energy that's going to dive off further
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towards the south, and if it does, brings some severe weather. maybe a little bit of dramatic activity, we're going to be. watching definitely strong winds and hail this morning across participants of illinois and indiana, guaranteed to get some of that as well. there's our biggest chance for that tornado threat, anywhere you see that yellow. warm still across parts of florida, but some are not coming in anywhere, just across parts of the north. lawrence: go for a run today. pete: yeah. i just found a mitten. i don't know where the other one is, maybe we'll find it later. [laughter] coming up, residents of venice, california, fuming over the growing homeless crisis. we'll discuss as crime consumes the boardwalk. smoking is fre. you get advice like: just stop. get a hobby. you should meditate.
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mother's day to all the mom across the country including our very own "fox & friends" moms. this is arieling with his mom lydia and grandma. this is producer dan hoenig with her sister andrea and their mom sue. can't wait to go back to broadway. and production assistant alexandra with her mom bonnie. come on, where's bonnie? there she is in a field, very cool. and check out copy editor connie's mom mary. she's a teacher in indiana. dressed up at her favorite character. i bet the kids liked that. jedediah: i love that. very cool. pete: but, guys, there's talk about residents of venice, california, are demanding action as the homeless population there is just overwhelming the community, and there's a famed
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boardwalk that is plagued with increased fighting and drug use. i was in los angeles about six weeks ago, i couldn't believe what was before my eyes, and i know you've been across the country too. up lawrence businesses have been begging the city to is step in. what about our community too? i mean, it's happening all across the country, and it comes from this progressive wave of just allow these people to stay here. they could be at playgrounds right in front of the school. kids can't play, they've got to cancel softball tournaments and everything. it's a sad time. jedediah: if you look at the images on the screen, imagine your kids coming to walk home from school or families are feeling really threatened in many ways and they feel like they have no recourse. they are making pleas to local government, state government, federal government in some cases, and no one is making it a
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priority. once you flee a place that has troubles like this to begin with, why would you go back? pete: open drug use. lawrence: just hanging out all over the park. pete: i mean, we drove through los angeles for miles, miles of encampments. it's like nothing you've ever seen. and it does make you sad when you see it and you realize it's liberal policies where they're not -- when you don't enforce anything and everything's allowed, public spaces turn into -- lawrence: they say it's compassion, guys, but i don't see anything compassion anytime about this. anyway, the key to winning over mom today is preferably through the kitchen. chef ryan scott is dishing up some -- jedediah: yeah! ♪♪ jedediah: oh, yeah. ♪ and the trumpets, they go ♪♪
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♪♪ ♪ lawrence: so it's mother's day, so we're celebrating all morning long. and if you're still looking for ways to celebrate mom, you're in luck. jedediah: our next guest has some ideas for a delicious brunch. pete: author of the upcoming no fuss family cookbook, brian scott. good morning, thanks for being here. >> hi, guys. i just want to let rick know, i'm all about the matching socks. i buy dozens -- [laughter] jedediah: fantastic. >> my wife is cannot figure out why do you need new socks? i'm with you, rick. [laughter] jedediah: brian, what do you have for us today? for mother's day? >> oh, my gosh.
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a lot of folks are trying to figure out what to do for mother's day. i think i'm the only man in america using my daughter's spork -- [laughter] but there is an easy version. you guys can check it out. it's absolutely gorgeous. it's done really simply. i have a 6 and 6 method. you put the eggs in boiling water for 6 minutes, keep them in that water for 6 more minutes, cool them down and the shell comes off so easy. i want to elevate pancakes this morn, and i'm doing -- morning, and i'm doing my cocoa version of red velvet. let me show you how to make this. in this jar here i have my version has a little bit of whole wheat flower because we have a three-week-old daughter, and, by the way, guys, i never went to bed. you guys have me coffee,
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pancakes ready. a little bit of sugar, some flour, some baking powder, i put baking powder and sew la in this, that -- soda, that really brings it up. you're going to separate the eggs and whisk this up. the can cocoa is the part that makes it red velvet, but what really does is know that eastert right around the corner so in here is some milk, some red food dye, a little bit of oil. i have two egg yolks, and i put the red dye in. i put a drop of apple cider vin daughter in with the -- vinegar in with the milk and the eggs. some people say it looks like pep to bit with moll, i call it a milk shake. this goes right inside your pancake mixture just like so. you're going to separate the eggs and whisk up the egg whites. and all you've got to do is bring your kids in in the
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morning if there's an opportunity and the kids are up and dads are, you know, cleaning the house, picking some flowerses, last minute shopping, this pancake batter is the absolutely last minute cool fix that you guys can do. now we've got this. now i just take some egg whites and go right inside. now you're levering up these beautiful, absolutely stunning pancakes that go right on the pan. two minutes on each side and one trick, real quick, if i can tell you real fast, is i use a handy dandy little ice cream scooper. lawrence lawrence oh, that's smart. >> >> and that way i get even pancakes. they get elevated and gorgeous and simple for mother's day. check out the web site, check out my egg recipe, my pancake recipe -- jedediah: ryan, that's amazing. thank you so much for sharing that. i am definitely going to have my
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husband make me those when i get home. >> yes. minus the spork. [laughter] jedediah: thank you. >> you never know. pete: thank so much. we appreciate it. jedediah: amazing. or. pete: a new york city dad went viral, he's calling on other parents to do the same. by funding scientific breakthroughs, advancing public policy, and providing local support to those living with the disease and their caregivers. but we won't get there without you. join the fight with the alzheimer's association.
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your moms, your wives, to all the moms out there. thank you so much for joining us. i'm about to have some pancakes, i am ready, guys. pete: very nice. lawrence: happy mother's day to you, jed. jedediah: thank you so much. pete: and to my mother and my wife as well. and you know what? folks have been e-mailing us this morning. we've been asking you to, friends@foxnews.com, to share photos of their mother. instead, you've got a viewer that sent us this picture just moments ago. it says, if you can't read it. it says this is looking a bit like that bidens and the carters photo where the bidens -- [laughter] the carters really small. now, jed, you're not a large person. jedediah: that is a very, that's a great way to say it. pete: lawrence is a large -- lawrence: i am a large person. jedediah: there you go. that's kind of what we look like --
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lawrence: i'm literally -- pete: go back to the other photo though. it's really good. pete: it's really good. jedediah: you're both really tall. [laughter] here you go. ing fantastic, lawrence, your side -- it's just like, wow. pete: people might not know, what are you, 6-3? lawrence: 6-5. jedediah: and you're tall too. pete: i've got to get this close to the camera -- [laughter] something like that. jedediah: and i'm, like, 5-4 on a good day. but that was adorable. i love it. lawrence: i love our fans. our viewers, they go out there and do the stuff that they don't think. pete: now that i'm looking at the camera -- jedediah: now that's all you see. [laughter] mini jed, it's all good. pete: we'll fix it. this is live? [laughter] all right.
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we'll do some news this morning as well. all right. a cyber attack is forcing the largest fuel pipeline in the country to shut down. fears are growing that gas prices may soar the longer it stays closed. griff jenkins joins us live as authorities begin investigating the half. >> reporter: that's right. if that pipeline doesn't open soon, americans could feel some pain at the pump. take a look at this map. the colonial pipeline running 5500 miles from texas to new york delivering 100 million gallons a day of gasoline, diesel, jet fuel and heating oil, that's roughly 45% of all fuel on the east coast. operators shut it down friday after this ransomware attack, and the president was briefed at the white house releasing this statement, saying the federal government is working actively to assess the implications of this incident, avoid disruption to supply and help the company restore pipeline operations as quickly as possible. now the fbi, dhs and department of energy all investigating as the government's cybersecurity
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and infrastructure security agency warns this underscores the threat that ransomware poses to organizations regardless of size or sector. we encourage every organization to take action to strengthen their cybersecurity posture to reduce their exposure to these types of threats. so when could americans feel it in their wallet? well, the chairman and ceo of united refining company earlier on this show says the clock is ticking. >> if it lasts for more than two, three, four, five more days, then you're going to have interruption in consumer availability for gasoline. that means a shortage. >> reporter: so who are the cyber attackers? the georgia-based colonial company isn't saying. we don't know exactly what these cyber attackers were demanding. the company has not yet offered a timeline for when they may reopen that pipeline. pete, jed with, lawrence? lawrence: thanks, griff. pete: thanks a lot, appreciate it. lawrence: let's bring in georgia
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governor brian kemp to react to this. governor, thanks so much for being on the program. happy mother's day to your wife and mother. i've got to ask you, this is going to have real world consequences. we've already seen gas go up. >> yeah. well, thanks for having me, guys, and happy mother's day to everyone out there today. it's a beautiful day in the great state of georgia. we're monitoring the situation. our emergency management agency's talking to all the suppliers and other partners that this may affect. right now we're waiting for another update that we'll probably get late this afternoon or tomorrow morning. right now the supply's still very stable. i think the company's, obviously, being very cautious here. a lot at stake, obviously. we'll know more in the days to come. pete: governor kemp, it's been -- on another topic -- quite a year for law enforcement, what they've faced in light of calls to defund the police and all of that. it is national police week, we're heading into it, and you just signed a bill in your state
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banning the idea of defunding local police. what does that look like? >> yeah, you know, representative houston gains, which i know you guys had on your show several weeks ago during the legislative session, had a bill this year to limit the amount of defunding the police that really radical local governments can do. if you rook at the figures around the country, violent crime's gone up, murders have gone up when this has been done. we know that having a presence on the ground by our local police officers, state police and others working in partnership together really helps fight these issues. we did that, matter of fact, friday night i did a fly-around, we had a joint operation that we've been doing in atlanta to go after street racing and violent crimes. and the numbers of people that e apprehending and stopping and arrest and citations, duis, drug arrests, stolen weapons and other things that we're finding shows that there's a need to fund the police and properly go
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after these bad actors, not to defund them. jedediah: governor, we want to get into some presidential politics with you, if you don't mind. stacey abrams has said she absolutely plans to run for president. she did an interview with cbs this morning. a preview has been released, and a quote says do i hold it as an ambition? absolutely. and even more importantly when someone asks me, i have a responsibility to say yes for every young woman, every young person of color. it's about you cannot have those things you refuse to dream of. your thoughts. >> well, i'm not so worried about what stacey abrams is running around the country doing with her billionaire if leftist folks that are portraying georgia's election law as something that it's not. it's easy to vote and hard to cheat here. i think people are, quite honestly, tired of these lies and tired of politicians running around the country to raise money from everywhere else and
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then try to manipulate the message. we know what we're doing in georgia is working. she would take that in a 180-degree different direction. and believe it or not, i think she'd probably move left of president biden if she were president, which is really hard to imagine when you think about the border crisis, the really amount of money that is being spent while not targeting that on people that actually need it and trying to get people back into the work force. lawrence: governor, what do you guys man on doing in georgia? you know, love her or hate her, she's been effective on the ground in georgia. republicans should have seen these attacks coming. you just lost two seats what do you planned the to do to mobilize republicans to win an election? >> senate bill 202, our elections integrity act has done that, lawrence. i know you've been very critical of what happened in georgia, but if you really look at what happened on november the 3rd, we held strong majorities in our legislative bodies because we
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campaigned and talked about the issues, and my administration has been pushing them over the last three years. largest teacher pay raise in state history, number one business environment in the country. we passed over 50 health care bills, republicans taking the lead on health care to lower private sector costs and have more availability for people using private, market-based solutions. obviously, having strong law enforcement, funding the police and standing behind them when the democrats are cutting and running from them and trying to cut their budgets and many other things. all politics is local, we've got to continue to talk about the good things we've done, continue to press the good issues that president trump really turned the country around on and joe biden's completely standing on its head right now and do that in a positive way. be happy warriors. pete: governor, stacey abrams has been pretty effective in trying to mischaracterize your voter integrity law in georgia. the major leagues took away the
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all-star game, but the braves just played their first home game at 100% capacity. talk to us about that? >> man, they were rocking and rolling last night at truist park. unbelievable environment, 100% capacity, and the braves had an incredible comeback, won after being 3 down in the 12th inning and had a walkoff hit. it was an incredible night. people are ready to get out. people know what to do to combat cooed are vid 19. many people here and across the country have been vaccinated. it's time to send a message that, look, get your vaccination. if you're uncomfortable ability that, talk the your medical providers and try to get comfortable. it's not just major league baseball, you're seeing it at atlanta united soccer games here, you're going to see it in packed football stadiums across the south and, hopefully, across the country. we'll see what the other states allow to happen. pete: governor kemp, it's
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certainly cool to see full stands. back to normal is awesome to see. governor, thanks for joining us. lauren lawrence thanks, governor. >> have a great day, guys. pete: you too. turning now to a few headlines, a manhunt is underway in denver after an officer is shot responding to a trespassing call. it started after homeowners reported a stranger on their porch. when police arrived, the suspect opened fire. no interaction for police is normal. it's always the potential of going this way. striking an officer in the leg. in the hospital in critical condition undergoing surgery, police have detained several persons of interest but have not identified yet a suspect. let's hope that officer is okay. china claims debris from its rocket9 ship has returned safety to earth. state media says the debris landed in the ocean near the maldives. u.s. space command the rocket reentered over the arabian peninsula but did not give a
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landing spot. experts feared the ship could have landed anywhere on earth including america after it was caught in an uncontrolled orbit. very responsible of the communist chinese. and bo jackson stops by a children's lemonade stand giving them an amazing memory. >> it's good. >> taste it. >> if it's not good, i'll walk off, okay? [laughter] [inaudible conversations] [laughter] pete: wait, a hundred? [laughter] pete: the great bo if jackson. -- bo jackson. the legendary player leaving the kids a $100 tip. proceeds benefit alabama children's hospital x those are your headlines. i just recently watched the 30 for 30 on bo jackson.
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lawrence: he believed in old school, push-ups and sit-ups, juris a machine and a good guy -- just a machine. jedediah: a little discipline, good stuff. lawrence: anyway, got a big show coming ahead. but a fox news alert, a 4-year-old girl shot in times square in the middle of the day. a manhunt is underway the find the shooter. new york councilman joe borelli reacts next. the light. ♪ it comes from within. it drives you. and it guides you. to shine your brightest. ♪ as you charge ahead. illuminating the way forward. a light maker. recognizing that the impact you make comes from the energy you create. introducing the all-electric lyriq. lighting the way. ♪
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>> tech: every customer has their own safelite story. this couple was on a camping trip... ...when their windshield got a chip. they drove to safelite for a same-day repair. and with their insurance, it was no cost to them. >> woman: really? >> tech: that's service you can trust. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪ ♪♪ >> how many more kids do we need to be shot before we realize that bad policies have consequences? we are taking guns off the street in new york city at an alarming rate over the last two years, and it's time for consequences. jedediah: a manhunt is underway for the suspect who shot three innocent bystanders including a 4-year-old girl in times square yesterday amid a surge of violence in new york city.
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here to react is councilman joe borelli. thank you for being with us. obviously, horrific news, deeply disturbing statistics when it comes to the murder rates in new york city. what's going on right now, why is it happening, and what can be tone about it? >> well, thank you for having me, jed. happy mother's day, of course. these are the kinds of crimes that happened even before our policies and laws were changed. they'd grab a headline, and we'd talk about them for a while, but what's different today is that this is being done more frequently because of policies enacted bilal banny democrats including andrew cuomo. as the commissioner pointed out, there's no consequences for gun crimes. 88% of people who were arrested in 2020 for a gun crime were back on the streets without any bail. 55% of people who were arrested pulling a trigger, back on the streets with no bail. it's a him a to say that albany
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democrats like cuomo and company and all these people, they care more about protecting the rights of the shooter than about the people who are out there just enjoying a nice day and certainly more than the cops who actually rush towards the shooter and saved that little girl. jedediah: yeah, there certainly has been a vacuum of political leadership in new york. let's talk about the sexual harassment allegations waged against cuomo. those are apparently expanding to include whether or not a top adviser linked vaccine access with support for the governor. are you surprised by hearing this allegation? >> yeah, i mean, this is another one of those things that's probably surprising to people who believed that andrew cuomo was this tv hero they met last year. the truth is, this is who andrew cuomo is. he is cutthroat, he is petty, he's more suited to be the vail indiana in a spa very villain in a spa spaghetti western, and whn
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you hear something like this, people around the country have to realize that this is the type of thing that would have got you promoted in the andrew cuomo administration. so new yorkers aren't surprised. they've been dealing with this for quite a while. and i think the biggest problem andrew cuomo has going for him right now is that his staff knows he's guilty of so much he's accused of, the attorney general knows he's guilty of so much he's accused of, and now finally the people of the state are realized he's guilty of so much he's been accused of. jedediah: joe, is there going to be accountability for cuomo? >> people like me, lee zeldin, people around the state are going to make sure he's held accountable. yes, ma'am. jedediah: thank you for joining us this morning. we appreciate. a father goes viral for slamming his daughter's elite private school's woke curriculum. now he's calling on parents everywhere to join his fight. he's going to join us life -- live next.
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♪♪ pete: well, your mother's day photos continue to pour in, especially from moms realizing how quickly their kids have grown. my 15-year-old towers over me like i'm the kid. and shot in the background, love it. and here's another one from maria blanked by her two -- flanked by her two taller sons. maybe as tall as lawrence are. [laughter] and jodi celebrates good times with her grown-up, taller boys. mom michelle is proud of her taller sons. john works for the fdny and cody works for the port authority. thank you for your service. i like it.
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all right, we've been telling you about the new york city dad whose scathing message to his daughter's elite prep school went viral for indoctrinating kids. lawrence: andrew gutman is now calling on parents to join his fight, and he joins us now. andrew, you been bold -- you've been bold, you care about this. tell me what really motivated you to get involved on this issue. >> sure. well, i think somebody had to do something. we had tried to talk the parents from the beginning of the school year and organize a little bit, which is very hard to do because there's such pervasive fear of speaking up on this issue. so i just thought, you know what? somebody has to do this. we have made the decision to not reenroll our daughter for next year. critical race theory is really a cancer in our schoolses and in our society, and i just said, you know what? somebody's got to do this and try to get parents to speak up, so i did. pete: andrew, you started something. you may not have known it at the time, but you really did.
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as you hook at the totality of the response to this across the nation, what more can be done? because the curriculum seems to still be pushing, still be there. what more can parents do? >> i had no idea my letter would ever be read by any more than the 1200 parents that i vent -- that i sent it too. there's been enormous anticipation in the last few weeks on this issue. i wrote yesterday in "the new york post", we need parents to speak up. i think we're at the very, very beginning stages of in this. this is a huge fight. it's hard because there's a persuasive fear of speaking up on this issue, this cancel culture. and until we sort of solve the cancel culture issue, we're not going to solve the education issue, this critical race theory. so we need some ceos, business leaders to not cower to the social media mob, we need courageous ones to speak up and say we're not going to cancel our employees who are speaking up for their kids' education.
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i think we're at the beginning stage, but i'm encouraged to by how many responses i got. i had probably a thousand people contact me just yesterday through a web site i created, speak up for education.org, is so that's encouraging, but it's also really carry because i had no idea this is so per swaifs, this -- pervasive in our schools. lawrence lawrence andrew, you made the decision to take your child out of school, but what's next for you? because they're going to get it from the culture. are you having these conversations at home to provide the shield for them? what are you doing? >> yeah, we've been having the conversations with our daughter. i'm really lucky, she and i both talk about history, thatst that's something that i think schools do really poorly, and it's one with of the things that -- [laughter] we're going to start school also. i've started to put a team the together to talk about that. our plan was to sort of home school. we'll see how that goes. i've had a lot of people reach
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out with other ideas, but, you know, my daughter and i have had these conversations. she was aware of what is going on in the school. she is noting indoctrinated, she is not brainwashed. i think a lot of these kids are starting to be in middle school and in high schools and universities it's so, so much worse. so, you know, she's a aware of what's going on. pete: andrew, did you just say you're probably going to start a school yourself? that's a big, bold endeavor. most people wouldn't know where to start. talk to us about that. >> i've had a lot of people encourage that, seriously, and started to put a team together. i think we're going to do this. in new york city, which, you know, other people say, look, it's impossible. come down to florida or do it in the suburbs. but, no, i think we should do this in new york city. there is a desperate need for sort of secular, classical education without, you know, this critical race theory, without the political nature of this. i've heard from parents, i've heard from educators.
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there's a desperate need right now because this is entrenched in private schools, public schools even in religious schools. i know it's going to be difficult, but we're going to try to do it. lawrence: andrew, what is your advice to parents? this is happening all over the country, what would you recommend? >> well, try to speak up as much as you can. and i recognize how difficult that is with this cancel culture. organize parents together, write letters to the private schools, the board of trustees, if you have to do it anonymously, that's still helpful although it's always more helpful if you can put names to it. educate yourself on this cancer that is create call race theory. organize and try to speak up. i think we're at the beginning stages, but i do think more more people have heard -- a lot of them in recent days and weeks, people starting to realize what's going on in this country, in our school system, so i encourage people as much as possible to speak up. pete: you mentioned secular
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classical. a couple of my kids go to christian classical, it's the ingredients of how western civilization was educated for so many years. i encourage people to check it out, and i'm heartened that's the route you're going. what's the web site? >> speak up for education.org. pete: speak up for education.org. hey, sometimes it takes one, andrew, and you're the man. we appreciate it. >> thank you very much. pete: love it. all right, today marks the beginning of national police week as anti-cop rhetoric reaches a fever pitch. our panel of police officers, moms -- police officer moms, that's great, i almost butchered that. of course, mother's day. the challenges they face on the job every day. ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ lawrence: today's not just mother's day, it's national police week that gips today with the mission to respect, honor and remember. who couldn't support this? anti-cop rhetoric is sweeping america. the most recent example, a maryland judge banning court workers from wearing the thin blue line. joining us now on this mother's day is our panel of law
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enforcement moms, spokesman for the national police association sergeant betsy brantner and sergeant bruni. thank you, ladies, so much for being on this panel today and for your service. happy mother's day. i've got to go to you first, officer winga. what do you think it's going to take for the country to come together and support the majority of officers which are good? >> you know, what i really think -- [audio difficulty] lawrence: it looks like we lost her. oh, there you go. you can go ahead. >> okay. what i was saying i think as -- there are a fewed bad apples in every job. you have to understand that we're not alled bad. we love our jobs. we love helping people. i love coming out and taking care of you, taking care of the
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community, and you've just got to get that understanding. i say it every time, you've got to come to the big table, cash it out just like in any family, hash it out, understand what makes us all tick. i think that would be the perfect way to get started, is just talk about it, understand us. there's got to be understanding. and bring in some of these families that have lost loved ones because we need to understand your feelings as well. it's just a come to the table type of event. that's what we need to do. lawrence: i love that because we truly are an american family. we should smart acting like this. sergeant smith, i want to get your reaction to this maryland court judge, john morrissey, this is what he had to say. he said those wearing a thin blue line may be perceived they've showing a bias or favoritism to a particular group or people and could undermine the district court's mission of fair, efficient and effective justice for all. what's your reaction? >> well, my reaction is this is,
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this is more woke poll tick thes -- politics. our thin blue line flag has been under attack, or you can see it in my background here. and it doesn't represent any one group or one person or one political faction, it represents the pride that we have in our profession, and it represents the sacrifice of our fallen which is what national police week is all about. so this is just more caving in to the far left. we're giving them the ability to attack us, and we've got to have police leadership stand up and say no more. the thin blue line flag represents our sacrifice, our service, our patriotism. and, lauren, you know because you're a supporter of law enforcement, and thank you for that. there are tens of thousands of american citizens who have nothing to do with law enforcement that also proudly display this thin blue line flag.
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lawrence: yeah, you know, i think about the cops yesterday in new york city with that baby that was just shot, 4 years old, and she put the baby on her shoulder, and she's running to get that baby care. and if it wasn't for her, that baby would be dead. sergeant, i want to get your response to this new fox news poll. 62% oppose reducing police funding. so that goes against the whole narrative that the majority of the country wants to defund the police. they actually want more police. sergeant -- >> to me, it's disappointing that people want to beaten on the police because we're there in times of crisis. we're there when they need our help, our assistance. they don't call us because they're having a good day. usually they're having a bad day, and they want us to help, you know? to so to me, it's very dispinting that they would even -- disappointing that they would even consider because for
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me personally it's reassuring to know there's people out there that support us and that want to see us succeed and give us the guidance and reasoning to continue to do what we do. lawrence: i hope you ladies continue to lead this conversation. i don't think i could have said it better than simone, that we're an american family. we've got to hash it out at the table if come together. i think that is the starting place. thank you, ladies, thank you all so much for joining the programmed today. y'all be safe out there. >> thanks. >> thank you. lawrence: jed? jedediah: we're going to turn to some headlines now. residents of venice beach are calling on the city to address the homelessness crisis. hundreds of people signed a letter to city officials this week saying shootings, fires and drug use have become more common especially around the famous boardwalk where nearly 200 tents have popped up.
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and the obamas announced the loss of their dog bo. the former first family say he passed away after a battle with cancer. bo was given to the obamas by late senator ted kennedy in 2009. the former president calling him a true friend and a loyal companion. and a california man faces charges for spending $5 million in fraudulent ppp loans on these sports cars. federal prosecutors say he created fake businesses to get the loans, even using someone else's name and social security number. agents seizing the car as well as $2 million from his bank account. those are your headlines. those are some nice cars, i'm not going to lie. pete: interesting tactic. i'm glad we're on to it at some level. jedediah: exactly. lawrence: about time. pete: rick, what kind of car do you drive? [laughter] >> a honda now. [laughter] next -- [inaudible conversations]
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pete: it's okay, hondas are cool. rick: you must have heard what i was thinking. interesting. that's a very generous word about what that guy did. all right. you know on sunday i like to show you the precipitation that's coming throughout the coming week, and we have a few interesting things. one, we need rain out across parts of the west, in fact, big fire danger today. no rain across areas of california, take a look at that, we have snow around the denver area and parts of eastern colorado. and then take alook at this, the rain really returns across parts of the southeast. unfortunately, this is going to be accompanied by pretty significant severe weather as well. that's part of what we're looking at today, this significant batch of moisture, already really strong storms across parts of illinois, indiana, headed in towards ohio and then down around the boot heel of missouri this morning. later on throughout the afternoon, we're going to see severe weather fire up, earlier
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afternoon the first cells, by later on tonight it's going to come before of a wind event, but mid afternoon we have the threat for tornadoes across parts of the deep south. so we'll be watching for that. temperature wise, tell you what, not really getting any summer-like temperatures at least across the northeast just yet, definitely there across the southeast, 90 for a high today in orlando. all right, guys? pete: all right. a disappointing jobs report and expanding unemployment bench fits are causing a -- benefits are causing a worker shortage, and that means a rise in prices from lumber to flowers. maria bartiromo on what businesses need from the biden administration, next. ♪ running down a dream that never would come to me. ♪ working on a mystery, going wherever it leads. ♪ running down a dream ♪♪ experience capability, crafted by lexus.
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muck if♪ pete: we are wishing happy mother's day to all moms out there there this morning including josephine, maria bartiromo's mom, i mean, how could we not, right, maria? martha: oh, thank you so much! jedediah: what a beautiful photo, maria with, that is gorgeous. happy mother's day to your mama. maria: happy mother's day to all of you out there. i'm so grateful you ran this shot of my mom, she'll love i it. thank you. pete: you got it, always. lawrence: we wanted to get your commence after these poor jobs report numbers that came out, businesses struggling to find workers, and prices are going up on everyday goods. what is going on? maria: well, look, lawrence, we saw this coming, right in this is a self-inflicted situation. the economy is booming right now. and yet we are sending people $300 checks, $1400 exec --
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checks, we are making the incentives to go back to work decline, and that's exactly what's happening. we've got $6 trillion in stimulus that we are talking about throwing into the economy in just a month and a half, and as a result of all of this money going to people who were at home, they're making a decision and saying, you know what? i'm making more money staying the home. i'm not going to push it. i'm not going to go and have the fire in my belly that i had before all of this happened, and it's showing up in the numbers. hiring slowed. we were expecting a million jobs created in the month of april. don't forget, we are talking about amazing comparisons when you look at the comparison this year versus last year. the economy was completely shut down one year ago, so we should be seeing a massive bounce on every indicator. the fact that we had so much slower growth than we expected in the month of april speaks directly to all of the stimulus, the $1400 checks, the $300 up employment in -- unemployment
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extended benefits, all of that is working as an incentive not to go back to the office. it's showing up in the numbers. there's also an inflation component. look at the price of lumber, looked at the price of chickennen. all of these costs are going up for the american family. it's not just higher taxes, it's higher prices for everyday goods. that's what's happening, that's the reality of all of this right now. jedediah: you know, maria, i'm sure you're going to talking a lot about what the biden add manager isn't doing, give us a preview of what's coming up. maria: let me just tell you about joe biden's wide open borders. it's not just about the 162,000 people that we apprehended in the month of april on top of 172,000 in the month of march, it's a massive amount of illicit drugs. i know of a friend who just lost their son, terrible story, because of overdosing. you know what the drug cartels are doing now in they're lacing
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commonly-used drugs like oxycontin and other drugs that are commonly used, they're lacing it with fentanyl. it is such of a huge business for the drug cartels, and because of these wide open borders, it's not just happening at the ports of entry like airports. we're getting massive amounts of illicit drugs, 6,000 pounds of fentanyl seized, you've got massive amounts of heroin, methamphetamine. all of this between the ports of entry at the open borders. so we've got a special program this morning. i've spoken with the drug enforcement administration to get a sense of what they have seen. it's the unbelievable. these open borders have so many poor and terrible consequences, up intended consequences. -- unintended consequences. of we're going to bring it to you. also the man of the moment, kevin mccarthy, to talk about that important vote next week to oust liz cheney from leadership. it's all coming up in ten
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minutes' time. we'll see you then. pete: maria, as always, we love having you. have a great show. maria: happy mother's day. pete: still ahead, it's race day at darlington. the goodyear 400 kicks off in just hours. it feels like a county fair with a racetrack around it. the drivers to watch during nascar's throwback weekend, that's next. ♪ ♪
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weekend. here with the drivers to watch, announcer adam alexander. adam, thanks for being here. what does throwback weekend mean, by the way? >> it's basically when we look at our history and celebrate those that have laid the foundation of the sport. drivers in today's race will throw back to paint schemes from yesteryear. it really embodies what the history of nascar is all about, and darlington is a perfect place to do it because we started racing there in 1950. to plenty of history to pull from, for sure. pete: tell us about darlington. it's wide, it's fast. what should we look for? >> the snuck name here the track too tough to tame, and that is so appropriate. the tires wear out very quickly. expect best way to get around this -- and the best way to get around this place is to run up by the wall, but the margin of error is so slim, it's easy to get into that wall and end your day. it's a challenging track. with no practice and no qualifying, today's race will be
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very entertaining. pete: i'm becoming a big fan, does that mean more pits? more variables involved, right? >> absolutely. you want to come to pit road every time you have the chance because new tires equals speed. anytime today the caution comes out, the drivers will be coming down pit road getting four tires every time. pete, you and i could be a crew chief in this race. the strategy is quite simple, actually. [laughter] pete: i don't know about that. maybe you, not me. so tennesseeny hamlin, he's leading -- denny hamlin, he's leading the cup series, but he hasn't won a race. >> it's truly remarkable that denny hasn't won. the three drivers i would watch today and, actually, none of them have won, denny hamlin, ken harvick and chase elliott. hethey have not won this seasoni like all three of those drivers at darlington. pete: what is it about a driver that makes them good at a track like this?
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what dynamic are you looking for? >> well, you have to be patient. you have to take care of your race car. as i talked about earlier, you can very easily have it get away from you. and the key at darlington is race the racetrack and not race those around you. the driver that does that the best today will be the one that is successful, and likely be the one that's standing in victory lane -- pete: so race the racetrack while going 200 miles an hour with cars 4 inches from you. >> that's right. it's a simple concept, right? [laughter] pete: i'm sure it's easy. no, having gotten in and out of a car once, i can definitely say it's an athletic sport. appreciate it, adam, thank you so much. we'll be watching today. >> yep, thank you. pete: catch all the action today, 3:30 eastern, 2:30 in god's country, on fox sports 1. and really appreciate adam joining us this morning. and remember to enter the fox bet super 6 stage two contest for your chance to win $10,000 of clint boyar's money.
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onstar, we see them. okay. mother and child in vehicle. mother is unable to exit the vehicle. injuries are unknown. thank you, onstar. ♪ my son, is he okay? your son's fine. thank you. there was something in the road... it's okay. you're safe now. >> kentucky derby winner has tested positive, type of steroid. trainer bob confirming the news this morning but says the horse never took the drug. he and the owner will file an appeal but not clear if the announcement will lead to medina spirit to be disqualified. medina spirit to race on saturday. >> didn't see that coming. jedediah: in the meantime we want to wish everyone a happy mother's day. i'm going home and have pancakes
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that my husband is making. not to angry you, and you're going to do what? pete: grill out. mother's day brunch. jedediah: lawrence. >> i have to apologize to mom saying she's annoying at times. hope she gets the flowers. jedediah: thank you for joining us. ♪ ♪ maria: good sunday morning, everyone. happy mother's day to all. welcome to sunday morning futures. i'm maria bartiromo. today connecting the dots between joe biden's radical immigration policy and the massive amount of elicit drugs flooding into the country killing american citizens, more with former acting administrator of u.s. druggen forcement administration, timothy shea and what agents have seized on
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