tv FOX and Friends FOX News May 10, 2021 3:00am-6:00am PDT
3:00 am
do good for other americans. that's what you are seeing on your screen. jillian: got to love that veterans passing the keys down the line to him. and we thank you service and we hope he enjoys hisny new ride. thank you for joining us this morning. hope we see you back here tomorrow. "fox & friends" starts right now. >> there are a lot of people who believe keeping unemployment instead of going to look for work. >> number one reason right now that people aren't going back to work is fear. >> pressed on president biden's mask wearing while endorsed. >> cdc will allow vaccinated people more and more privileges. >> a manhunt intensifying for the person of interest times square shooting injured three people. >> among those shots a 4-year-old shopping for toys. >> when is this going to end? >> medina spirit the horse who won the kentucky derby has
3:01 am
failed a post race drug test. >> bob baffort as of today is banned from churchill downs. >> i don't feel embarrassed i feel like i was wronged. >> i would never do this because you can't do anything wrong. >> everyone should want to help small businesses. >> it was disheartening not to see the federal government do anything. >> martin truex jr. wins the darlington many. >> he doesn't get enough credit. ♪ brian: welcome, everybody, brand new week. i know one thing for sure it will be action-packed and you will be here all three hours all week long to get the latest and first. as much as i like nascar the big story as ainsley was talking about right before the show is clippers on the road. ainsley: long conversation about it. brian: did you break that down on the internet afterwards or do
3:02 am
it today. ainsley: i will be happy to do it. right now get to news and wish all the mothers a happy mother's day i hope you had a wonderful day with your family. steve: absolutely. welcome back to another workweek. on friday when we left you we had just given you the april jobs numbers. they were a stinker. they were estimating close to a million people would find jobs but that number was only about a quarter of a million. yesterday, the president's secretary of commerce was on the tv show cbs face the nation she was asking don't you think some people aren't looking for work because there are lavish unemployment. she said absolutely not. she said this is why the number is so bad. >> i think we have a long way to go to recover from the pandemic. it's -- there are so many americans still struggling, 8 million fewer jobs than they were pre-pandemic. we have to remember that when
3:03 am
the president moved to make this happen, this unemployment insurance had been a lifeline, a survival, you know, lifeline for so many americans. the number one reason now that people aren't going back to work is what you said fear. or they can't find child care or schools are still closed. so, we'll monitor it as necessary, but right now we don't think that's the reason people aren't able to go back to work. ainsley: people are yesterday to recover. people do want to go back to work. why would you go back to work if you are getting paid from the government to stay home. steve: getting paid more. ainsley: exactly, in many cases. that's what business owners are saying they are saying they can't compete with these benefits. listen. >> many people want to, would. no, they don't. when you are handing them so much money, so much unemployment, it is back firing. >> extended benefits are keeping people pause and they are saying hey, let me stay home a little bit longer and figure out what i do next. >> they're incentivizing people to stay home and that just
3:04 am
doesn't make sense. you know, i don't care what side of the aisle you are on. that doesn't make sense. >> the employment is not lining up with the demand that we are seeing in the marketplace and we are having to get really creative on how to bring employees into the business. i would like to take the un out of unemployment benefits and incentivize to come back to work. brian: "fox news sunday" exactly in new york getting paid on average if it continues this way and not extend not only the supplemental unemployment insurance they want to extend it past september instead of doing what canada did getting rid of it right now. in california and illinois get $57,408. in new york, you are going to get $57,000 for not working. so, how does mcdonald's get people there how does that bar and restaurant down the street get somebody there? our economy might have to be saved by high school and college kids coming back, taking jobs that were normally filled by people looking to supplement or
3:05 am
actually provide their income. in fact, if you look overall, forget politics, the people speaking out and complaining, i don't know what party they are from. they are just people wanting to earn a living and keep their business up and running. 44% of small businesses right now cannot fill ownings. that's politics aside. and again, what's so insulting and the commerce secretary tends not to be as political as most people, but almost every biden official is saying the same thing people are fearful. i have news on you. that's on the president, too. he is walking around wearing two masks outside, walking by himself. is he walking around -- we have anthony fauci telling everyone look out we still have too many cases. we might be able to have a cookout on july 4th. people who voted for joe biden are freaked out because they watch the way he acts and what anthony fauci says. steve: something else that the secretary of commerce said yesterday in addition to the fear. the fear of losing the government supplement, perhaps, but there are a lot of people who have not returned to the
3:06 am
workplace because they are unemployed women and they are the child care person at their house, and so they need child care. oh, by the way, joe biden is trying to fix that. ben sasse yesterday summarized it pretty well with numbers. he said currently there are 7.4 million jobs available in the united states. but fewer than 300,000 found new work. why is that? he said because washington is paying people more for unemployment than for working. and one of the president of the federal reserve in minneapolis neil cash karen said that the lockdown men tags and unemployment benefit are still holding the economy back. he said i do think there is something to the unemployment benefits that may be a disincentive. ainsley: if you talk to people about the silver lining in all of this, many people are enjoying staying home with their kids and being home as a family and eating as a family. the husband is not traveling. the wife isn't going to board meetings all over the country.
3:07 am
so i think when you factor that in and the government is paying you, what is the incentive to go back to work if you don't have to. and the white house covid-19 response coordinator was asked about when are we going to be able to take these masks off? and he says the cdc is allowing vaccinated people more and more privileges to remove their masks. steve: did you say privileges? ainsley: privileges. >> i think everyone is tired and wearing the mask is going to be the same. we are getting there and the light at the end of the tunnel is brighter and brighter. but to keep up our guard, let's follow the cdc guidance and the cdc guidance across time will allow vaccinated people more and more privileges to take off that mask. brian: really. what country are we living in. more and more provision to take take -- privileges to take off a of course that. first tell us to get the vaccine 96% effective and possibly grant the privilege down the line to live our lives.
3:08 am
just came from florida. no one is walking around with a mask at all. guess what? the numbers are down. did you see how many people came out in jacksonville two weeks ago packed stadium no. one bore a mask no surge in texas. will most of these people have been vaccinated or get a rapid test. that's called living with all of this. as dr. scott gottlieb said over the weekend it a cdc director says i think we are at the point now we have to start lifting mask mandates indoors. if you wonder why only 39% of the country is only vaccinated and only 44% have a single shot is because the incentives are not there for people to take a risk they are not personally feeling great about a vaccine that came out so quick. they're like really? what's going to change about my life? i'm watching the president of the united states walking around with triple masks and doctors saying i don't know what you are talking about and dr. fauci the
3:09 am
legend by next mother's day we should be close to back to normal. next mother's day? seasonal, are you kidding me? you can wear a mask seasonally. steve: what he said was you look at this last year and there was no flu season. nobody got the flu because it's respiratory and because people were wearing a mask maybe going forward he said that could be the case. brian: why don't we say in michael jackson's oxygen chamber. we want to make sure we don't get the flu next year. ainsley: the goal is to have every adult american vaccinated 70% by july 4th. right now 58% of the country has had at least one shot. it. steve: so there are some incentive programs going on in d.c. they are doing just exactly what they did in new jersey. ainsley: are they going to pay people to get vaccinated there? steve: in d.c. take a shot, get a beer. ainsley: okay. steve: that's what they are doing in new jersey. governor phil murphy said
3:10 am
yesterday apparently the state of emergency is considering paying people to get the shot. we were joking when we were talking to the white house correspondent last week hey, when is joe biden going to start saying okay, everybody, gets a check who gets a shot? just a matter of time they are trying to get the number to 70. think about this. if you were reluctant to get it right now, would you get the shot for $1,000? brian: why would you get it now for free if you know in two weeks they are going to put $1,000. let's keep delaying everything and keep the unemployment rolling and down the line we will pay you to take a shot. ainsley: south carolina is another state like montana that said we are not doing these unemployment benefits anymore and rhode island's governor is asking can we still get the check if we go back to work or some of the check? brian: ainsley, i will tell you i wish it was 58%. only 46% of the country have gotten a single shot. ainsley: just read an article. brian: 34% are fully vaccinated.
3:11 am
caves down 30%. hospitalizations down 1 over the last two weeks and deaths down 6. numbers are going down. people are running from good news and i don't get it. it a fox news alert. ashley strohmier joins us now intensifying manhunt for the person of interest a few blocks from here times square a shooting that injured three people including a little girl. ashley. >> yeah. the nypd thought they found 31-year-old farrakhan mohammed but it was actually his brother they spoke. to say police say the man told them mohammed who is a cd meant to shoot him meaning the brother after an argument but instead hit bystanders. police released footage following that incident. among those shot, a 4-year-old shopping for toys with her family along with two other women. and through all the chaos this incredible moment nypd officer alissa vogel seen rushing the little girl to an ambulance. she even tried to comfort the girl's mother telling her keep your head up, the little girl is
3:12 am
going to be able to walk again she will be okay. another victim breaking her silence on the horrifying ordeal telling local media i saw a police officer, i was screaming to him i have a 2-year-old, i don't want to die, please help me, i'm shot. please help me. instead of people actually helping her after she was shot. they started filming her on their phones. the third victim was shot in the foot. everyone though is said to make a full recovery. this does comes on heels of the city cutting the nypd budget by half a billion dollars 116 no other agencies. back to you guys. steve: thank you very much. ing it when you walk around new york city on a beautiful day it's heart breaking that there are so few people on the street but, you know, covid has shut everything down. although over the last couple of weeks we have started to notice a little green chutes where you see a few people coming out of restaurants and out of hotels as well. and then over the weekend there
3:13 am
were actually a number of people on the streets in new york until saturday afternoon just a couple of blocks as brian said from where we are sitting over why a toy store, a family was there to buy some toys and next thing you know somebody starts shooting. we just heard ashley talking about apparently somebody was trying to shoot their brother, shot two women and a 4-year-old extraordinary. ainsley: they said there was some sort of argument between two guys at illegal cd vending area. and one of the moms who was visiting from rhode island who was one of the people that was shot, she said she was there with her whole family and her child. and she told her husband honey, i think things are getting heed heated. maybe we should move. go in a different direction. and that's when the gunshots rang out. three people were injured. thankfully all are going to be okay. can you see this video, this hero cop running down broadway in times square trying to get that little girl to the
3:14 am
ambulance. brian: she a former teacher, her name is alissa vogel, what she told the 4-year-old victim's mom quote i kept telling her to breathe. that i know what she is going through because i have a baby myself. it was very difficult for her. very traumatic. she saw her daughter just get shot. i kept trying to calm her down because she was obviously very scared that child is going to be okay because of that officer. doesn't care about all the anti-cop sentiment. all she saw is she is wearing the uniform and take action. sadly a lot of people on the sidewalk reportedly using their iphones to tape it hope to get likes down the line perhaps instead of helping out. get the townhouses back to new york even though we don't have international tourists. that's what happened in new york when you take a billion dollars out of the budget. get rid of the anticrime unit. let guns flood the street and tell everybody cops are bad and being vilified around. they can't fill up the academy. they can't get people to walk the streets. you tell them take away qualified immunity and then you want them to make the city safe,
3:15 am
forget it it's a combination that's not going to exist this. is police week. ainsley: officer vogel got into the force. she was a school teacher, her dad was a cop. her brother is a cop. her husband is a cop. she just had a baby she has a 6 month old at home. she said that's what made me want to go and save this child. when the post asked her why she became a cop she said i just want to join the police department to help people. steve: it was reflex. she has a little 6 month old at home. she grabbed the baby and ran towards the ambulance. ainsley: the mom was running behind her. the little girl was calling for her mom. brian: somebody else was shot, too. steve: shootings are up 83% in new york city as we approach tourist season. how many people are going to come to new york city given that andrew yang, who would like to be the next mayor of new york said yesterday the city cannot afford to defund the police. it will. ainsley: few people that are running said that as well. brian: subway a tourist was
3:16 am
stabbed in the chest with a screwdriver randomly at 7:50 at night very good area. very crowded time. just a guy walked up and stabbed him in the chest with a screwdriver. they found the wife was able to point out the assailant. arrested the guy. wouldn't be surprised if he is out now. ainsley: new york is going back to the way it used to be. remember when we were growing up people were scared to come to the city. brian: do you know what's worse? they're emptying the prisons and don't hold people overnight. bail reform called every man for himself. everyone is getting out and number two. ainsley: cutting police budget. brian: cutting police budget, anticrime unit and very few on the left speak out about andrew cuomo and the worst. >> maria: de blasio. steve: it was a rough weekend in new york city. brian: tourists, stay where you are. ainsley: according to the article i read it, it 58% of the adult vaccination has received
3:17 am
one dose. brian: the times says 39%. if. ainsley: who is right? >> i hope the "wall street journal." steve: because our company owns them. 17 minutes after the top of the hour on monday. thank you very much for joining us. and jillian joins us with the news. jillian: good morning, while you guys investigate this. i will tell you about this story out of colorado. police there are searching for a motive after a gunman killed six people before turning the gun on himself. the shooting happened at a birthday party yesterday morning. the victims were all adults no. children were injured. being. >> somebody lost their mother right before mother's day. i don't want that to happen to my family, you know. jillian: police believe the gunman was the boyfriend of one of the victims. 17 states and d.c. are under a regional state of emergency over the shutdown of one of the largest pipelines in the u.s. the order lifts restrictions for
3:18 am
people providing assistance to areas suffering from fuel shortages. colonial pipeline shut down more than 5,000 miles after a ransomware attack on its system. experts warn gas prices may rise if the pipe line is not operational in the next few days. reality star turned california gubernatorial candidate candidate jenner says she supports the path to citizenship for the state's 1.4 million undocumented workers a lot of bad people are trying to cross our border illegally. i'm for legal immigration. the bad ones have to leave. >> jenner adding the crisis at the border is one of the reasons she decided to run for governor and spacex now accepting crypto currency dow jones industrial concern doge coin. crypto currency plunged nearly
3:19 am
30% elon musk's appearance on "saturday night live" where he mentioned the currency in a joke. steve: he was funny. ainsley: he was. his mom was there with him. steve: we watched it the next day just a snippet. ainsley: is he from south africa. his mom is beautiful and just proud of her son. brian: first one to woes aspergersens. steve: he went on to say i reinvented the electric car and sending people to mars. you didn't it think i would be a chill guy, did you? ainsley: pretty smart guy. barstool sports ceo dave portnoy ever continue public service in the white house? his answer in exclusive interview with tucker carlson up next. ♪ ♪
3:20 am
dignity. it demands a rapid covid test, because we all deserve an answer. it demands your heart stays connected to your doctor, so you know it's beating as it should. and a rapid test to help evaluate concussion, in case something were to happen. at abbott, we fight for these moments, developing life-changing technologies. because dignity demands it. ♪ ♪ why choose proven quality sleep from sleep number? because staying healthy isn't always easy. but quality sleep is scientifically proven to help improve your overall health and wellness, and it couldn't be easier. the new sleep number 360 smart bed helps you fall asleep faster by gently warming your feet. and it helps keep you asleep by sensing your movement and automatically adjust to keep you both effortlessly comfortable. proven quality sleep, is life-changing sleep. only from sleep number.
3:21 am
well, well, well. look at you. you mastered the master bath. you created your own style. and you - yes, you! turned a sourdough starter. into a sourdough finisher. so when you learn your chronic dry eye is actually caused by reduced tear production due to inflammation ...you take it on by talking to your eyecare professional about restasis®... ...which may help you make more of your own tears with continued use twice a day, every day. restasis® helps increase your eye's natural ability to produce tears, which may be reduced by inflammation due to chronic dry eye. restasis® did not increase tear production in patients using anti-inflammatory eye drops or tear duct plugs. to help avoid eye injury and contamination, do not touch bottle tip to your eye or other surfaces. wait 15 minutes after use before inserting contact lenses. the most common side effect is a temporary burning sensation. ask your eye care professional about restasis®. now to trick out these lights. visit restasis.com to learn more.
3:22 am
my nunormal? fewer asthma attacks with nucala. a once-monthly add-on injection for severe eosinophilic asthma. nucala reduces eosinophils, a key cause of severe asthma. nucala is not for sudden breathing problems. allergic reactions can occur. get help right away for swelling of face, mouth, tongue or trouble breathing. infections that can cause shingles have occurred. don't stop steroids unless told by your doctor. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection. may cause headache, injection site reactions, back pain, and fatigue. ask your doctor about nucala.
3:23 am
find your nunormal with nucala. which shows will you be getting into tonight? ask your doctor about nucala. how 'bout all of them. netflix. 'cause xfinity gets you really into your shows. when one burns for someone who does not feel the same. daphne, let's switch. from live tv to sports on the go. felix at the finish! you can even watch your dvr from anywhere.
3:24 am
okay, that's just showing off. you get all of this on x1. so go on, get really into your shows. you need a breath mint. xfinity. it's a way better way to watch. will ♪ we're the kids in america are ♪ ♪ brian: if you talk to anybody in college, they would talk about barstool. if you ever listen to the show when it was on sirius. it started at barstool. dave portnoy founding it. it came out of anywhere. they accepted it because of dave portnoy's powerful personality. one of the reason why he was acceptable he never gave in and didn't worry about being politically correct. when he aattacked he attacked back. moved to the point where you can go anywhere this can country if
3:25 am
you bring up barstool people know what they are about. i think they went mainstream in my humble been when he put up his own $500,000 and started that fund for his businesses that were flat on their back after the pandemic. protestor i can't remarkable he put up that money and raised $40 million and able to support 334 businesses when you watch those videos heart wrenching people were in dire straight. they were having to close their restaurants didn't have money to pay their staff, closing down which many of them he did. they would see him knock at the front door and they cried. some applied for assistance. so sweet. steve: he felt the government was dragging their feet. he would do what the government could not do. that's why he got people like guy gety to join him and others. dave portnoy would show up at
3:26 am
pizza places across america and grade them and suddenly that place would be the most popular place in a town. he has changed so many lives. that is the reason why over the last number of months dave, you are a man of the people. why don't you run for office? i would vote for you he has sat counsel with tucker carlson this new tucker carlson episode on fox nation tucker asked him would you ever think about running for office? you have done so much for so many here's what dave has to say. >> i don't know if people are serious or not run for office. i would never do that because you can't get anything done. it's fairly disgusting in my mind that the government didn't do something far earlier. >> tucker: since they caused it. >> to cause it it's not that hard. it took me it 24 hours to come up with this concept and future in motion and go. everyone should want to help small business. it was disheartening to not see
3:27 am
the government do anything. i'm glad we could help a little bit. brian: they helped a lot. he was the impetus to do it people started kicking in 2,000 or $20,000. aaron rogers on down. videos. instead of handing gave it to x, y, z. started taping ton iphone are you going to be home here are the numbers. make sure you have the phone number. pop it in and get the real reaction. when they posted that everyone saw the possibility and also i think the ppp loans would eventually do a lot of that in the meantime is he going to be giving out many more millions of dollars continue to apply for it. ainsley: i love that about america. can you start from the ground, build your own company and then be able to give back to so many people. dave is such a hero. nice guy for doing this. steve: he ultimately told tucker he would never run for office because when you are running for office and get elected you can't actually get anything done.
3:28 am
the full interview will be on "tucker carlson today" at 4:00 in the afternoon eastern time on fox nation. sign up for fox nation now to see this plus get exclusive access to content, events and favorite personalities on any gizmo that you watch stuff. brian: 27 minutes after the hour. still ahead on our show, after a year of remote learning and the rise of controversial curriculum moms and dads are saying enough is enough. even running for office to make change in their kid's schools. a panel of parents who are running for spots on their local school board. they will join us next. ♪
3:29 am
not everybody wants the same thing. that's why i go with liberty mutual — they customize my car insurance so i only pay for what i need. 'cause i do things a little differently. hey, i'll take one, please! wait, this isn't a hot-dog stand? no, can't you see the sign? wet. teddy. bears. get ya' wet teddy bears! one-hundred percent wet, guaranteed! or the next one is on me! only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪
3:30 am
comfort in the extreme. ♪♪ the lincoln family of luxury suvs. ♪♪ [narrator] this is steve. the lincoln family of luxury suvs. he used to have gum problems. now, he uses therabreath healthy gums oral rinse with clinically-proven ingredients and his gum problems have vanished. (crowd applauding) therabreath, it's a better mouthwash. at walmart, target and other fine stores. ♪ ♪ aging is a journey. you can't always know what's ahead. since 1995, seniors have opened their doors to right at home for personalized care. to be their guide. to steer them through uncharted territory. and when it comes right down to it, to keep them safe at home.
3:31 am
after all, home is the best place to be. right at home. navigating what's to come. ♪ ♪ what's the #1 retinol brand right at home. used most by dermatologists? it's neutrogena® rapid wrinkle repair® smooths the look of fine lines in 1-week, deep wrinkles in 4. so you can kiss wrinkles goodbye! neutrogena® up at 2:00am again? tonight, try pure zzzs all night. unlike other sleep aids, our extended release melatonin helps you sleep longer. and longer. zzzquil pure zzzs all night. fall asleep. stay asleep. finding new routes to reach your customers, and new ways for them to reach you... is what business is all about. it's what the united states postal service has always been about. so as your business changes, we're changing with it. with e-commerce that runs at the speed of now. next day and two-day shipping nationwide.
3:32 am
same day shipping across town. returns right from the doorstep, and deliveries seven days a week. it's a whole new world out there. let's not keep it waiting. ainsley: good morning, we are back with headlines, starting with this fox news alert. overnight more than 200 palestinians are hospitalized after israeli police firing tear gas and stun grenades class with stone-throwing protesters at a jerusalem holy site. impending convictions east jerusalem. >> two reported tornado touching down. the will national weather service is expected to survey the damage near munford. knocked down and trees uprooted. bob baffort is denying all wrongdoing after medina spirit tests positive for steroids.
3:33 am
is he banned from churchill downs. >> i got the biggest gut punch in racing for something that i didn't do. this is really disturbing. it's an injustice to the horse. i don't feel embarrassed. i feel like i was wronged. >> this the second time he has faced cheating and had five horses had drug test in the last year. >> the singer made announcement over the weekend expecting fourth child another girl. rhett told the audience of first concert since the pandemic having to change the lyric to his songs to the guys who date my girls. the couple tied the knot in 2012 and parents to willa gray, lennon love and ada janes. those are your headlines.
3:34 am
brian: thomas rhett who sang beer with jesus who sang on our show. front row seat to the way kids are being taught. anti-racism curriculum pops up across the country, moms and dads are jumping into the political arena to make a change. our next guests are running for their local school board in oregon. those candidates for bend la pine school board join us two dan hour with us. single mom of two and widow of a former marine wendy i'm mel are here and john hafner is here, wendy, start with you what prompted to you run? >> you know, several things prompted me to be interested in running but the thing that actually made me take action was watching my children struggle over the last year and distance learning and then also seeing what they were actually learning in their classrooms were two of the biggest catalysts.
3:35 am
i would have to say the largest thing that entered me into motion i constantly tell my kids if it's worth complaining about it's worth taking action to change it did i enough of my own complaining this year and my oldest son who is 11 who said to me one be day well, mom, what are you going to do about it? this is something i can do to try to make change. brian: you have some open seat you have the majority if all of you win you seem to be on the same page from the a lot of issues reopening schools seemed to have taken so long. critical race theory and condemnation of white supremacy which we are all against but a different view of how prevalent it is. le pen is the district i should say. marie lopez. what prompted you. >> i thought the school board was nonpolitical. i received a letter and in it a candidate was talking about
3:36 am
being democratic and democratic values and progressive values and i thought, you know, will that doesn't sound right. i'm a conservative mom, and then i just made a quick comment on facebook who would vote for me? and the response was overwhelming. there are so many parents who are looking for an alternative. brian: so many people sit out local elections they shouldn't sit it out. a lot of times if you out hustle people and win them it means so much. people look at the federal government and say you are going to fix this. it's really local. john, you have a daughter in the sixth grade. 12 years old. you are a financial analyst. will you have the time to do this? what prompted to you act? >> what probably prompted me to act was other parents, you know, started a face group. you know, with almost 3,000 parents in it back whether the summer, when we were trying to get school started in the fall. and enough parents came up to me and said, you know, why don't
3:37 am
you do something why don't you run for school board and it's something i never thought about doing in my life. but i had seen my daughter, you know, struggle at home. so, it made sense that, you know, i get involved in her life because being a single parent, you know, she is an only child. she definite definitely needed to be in school. and she needed to get caught up in all the subjects that she was falling behind on. so it would be other parents, all the supports and encouragement i have gotten from other parents is the main reason that i'm running for school board. brian: if you guys are going to get in it, you have to win and all about hustle now and getting those message across. my sense is there is a lot of support for you. here is what the la pine school board says. ben la pine schools ghoited he
3:38 am
equity. seeks to enyou sure critic pflum practices prepare the students for future and interconnected world. critical race theory buzz word attack natural evolution of education. a theory taught at the college jalal jat level not a k through 12 curriculum. marie, do you buy that? >> i'm not buying it at all. if you look at the what the oregon department of education posted on their website about what they're teaching kids, it's all about divisiveness and dangerous. this is something that we haven't seen until recently. and the fact that doing to kids at a younger age is disturbing quite frankly. >> not waiting for 2022 taking action now. thanks, wendy, jon and maria. best of luck. i personally hope you all win make some changes or get things back to the way they were. appreciate it.
3:39 am
>> thank you. >> you are welcome. brian: you got it coming up straight ahead the signer attack on key u.s. fuel pipeline did you hear about this, triggering a state of emergency nearly half of the country. as we brace for the consequences at the pump, charles payne lays out what it means for the future of american energy ♪ ♪ from prom dresses to workouts and new adventures you hope the more you give the less they'll miss. but even if your teen was vaccinated against meningitis in the past they may be missing vaccination for meningitis b.
3:40 am
although uncommon, up to 1 in 5 survivors of meningitis will have long term consequences. now as you're thinking about all the vaccines your teen might need make sure you ask your doctor if your teen is missing meningitis b vaccination. good night syra. night, drive safe. i love you. drive safe. ok buh bye mommy.
3:41 am
you guys ready? you sure you got everything? drive safe. we all say it; chevy can help you do it. with chevy safety assist standard on the new equinox and trailblazer part of the chevy family of suvs. drive safe. at aspen dental, today is the day to take back your smile. of the chwhy wait?y of suvs. we're here nights, weekends and right now, to give you exceptional care and 20% off your treatment plan. new patients, take the first step with a complete exam and x-rays that are free without insurance. because our nationwide network of over 1,500 doctors at 900 locations all have one goal — to make you smile, today. start now. call 1-800-aspendental or book online at aspendental.com >> tech: every customer has their own safelite story. this couple loves camping adventures and their suv is always there with them. so when their windshield got a chip, they wanted it fixed fast. they drove to safelite autoglass
3:42 am
3:43 am
3:44 am
money host charles payne. good morning to you. >> good morning. obviously mind boggling. talk about the size of this thing, right? this pipeline 2.5 million barrels a day. 45% of the east coast heating oil, gas lien, jet fuel. that's the magnitude of all of this. you know, i have got to tell you not just the oil industry that's vulnerable. every industry in our country is vulnerable in the last -- since last year there have been over 370 of these ransomware attacks in this country alone. by far more than any other country. can you imagine if someone broke into your house and then changed the locks and then held your house hostage. you had to pay them for the keys to unlock and go back into your own house it really is remarkable. steve: apparently federal investigators told the associated press that it looks like a criminal enterprise known as dark side is behind it. and dark side, you know, they do these ransomware things. they take a bunch of money and then they donate part of the money to charity like a
3:45 am
robinhood thing. but it's just so jaw-dropping that this is able to happen. i think we all think everybody has got good computer security but, obviously, they don't. >> you know, they obviously don't. it's a great point you make. how long have relived now with these headlines of 30 million accounts have been accessed. 50 million accounts have been accessed. and i have always wondered why corporate america really hasn't stepped up. i will be frank. i watched all the cyber security stocks and they never lived up to the threat. you wonder how come these companies don't step up? a lot of them pay insurance and they would rather just rely on the insurance to pay these things off rather than keeping or our own information safe. now we are talking about a different vulnerability. we are talking about a vulnerability that can shut down our economy that sends the price of gasoline through the roof. that disrupts the entire economy. so, you know, i think it's tame for corporate america to start making those investments and store relying on well, i have
3:46 am
got an insurance policy. we don't have an insurance policy. steve: absolutely. it looks as if everybody is going to feel it, particularly people in the east. gas prices could go up 15 to 0% this week. charles, real quickly, the secretary of commerce was on one of the chat shows yesterday. and she said yeah, the jobs number at the end of the week, we were expecting a million people to get jobs but only a quarter of that did. but it has nothing to do with the fact that the federal government is paying people more money to stay at home on unemployment than go get some work. here she is yesterday. listen to this and then your comments. >> this unemployment insurance has been a lifeline. a survival, you know, lifeline for so many americans. the number one reason now that people aren't going back to work is what you said. fear. or, they can't find child care or schools are still closed. so we'll monitor it as necessary. but, right now we don't think that's the reason people aren't
3:47 am
able to go back to work. steve: charles, there are 7.5 million open jobs in america and only 260,000 people took jobs? that just doesn't make sense. >> that doesn't. you don't have to be the secretary of labor to know that's just not right. by the way, we were warned that this was going to happen. national federation of small businesses said last week. 42% of small businesses have job openings and no one will take. we have seen it in the initial jobless claims. 16 million people still on unemployment benefits. most of that from these pandemic emergency things, heck, last week the state of california had more people on extended unemployment benefits. you have got to be kidding me. copout. the administration is embarrassed and they should be. she is absolutely right. when this was instituted last year it was a life ryan. when it was extended it was a lifeline. i'm not sure if this last extension is doing what it was intended to do. you add 300 bucks to what other states are giving already, it's
3:48 am
hard for a lot of businesses, particularly small businesses to compete. i will tell you one thing quick, steve. i went through this report over the weekend. i couldn't go through it saturday because they shut down the site. i went through it yesterday and what struck me was how many jobs were lost in certain industries. it blew my mind. 77,000 courier jobs gone. 77,000 gone. retail jobs were gone. i mean, it's just the list those on and on of jobs that were absolutely gone. you knew someone was sitting there saying i can make 500 bucks a week for this or maybe 600 or 700 bucks a week and maybe not leave the house. steve: you do the math. and i think we know which one wins. charles, thank you for joining us. we will watch you on making money on fox business this afternoon at 2:00 eastern time. thank you, sir. a dozen minutes before the top of the hour, coming up. the 20 2 midterms are not far off. raphael warnock is already feeling the heat. meet the former navy seal turned
3:49 am
congressional candidate on a new mission to make it to washington. they're next. ♪ incomparable design makes it beautiful. state of the art technology, makes it brilliant. the visionary lexus nx. lease the 2021 nx 300 for $349 a month for 36 months. experience amazing, at your lexus dealer. my husband and i have never eaten healthier. shingles doesn't care. i logged 10,000 steps today. shingles doesn't care. i get as much fresh air as possible.
3:53 am
former white house adviser just joined the tries defeat raphael warnock. latham saddler knows the value of service and now he wants to bring that experience to washington. >> our country is being undermined from within by a broken political system acting authentic leadership. that is not the american way. we deserve better. >> and latham saddler joins us now. good morning, latham. >> good morning, ainsley. honored to be on the show and i hope you had a wonderful mother's day. ainsley: i did. i hope your wife did too to those precious young boys that you have. congratulations on your successful. student body in georgia that's not easy and went on to serve your country. taught yourself farsi and administration under president trump developing special operations for the national security council. thank you for everything have you done for our country. why do you want to run for senate now? >> thank you so much, ainsley. i'm running for senate because i
3:54 am
am madly in love with this country. it's how it's raised, it's why i decided to join the military and i'm watching what's going on in this country and i'm not happy with what what i'm say seeing. i think most of us who love this country feel the same way. i think the answer is jest generation conservative leadership. step up and serve in washington. i feel a similar conviction i felt in 2011 that led me to join the military. quite frankly with this, i hope that my campaign busts open the gates for other next generation leaders to help our country because it's needed right now. are. >> what do i plan on doing for the state in washington that's not being done now. >> what i'm seeing now is
3:55 am
antithesis of georgia values in washington. conservative policies work. low taxes, low regulation strong national defense. strong border and protected border and also the dignity of the american worker. one of the things i'm seeing every single day when i talk to business owners is that they can't find workers that are -- nobody is applying for jobs. and one of the messages of our campaign is going to be dignity not dependency. as concerns we believe in providing economic opportunity believes in dignity rather than government handout that brings gep den is i. the viewers of your show waking up right now are not waking up to pick up a free paycheck. they are waking up to work hard today as red-blooded americans to attack the day. and god bless them. and i want to fight for them.
3:56 am
and i hope i have the opportunity to do that as a united states senator and the other thing i will say is i'm the only person in this race that serves in the trump white house advancing the america first policy agenda. we all saw that that policy agenda works for the country. and we're seeing the opposite right now. and so the argument i'm making, ainsley, i'm the jennings generation conservative leader that can and will beat raphael warnock. ainsley: you opposed the stimulus and backed election reform laws in georgia. latham saddler, thank you very much for coming on. >> thank you so much. please join the mission at latham saddler.com and hope you all have a wonderful morning. ainsley: thank you. more "fox & friends" moments away.
3:57 am
people everywhere living with type 2 diabetes are waking up to what's possible with rybelsus®. ♪ you are my sunshine ♪ ♪ my only sunshine... ♪ rybelsus® works differently than any other diabetes pill to lower blood sugar in all 3 of these ways... increases insulin... decreases sugar... and slows food. the majority of people taking rybelsus® lowered their blood sugar and reached an a1c of less than 7. people taking rybelsus® lost up to 8 pounds. rybelsus® isn't for people with type 1 diabetes or diabetic ketoacidosis. don't take rybelsus® if you or your family ever had medullary thyroid cancer,
3:58 am
or have multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2, or if allergic to it. stop rybelsus® and get medical help right away if you get a lump or swelling in your neck, severe stomach pain, or an allergic reaction. serious side effects may include pancreatitis. tell your provider about vision problems or changes. taking rybelsus® with a sulfonylurea or insulin increases low blood sugar risk. side effects like nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea may lead to dehydration which may worsen kidney problems. wake up to what's possible with rybelsus®. ♪ please don't take my sunshine away ♪ you may pay as little as $10 per prescription. ask your healthcare provider about rybelsus® today. [sfx: thunder rumbles] [sfx: rainstorm] ♪♪ comfort in the extreme. ♪♪
3:59 am
the lincoln family of luxury suvs. cell phone repair. did you know ♪♪ liberty mutual customizes your car insurance so you only pay for what you need? just get a quote at libertymutual.com. really? i'll check that out. oh yeah. i think i might get a quote. not again! aah, come on rice. do your thing. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪
4:00 am
[sfx: psst psst] allergies don't have to be scary. spraying flonase daily stops your body from overreacting to allergens all season long. psst! psst! all good ♪ jillian: a state of emergency is declared over a cyberattack that forced the is thedown of one of the country's largest fuel pipelines. >> it's not the fuel industry that's vulnerable every industry in our country is vulnerable. >> president biden is expected to meet with lawmakers in an effort to multitrillion dollars spending plan. >> if republicans want to come on board good if not we are doing it alone? enough is enough. >> the thing that made me actually take action was watching my children struggle. >> and seeing what they were actually learning. >> michael mcconnell had some
4:01 am
choice words about the company's current rules. >> facebook exercises too much power. their rules are a shamable. they are not transparent. >> martin truex jr. wins the good year 400 at darlington. doesn't get enough credit. i think because he is a pretty quiet guy. ♪ ♪ baby let me take you a nice drive ♪ tiktok south in now i'm knocking on midnight. steve: looking at the potomac river right there, national harbor, capital wheel stands 14. 42 climate control gondolas open year around. wholly socially distanced. open today. ainsley: how long ago did they built that? steve: probably 10 years ago. ainsley: have you ever been there? used to live close to that area. steve: did indeed over in great falls you can see the potomac right there. kind of a cloudy day down in the d.c. area.
4:02 am
right now 57. going for a high of 65. welcome aboard, folks. hour two of "fox & friends" live if you are are are just joining u.s. last week we started out on the articulated curvey couch. good to be back together. brian: i imagine if you are on that ferris wheel if it's that slow got restroom before. you can't go excuse me up top got to go. make sure of that one thing we have not advanced on. we have not made the ferris wheel better. can you go back to 1910 we still had a ferris wheel. we still have ferris wheels. shouldn't we do something quicker. ainsley: did you like it. brian: not really. ainsley: really like a high school girl a chance to sit next to her for a long time. brian: that would be very good if you have a lot to talk about. ainsley: right. popcorn, coca-cola. brian: never thought about dating in the ferris wheel, good to know where your mind is at. steve: opened in 201 a little birdie in my ear. ainsley: thanks to those wonderful producers.
4:03 am
brian: and everyone who made it necessary with the screw guns. steve: job well done. it's a landmark there now. meanwhile, speaking of the district of columbia, d.c. and 17 state are under a regional state of emergency over a shutdown of one of the largest pipelines here in america. ainsley: apes it suffering from fuel shortages. brian: unbelievable. mark meredith joins us live from the white house with the latest. hey, mark. >> brian, ainsley steve good morning. the white house is doing all it can to contain the fallout of this cyberattack on the colonial pipeline. we don't know how long the impact of this ransomware attack is going to last. one thing is for sure exposing how vulnerable the nation's energy structure is. colonial says it decided to shut down operations on its own to prevent any sort of catastrophic issue. as you can see it runs through some 1 states, stretches more than 5,000 miles. giving nearly half of the east coast its fuel. when normally operating it transports 100 million gallons of fuel a day. while the company said last night while main lines are still
4:04 am
offline, some smaller lines are starting to go back online. the feds have yet to say who is responsible. hiring a third party firm to investigate. statement over the weekend from the white house. the government is working actively to assess the implications of this incident. avoid this disruption to supply and help the company restore it to operations as soon as possible. should be a wake-up call. >> cyber security is a incredible threat to national security. up credible threat to our economy, our livelihood. so we have got to shut down these cyberattacks. that's an infrastructure plan that need to put more money toward. being prepared for cyberattack. >> nest big question is how long will the impact of this last. expert say if it continues to drag on, gas price could go up. i do think it's interesting airport could be impacted by this. places like nashville, charlotte douglas as well as raleigh durham international. all use jet fuel that says this has impact on the economy overall. we will see if the president has
4:05 am
anything to say about this later today as well. pete, ainsley, and brian? brian: thanks so much, mark. president has got to say something. hard to imagine bigger. maybe it goes back to the solar winds hack. maybe it doesn't. bottom line russians are responsible. russian renegade group or some type of evil criminal will organization inside of russia. nothing happens there that vladimir putin doesn't give a thumbs up to. and when he is happy dherks do what they want. if he is unhappy about it and hurting national security, believe me, all those people would be dead. we saw what he does in chess .he will kill them on the spot dead the next day no ramification. the only thing the russians would understand is strength and if you have the same cyber technology that they do. i believe it's better. a lot better. we have to blink their likes. that's the only thing they understand we repretend we are living in the civilized world. next thing is hoar dam. do you think this is where the
4:06 am
pipeline stops? this is where it starts. throwing out a few diplomats doesn't work. ainsley: i agree with you. we depend on this pipeline and it provides so much oil for the east coast. steve: 45%. ainsley: people are worried about gas fries going up again. they are saying they are not expecting it to go up because of this. they already have gone up since joe biden has been in office. steve: they could go up another 15 or 20% this week alone. this criminal ernesto prides suspected of doing it is called dark side, according to. brian: aptly named. steve: who have spoken to the associated press. with this ransomware attack, they say they won't attack hospitals and nursing homes, educational or government targets, and then they donate a portion of the proceeds that they get from the companies when they shake them down to charity. it is unclear whether or not if thick company it colonial has actually paid ransom. tune what? this is actual infrastructure
4:07 am
this. isn't care infrastructure or anything like that. this is part of the infrastructure of the united states this would be good for joe biden to say you know what? with actual infrastructure we need to increase security so this never happens again. charles payne was with us just about 25 minutes ago and had this observation about this is bigger than just this one event. listen. >> 2.5 million barrels a day. 45% of the east coast heating oil, gasoline, jet fuel. that's the magnitude of all of this. and, you know, i have got to tell you not just the oil industry that's vulnerable. every industry in our country is vulnerable in the last -- since last year been over 370 of these ransomware attacks in country alone by far more than any other country. can you imagine if someone broke into your house and then changed the locks and then held your house hostage. you had to pay them for the keys to unlock and go back into your own house it really is
4:08 am
remarkable. brian: private company, but we will need some federal assistance. we will need the best of the best to start securing some of these things that revolve -- their business revolves around national security. then the federal government has got to help out and provide expertise or provide the financing to get the expertise in or you are not going to get green lighted to get any of this stuff to run any of these things without providing proof that you can keep up with the latest in cyber technology. this is extremely disconcerting. it reminds me of when sony was hit by north korea and all this other because they didn't like a movie being released. you wonder what the federal government's job is to secure sony's infrastructure. what is their job in securing this pipeline, when it matters so much to every day americans? ainsley: talking about green lighting. joe biden wants to green light infrastructure package because this is a part of infrastructure what's happening that we just talked about in the news. is he trying to get together with republicans. he wants them to some sort of -- they are at loggerheads right now. he wants to have some sort of a
4:09 am
come to the middle. and i know that bernie sanders is not in favor of that. but is he meeting with this group on wednesday, the leaders. he is heating with schumer, pelosi, mccarthy and mcconnell. and then the next day on thursday is he meeting with this group. you have got shellie more capito, senator barrasso, senator blunt. mike crap toe, toomey and it wicker. steve: is there any way the democrats and republicans can get on the same page and find areas of mutual agreement and common ground because in the past. ainsley: it will be difficult. steve: yeah, so far. because the biden administration has pushed through the coronavirus relief saying look, it's an emergency. can't really say it's an emergency with this. so the white house doesn't see any downside to try and find common ground. they do need 60 votes. they -- for infrastructure they would like to see 60 votes.
4:10 am
so that could mean they get rid of a lot of the, you know, the non-real infrastructure stuff. when it comes to raising taxes, because it is a very popular thing with a lot of people they think they can do that without republican votes. ainsley: a lot of republicans don't want corporate tax rate raised to 28%. worried how it will affect business also they leave our country. people without jobs. brian: breaking it up. 2.4 trillion with all this stuff called human infrastructure. the republicans came to the table with almost $600 billion and bill cassidy said yesterday there is no doubt about it mitch mcconnell gave them the power to do a deal even though mitch mcconnell said those things a couple days ago ill advised i'm going to go against joe biden everything he does. ridiculous statement to make. basically reinforcing everything the democrats claim that republicans don't want to do business with you. bernie sanders says yeah, i agree. this sudden not be a deal that we do. listen to what he says.
4:11 am
>> in general i don't agree with that look, the bottom line is the american people want results. the senate is a very slow-moving process. i would begin starting this work immediately. if republicans want to come on board seriously? great. if not, we're going to do it alone. brian: what, 2.4 trillion what he calls serious. he has no sense of money. he has never really had a job besides a government job. steve: he just wants it done. brian: go to the summer house where socialists go. ainsley: support it if it's just bridges or tunnels or roads. steve: what's called infrastructure. brian: i bet you they get it done. because they know it's a nonstarter. ainsley: do you think democrats will take out some. brian: they will and break it up. he said this is an opportunity to get something done and very little town side to getting it done because if you go for everything, you are going to get nothing. and i think he sees some positives to it and then the next thing we will talk about is actually getting something that could actually be built.
4:12 am
regulations that donald trump started getting rid of because you can't build a tunnel or anything else with all these environmental studies and getting rid of the horn frog and the praying mantis. ainsley: what about the corporate tax? do you think they will come on the middle on that or stay at 21%? brian: that or break that up into a separate package, perhaps. on the corporate tax i can't see the republicans. joe manchin says i won't accept anything lower than 25. ainsley: susan collins not for it all all. steve: some democrats won't vote for it they would have to do it alone. brian: reconciliation might qualify. steve: which would blow up the entire system. bernie went on to say look, you are wasting your timing administration, you it does not need to be bipartisan. >> when somebody out in america gets a check for 1400 bucks, they don't say i can't cash it because it was not done with any republican votes. people see 1400 bucks and they are going to cash it they don't
4:13 am
care how they get it according to bernie. brian: right which is nothing to do with this package. you are not going to get a check off this package. steve: so far. who knows? ainsley: we have been through the country the last year, year and a half. many of you parents kids not in school. kitchen table turned into a classroom. sitting there watching your kids zoom. you are learning about critical race theory. and different pronouns what you can and can't say at certain schools. many parents have a problem with all of this. that's why nor parents are getting involved. brian interviewed three people running for oregon school district and they said they would not have gotten involved, right, brian, unless they had gone through this process with their kids and they think things need to change. brian: three people running, the majority. then don't like the curriculum and going to take action. for the most part jobs don't pay anything take a lot of time. care about your kids in the community. risen to what they are saying on why you got involved. >> the thing that actually made me take action was watching my
4:14 am
children struggle over the last year and distance learning and then also seeing what they were actually learning in their classrooms. >> seeing my daughter struggle at home so, it made sense that, you know, i get involved definitely needed to be in school. she definitely needed to get caught up in all the subjects. >> i always thought the school board was nonpolitical. nonpartisan. if you look at what the oregon tempt of education it focusing on their website about what they are teaching kids, it's all about divisiveness and it's dangerous. steve: well, the school board used to be nonpolitical when the curriculum was not political. but, you know, it was just last week we introduced you to a couple of people down in south lake which is one of the suburbs of dallas who won in a landslide. they were parents who were watching what was being taught to their kids in school. they did not like the idea of
4:15 am
critical race theory. and so they ran for school board to open seats and they won by a landslide. over 70% of the people in our town said we want parents like that who think like us to be on the school board. ainsley: this school board, brian, you did the interview. this school board said we are going to teach critical race theory and not going to fully reopen? brian: about reopening critical race theory and so-called white supremacy. they are supposed to have 9-year-olds apologize for. the statement from the vice chair of ben la pine school said this la pine school committed to excellence and equity for all of it students there is a buzz word. it seeks to ensure curriculum and practices that reflect and honor all of its students to connected to the world. buzz word and attack the natural evolution of education there is a theory thought at it collegiate level and not k
4:16 am
through 12. it's not evolutionary concept. it's a new concept which people have a problem with because they never checked with them. the average person, it's very rare, i have a friend of mine who is on the school board and he was the first one that enlightened me to the intensity of it. how much time it takes and how it's so important to have a majority pause people out there, they could change a community in one election. and they said there is huge forces in communities change curriculum. these 20 and 30-year-olds come in somebody finances them and look to take over town by town what your kids are learning in school. one of the first things they learn is how bad this country is. steve: it will be interesting to see how many people across the country do get involved in the school board. for the most part you only have one set of kids. and they are only in the schools a certain amount of time. and what can you, as a parent, do to make sure shah what they learn is appropriate? ainsley: that has been one of the benefits of being able to see the zoom and. brian: hearing it.
4:17 am
ainsley: her son does not come home and talk to her about what is he doing in school. he used to. now he is in the teenage years. she says i don't know what's going on at the school because he doesn't tell me anything anymore. so she has been able to through this process see what he is learning. steve: what did you leisure in school today? ainsley: nothing. did you have a good day? yeah. brian: reports cards used to come in the mail. now wait a second isn't the marketing period up it's online can you check it really? why didn't you tell me that you have to stay when the marking periods are. dad from are brearley wrote the letter that changed everything. he like so many others taking action board members. he might be the father of this 1-year-old might be starting his own school he has gotten such a huge hit on facebook page and everything else there is a big push in local new york city to start his own school. think about that. ainsley: he lives in my neighborhood. i believe. the school is in my neighborhood. brian: i will see if i can get you in. ainsley: connection?
4:18 am
i don't want to go through that again. brian: don't forget ian prior in virginia how is he pushing back. steve: 7:17 in the east. jillian joins us with a fox news alert. jillian: that's right. >> good morning. >> the manhunt is intensifying for the person of interest in a times square shooting that injured three people. farrakhan mohammed's brother told nypd mohammed meant to shoot him after an argument. instead three bystanders were hit including a 4-year-old. describing her the strongest little girl i have ever seen. a massive fire destroys an historic church in philadelphia i more than it firefighters try to save the catholic church. built in 1884. but had been vacant for a couple of years. church was reportedly going to be rented out to religious groups. now only the front side remains. no word yet on what caused the fire. people in new jersey may start getting paid to get vaccinated. governor phil murphy is considering khashoggi as an
4:19 am
insensitive to get the jab. this as he aims to get 70% of new jersey adults vaccinated by june. in washington, d.c., they are doing a take a shot get a beer campaign, handing out a free brew after getting the vaccine. and now to this navy veteran motor cycle after hard times forced him to sell his. three tours in the middle east. charity group hog force heros heard his story and presented him with a new harley during a ceremony with dozen of fellow veterans. it was the group's 17th bike presentation. we thank him for his service. a look at your headlines. send it back to you. steve: we do indeed. brian: thanks, jillian. 19 manipulates after the hour. straight ahead. blasting the ban. facebook's oversight board co-chair speak out against the social network as it continues to silence trump. spoke out against trump, too. new york veterans threatening legal action if their parade permit is shot down after pot
4:20 am
smoking group gets the green lights but veterans don't. sickening. ♪ r severe eosinophilic asthma. not for sudden breathing problems. allergic reactions can occur. get help right away for swelling of face, mouth, tongue, or trouble breathing. infections that can cause shingles have occurred. don't stop steroids unless told by your doctor. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection. may cause headache, injection-site reactions, back pain, and fatigue. ask your doctor about nucala. find your nunormal with nucala.
4:22 am
are you managing your diabetes... ...using fingersticks? with the new freestyle libre 2 system, a continuous glucose monitor, you can check your glucose with a painless, one-second scan. and now with optional alarms, you can choose to be notified if you go too high or too low. and for those who qualify,
4:23 am
4:24 am
and sometimes the hardest thing about homework is finding a place to do it. so why not hook community centers up with wifi? for kids like us, and all the amazing things we're gonna learn. over the next 10 years, comcast is committing $1 billion to reach 50 million low-income americans with the tools and resources they need to be ready for anything. i hope you're ready. 'cause we are. ♪ ♪ >> subject to the same rules on facebook as everyone else. they were not justified in taking him down indefinitely. they did not provide any reasons for that that was wrong. their rules are a shambles. they are not transparent. they are unclear. they internally inconsistent. steve: the rules are a shambles he says. that's facebook's oversight board co-chair criticizing facebook for pulling the plug indefinitely on former president donald trump's facebook account.
4:25 am
sosdoes the social media giant we would too much power author of the upcoming book woke inc. ihave vic ramaswamy. different rules to show they are doing something are they really self-criticism is a veneer smoke crean to create this air of -- they did exactly what mark zuckerberg wanted to. reinforced the decision that facebook made to take away it the voice of the president of the united states. president trump should take this case not to facebook's sham appropriate supreme court take it to the radio real u.s. supreme court. the u.s. supreme court. i actually think he has a potentially groundbreaking legal theory facts are on his side where these companies aren't
4:26 am
like normal private companies. they are effectively doing the bidding of democrats in congress who have threatened them with regulation and reprisal if they don't go out and censor content that they as democrats don't want to see and get section 230 immunity to go out and do it. combination of a stick and carrot turns private action into state like action governed by the first amendment. clarence thomas threw the gauntlet interested in hearing the case in an machine opinion he wrote recently i think president trump should take it to the real u.s. supreme court. steve: heard there are a number of people on capitol hill republicans and democrats both are talking about because these are monopolies. maybe it's time to exercise some antitrust activity and try to break them up. we will see about that. meanwhile, wanted to ask but starbucks. they apparently are considering quitting facebook. they have 35 million followers and one of the problems vivek is
4:27 am
in addition to posting coffee pictures they also do some social media things regarding hateful comments in response so some of their posts. and so when they get out into those things where people are saying hey, starbucks, you might feel this way, but i feel that way. and they don't like it. >> yeah. so woke corporations of course want to have it both ways. speak out boldly about social justice issues and yet when they experience think dissent or any disagreement, they immediately go into hiding. and this is actually the modern moment where we have completely escaped with an open marketplace of ideas where people can assert their own views so then they have to take the disagreements they get from others. instead most elite institutions in america, including companies have now gotten into the habit of classifying any speech as of course hate speech. as a way of ducking debate and dissent.
4:28 am
that has eris rated our culture. this isn't a legal issue. it's a cultural issue. gotten rid of our culture of free speech and replaced it with this new culture of fear. starbucks is doing what starbucks does. shameful and embodiment where our culture stands today. steve: hateful comments are not about their lattes it's about when they get into social issues. facebook just sent us a statement moments ago. they say we have invested in technologies to take down hate speech and we proactively detect 97% of what we remove. we also offer tools to limit this content from appearing on partner's pages including ways for brands to control those who can comment on their posts. so, facebook said hey, starbucks, don't go away. we have got an algorithm for you. >> yeah, look, these algorithms are as good as the people who train them. algorithm is a way to use a trained data set and applying it. depend on what the trained data
4:29 am
set is. a lot of the comment we see online including for starbucks are comments that disagree with the public positions they take on contentious controversial social issues that should be the product of debate. some engineer is fed an algorithm that says any dissent to it support of black lives matter stands as hate speech that will replicate itself. steve: well, let's see what starbucks decides to do. vivek, thank you for joining us today. >> thank you. steve: all right. 7:29 now here in the east. up next, outrage grows after new york city gives green light to a cannabis parade and turns down a memorial day march for american heroes. how the group of vets plans to fight to march right after this. ♪ ♪
4:31 am
4:32 am
keeping your oysters business growing has you swamped. you need to hire. i need indeed indeed you do. the moment you sponsor a job on indeed you get a shortlist of quality candidates from a resume data base claim your seventy-five-dollar credit when you post your first job at indeed.com/promo it's an important time to save. with priceline, you can get up to 60% off amazing hotels. and when you get a big deal... you feel like a big deal. ♪♪ priceline. every trip is a big deal. the ups and downs of frequent mood swings can take you to deep, depressive lows. or, give you unusually high energy, even when depressed. overwhelmed by bipolar i? ask about vraylar. some medicines only treat the lows or highs. vraylar effectively treats depression, acute manic and mixed episodes of bipolar i in adults. full-spectrum relief for all bipolar i symptoms, with just one pill, once a day.
4:33 am
elderly patients with dementia-related psychosis have an increased risk of death or stroke. call your doctor about unusual changes in behavior or suicidal thoughts. antidepressants can increase these in children and young adults. report fever, stiff muscles, or confusion, which may mean a life-threatening reaction, or uncontrollable muscle movements, which may be permanent. side effects may not appear for several weeks. high cholesterol and weight gain, high blood sugar, which can lead to coma or death, may occur. movement dysfunction, sleepiness, and stomach issues are common side effects. when bipolar i overwhelms, vraylar helps smooth the ups and downs. ♪ ♪ brian: veterans are fighting back after new york city takes the ax to a military memorial day parade, it's been 102 year old tradition.
4:34 am
island veterans organization threatening legal action if it is not granted a permit by noon today. especially after, get, this the city grave the green light to pot smokers to hold a cannabis parade just a day ago. joining us now is jane haines the iii the ceo of the staten island veterans organization along with his attorney brendan landry. first off to you, james, were you shocked to see -- hear about the green light to the pot parade? >> yes. yes, i opened up the paper sunday afternoon. i see this big joint in the paper. i'm not against marijuana but story. brian: compared to veterans memorial day? what legal action can you take? what is the game plan? >> as you said, brian, earlier, this is disturbing this. is sickening what the city is doing with our veterans here there is a clear double standard being applied. we are just asking the city not to play politics with our veterans. so, at this point, we have set a
4:35 am
deadline of noon for today on the memorial day is three weeks away. and so if they don't issue a permit, if they don't correct course here, we will be bringing an action in supreme court new york state richmond county in new york to compel them to issue a permit. brian: james, how many people are behind this effort to bring back this parade and what are you willing to do to acknowledge the pandemic to make it safe? even though outdoors vaccinated you should be safe, it's ridiculous. >> well, we had a convoy, we don't get ready this year we will do a convoy again with social distancing. people can wear masks and still be safe. they were safe last year. brian: go ahead, i'm sorry. >> really, the point about the parade, just last weekend, the
4:36 am
weekend before last. this marijuana parade took over blocks of park avenue and broadway. numerous other blocks of manhattan, police barricades, police personnel on the ground. and we're just asking for the same treatment, right? there was the same process that was put in place last week for the cannabis parade, that same process should be put in place at least for our veterans. brian: i mean, but legally, do you have a strategy to get them to this parade to get it working, to get the police to provide the protection to make the parade happen? >> absolutely. so, there is a procedure in new york state it's called article 78. basically city or state can't do anything that creates a double standard. we believe that they engaged in an arbitrary decision to deny the veterans their parade. there is also first amendment concerns here as well as to their ability to hold such demonstration. not really a demonstration, they are calling saying can you do a
4:37 am
protest but you can't do a parade. so, yeah, certainly legal grounds for -- to compel the state of ohio issue this permit. brian: unbelievable. you see these sold out arenas in texas and florida, indoors and you can't march in a parade voluntarily to salute those who lost their lives in battalion on memorial day by the way staten island not new york city extremely republican: james lantry iii thank you for your time and service. >> thank you. brian: reached out to mayor de blasio's for a statement we did not hear back. i imagine they are still sleeping. violent crashes overnight verizon holy site, live overseas, more than 200 palestinians are taken to the hospital. in business, it's never just another day. it's the big sale, or the big presentation. the day where everything goes right. or the one where nothing does.
4:38 am
with comcast business you get the network that can deliver gig speeds to the most businesses and advanced cybersecurity to protect every device on it— all backed by a dedicated team, 24/7. every day in business is a big day. we'll keep you ready for what's next. comcast business powering possibilities. 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. ♪ among my patients i often see them have teeth sensitivity as well as gum issues. 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. [sfx: thunder rumbles] [sfx: rainstorm] ♪♪
4:39 am
comfort in the extreme. ♪♪ the lincoln family of luxury suvs. ahhh! get out of here mouse. ahhh! ♪♪ >> tech: every customer has their own safelite story. don't this couple was onrminix. 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. ♪
4:41 am
and the gentle waves of the sea on your skin. feel the warm jamaican breeze lift your spirits and nourish your soul. escape to exactly what makes your heart beat. you will love every moment. jamaica. heartbeat of the world. let's go. from prom dresses to workouts and new adventures you hope the more you give the less they'll miss. but even if your teen was vaccinated against meningitis in the past they may be missing vaccination for meningitis b. although uncommon, up to 1 in 5 survivors of meningitis will have long term consequences. now as you're thinking about all the vaccines your teen might need make sure you ask your doctor if your teen is missing meningitis b vaccination. ♪ ainsley: we are back with a fox news alert.
4:42 am
overnight, 300 palestinians injured during violent protests at a jerusalem holy site. brian: all right. israeli police firing tear gas and stun grenades following days of mounting tensions. steve: amy kellogg joins us now live from jerusalem with the very latest. amy? >> hi, steve, brian and ainsley. the international community is call for calm here but not clear how that can be achieved. the situation is so unpredictable and volatile at the moment, these are the worst clashes we have seen in jerusalem in many, many years. most of them are happening around the mosque third holiest knight islam. we have some new video to show you of a car of the tensions spilling out onto the streets. the police released this. you will see palestinians attacking the car of an israeli. it is not clear what provoked it. the man apparently then lost control of his car smashed into some of the violent crowd just outside the walls of the old city. this is the third day of intense clashes fueled by really a mix
4:43 am
of events and provocations on both sides including the planned eviction of some arabs from east jerusalem. what it boils down to is the fate of jerusalem that long standing and intractable issue. this that conviction supposed to be decided on today has been kicked down the road for a month that may alleviate some of the pressure. we will all be watching what happens this afternoon on the jerusalem day march which is when when many of the right wing jews and nationalist groups will be marching with flags through the old city and palestinians call it, it happens each year provocation. this year though it happens in the waning days of the holy month of ramadan. steve, ainsley, and brian back to you. ainsley: in the valley of sin pitted residents in a small town against each other. watch this. >> surprises even me how
4:44 am
traumatizing it is. i haven't slept well the last two nights in anticipation of this interview. that's how post-traumatic stress works. have a flashback experience. so i lie awake remembering the trauma that we all went through. ♪ >> have you probably heard about washington, the all-american town by some accounts is them a sorted child sex ring. >> when the cases began in 1994. >> over two years, 44 people were charged with sex abuse. >> largest sex ring in the history of america at that time. >> allegations of groups of adults meeting regularly to molest and rape dozens of children. >> that city was divided. half of the people were convinced that there was a it
4:45 am
sex it sting behind every sign post. the other half who thought that the people who thought that were crazy. >> if it's true, it's one of the worst sex crimes certainly i have ever heard of. i was there.i know what happene. >> you are absolutely certain that detective perez has followed police procedure correctly in this investigation. >> i have never seen an investigation as thorough as this one. >> you liar. >> those that proclaim their innocence the loudest are usually the most guilty. >> i can't believe that the children lies, the doctors are lying. >> the sky would have looked sun set with all the red flags lighting up this thing. >> everybody should have a chance to repent and redeem themselves but i'm having a hard time forgiving. >> if i could tell my 11-year-old self one thing. it would be run.
4:46 am
♪ >> believe the kids. kids don't lie. steve: so powerful. catch the unbelievably true story in the valley of sin now on fox nation. new episodes available every day this week. sign up at fox nation.com to see this plus get exclusive access to other original content, events and your favorite tv personality on any device. that is really something. ainsley: compelling, watch it. brian: jillian mele compelling. i want to watch that. go ahead and begin with you guys. go ahead and begin with update we have been following very closely. the family of missing california mom maya millete posting caption how about mother's day may a, we will bring you home. this comes as her husband is hit
4:47 am
with a temporary gun violence restraining order this. happened around the time that his home was searched last week for a second time. it was also searched back in january. the application for the order says he may owns a many as 20 guns and be that 18 remain unaccounted for. will may a went missing on january 7th. a pilot suffers minor injuries arizona overpass. can you see it upside down with the tail sticking up. emergency crews shut down the road as they got the 23-year-old woman out of the cockpit and to the hospital. the cause of the clash is unclear. the faa will be handling the investigation. bar stools sports founder dave portnoy blasts the stock market investors sit down with tucker carlson. >> designed to keep the. >> richard: and, you know, the little guy struggles which a lot of the game -- the power held the market very hard to win it as the little guy.
4:48 am
jillian: tucker's full exclusive interview with elle present at a goes life today fox nation stay tuned for that send it back to you. steve: jillian, thank you very much. ainsley: hand it over to adam klotz, he has our forecast for us. hey, adam. adam: good morning, guys. tracking what is our first tropical storm here of the season. actually. this one in the pacific, so the first of the pacific season. the season actually doesn't start for another couple of days this sitting just a couple hundred miles off the coast of mexico is going to turn tout sea. no threat to land here a good reminder that hurricane season will really be ramping up here in the next couple of months. otherwise, here is your temperatures across the country. do you notice there is cold air out there, 34 degrees in cleveland earlier this morning. 44 degrees in chicago. that cold air frost advisories stretching across portions of michigan, indiana, getting down into illinois. indianapolis. areas where it is really cold here not just this morning but the next couple of mornings. that is all along the line of storms that we have seen fired
4:49 am
up here the last 24 hours. that's a line of thunderstorms is going to sweep off to the east as we will see at least at times a bit of a foggy day. behind that the cold air still remains feeling like winter. back out to you guys. brian: we will deal with it because the end is soon, is here. spring is almost here. summer feels it, sometimes. sometimes i feel like it's summer. sometimes it doesn't. maybe because i was in florida. 11 minutes after the top of the hour, coming up, a major break through in the race to roll out a major covid-19 vaccine as the fda is authorized to authorize pfizer's vaccine for teens. will yours take it ♪ ♪
4:53 am
ainsley: the fda is expected to authorize pfizer's covid-19 vaccine for kids 12 to 15 this week this after a march clinical trial pfizer's vaccine 100 percent efficacy for teenagers. what do parents need to know before vaccinating their children. author of the brand new book panic attack dr. nicole saphier.
4:54 am
hey, dr. saphier. >> good morning, ainsley. >> what do parents need to know? should we get our kids between those ages vaccinated. >> ainsley, just like any vaccination at that age you want to have the conversation with the pediatrician. there are risks and benefits to everything. 12 to 15-year-olds have very similar biologies to young aguls adults. they are demonstrating some getting that long covid. especially if you have a high risk child may be overweight, having asthma. definitely have that conversation with your pediatrician. i don't think this push is going to get us to that herd immunity that everyone is crying for in the media. we are much closer to herd immunity and don't need to extend the vaccination to children goat to us herd immunity. i do think some children are severely affected by this virus. so it is important to have a safe and efficacious vaccine available for them. ainsley: good deal. you wrote an op-ed, it's called -- titled biden vs. big pharma here is why waiving
4:55 am
patent rights on covid-19 vaccines is a big mistake. explain that. >> so, ainsley, you know, president biden during his campaign trail said if there was a successful covid vaccine he would give away the patent so other countries benefit from it. this gets a dangerous precedent. the reason u.s. is global leader in pharmaceutical is we have such strong many rights. if you give away what will make those pharmaceutical companies want to innovate this. is virtue signaling this. does he have little to help nations in need right now. the good news is pharmaceutical giants have already pledged billions of doses in addition to what the united states and other countries are pledging. billions of doses to these countries. really why saying that they support giving away the intellectual property rights, again, virtue signaling doesn't do anything tangible to help these struggling countries and it sets a dangerous precedent by chipping away at these property rights that are so crucial to
4:56 am
our innovation. if you start doing that now, where will the government stop? will they do away with the private entities all together? that's what i get concerned about. ainsley: you make some great points in this article. you congratulate operation warp speed and you talk about the efforts that we have done here in the u.s. to have such a surplus of these vaccines and how we are helping other countries like india. it's a good reeled. check it out. dr. saphier, thank you. >> thank you. ainsley: you are welcome. ben domenech and dan bongino join us live for the final hour of "fox & friends." ♪ ♪ you need a financial plan that can help grow and protect your money. an annuity can help cover essential expenses in retirement. have the right financial professional show you how... ...
4:57 am
4:58 am
4:59 am
to lower blood sugar in all 3 of these ways... increases insulin... decreases sugar... and slows food. the majority of people taking rybelsus® lowered their blood sugar and reached an a1c of less than 7. people taking rybelsus® lost up to 8 pounds. rybelsus® isn't for people with type 1 diabetes or diabetic ketoacidosis. don't take rybelsus® if you or your family ever had medullary thyroid cancer, or have multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2, or if allergic to it. stop rybelsus® and get medical help right away if you get a lump or swelling in your neck, severe stomach pain, or an allergic reaction. serious side effects may include pancreatitis. tell your provider about vision problems or changes. taking rybelsus® with a sulfonylurea or insulin increases low blood sugar risk. side effects like nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea may lead to dehydration which may worsen kidney problems. wake up to what's possible with rybelsus®.
5:00 am
♪ please don't take my sunshine away ♪ you may pay as little as $10 per prescription. ask your healthcare provider about rybelsus® today. >> the number one reason now that people aren't going back to work is fear. >> it's a cop-out and the administrations embarrassed and they should be. >> a manhunt intensifying for the person of interest in a times square shooting that injured three people. >> among those shot a four- year-old shopping for toys. >> when is this going to end? >> is the mask going to be something we have with us? >> what is conceivable that during certain seasonal periods people might actually elect to wear masks. steve: outrage grows after new york city gives light to a cannabis parade for american heros. >> this is disturbing, this is sickening what the city is doing with our veterans.
5:01 am
>> i don't know if people are serious or not they are like run for office, do this , i'd never do that because you can't get anything done. everyone should want to help small businesses. >> it was disheartening to see government not do anything. >> ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ainsley: wake up, vegas. thanks so much for turning on your tv's this morning and watching us at fox & friends what's the weather like there? steve: it's going to be dry. ainsley: it's going to be a dry heat. brian: i watched bar rescue which is staged the entire season in las vegas little by little is standing everybody up, straightening everything out talking about this new generation of restaurant owners you got to watch bar rescue. ainsley: that show cracks me up, he goes in there and he lays down the hammer and says you're doing this wrong and this wrong. they are so funny because the way that they -- brian: just so you know it's real. ainsley: it's like a party and people are drinking all the booze behind the counter. brian: right. and then he straightens
5:02 am
everything out but one thing carrot top was on last night. he's a very funny comedian. ainsley: what happened to him? he hasn't been around has he? steve: he's in vegas. brian: i have not kept in touch with carrot top. if anyones seen him let me know if he's still funny because he used to be funny when he was skinny and now he's a big body builder. steve: is he still called carrot top? brian: yeah, they introduced him, that we have a mutual friend carrot top and in came carrot top. steve: you thought you were just getting the news when you tuned in you get so much more. speaking of the news last week, on our program, we gave you the jobs number. the experts had anticipated 1 million jobs be added and it was only a quarter of that. and do you know why? we did instant analysis. we said obviously, this is because so many people are getting paid extra money by the federal government to sit at home with their unemployment. it's a supplemental and one of the reasons we have heard from so many people that people are
5:03 am
not lining up to go to work. ainsley: restaurants can't fill their positions because people are getting paid more with this unemployment stimulus money than they were in the restaurant or maybe just a little bit less , but they would rather be at home in their pajamas watching netflix or hanging out with friends. steve: watching bar rescue. ainsley: do you blame them though? steve: carrot top is on for goodness sakes. brian: right and i'll say this. there is that element of the supplemental paying you more not to get back to work so therefore we're stuck at 6% with all these jobs, left unfilled, the other thing is, people are also so freaked out because for the last year if you go outside you're going to die, you got to wear three masks look at the president of the united states, we got vaccines, and we're going to have to keep them for a year, gina romando, the commerce secretary was on over the weekend and she like every other biden official was not saying it was about the supplemental insurance and a rescue package because we just got 900 billion in september. she was saying it's because of
5:04 am
fear of virus, listen. >> i think we have a long way to go to recover from the pandemic. there's so many americans still struggling, 8 million fewer jobs than there were pre-pandemic. >> we have to remember that when the president moved to make this happen, this unemployment insurance has been a lifeline, a survival, you know, lifeline for so many americans. the number one reason now that people aren't going back to work is what you said. fear, or they can't find child care, or schools are still closed, so we'll monitor it as necessary, but right now, we don't think that's the reason people aren't able to go back to work. ainsley: that might be true for a small percentage of people , but the majority, we're learning, it's because they're getting paid to stay-at-home. steve: and there is some fear, but and there is some child care problems, because you know, if you're a parent, and you want to go to work, it's hard to find anybody. we've been telling you that businesses, you know, you drive
5:05 am
up to a mcdonald's on the highway, and they'll have a sign on the door that says, um, we're only operating the drive- through window, because we can't get anybody to operate the dining room. i just got a note from my friend ken down in miami and said usually, it takes me two minutes to get an uber. now, it's taking north of 10 minutes and the ride that used to be $15 is now $32, so, not only are small business owners when it comes to restaurants having trouble, but also the small business people who are the uber drivers, there's so few of them who want to go to work -- brian: you can't count on them anymore. ainsley: it's true. if you're in an area and you don't have, you know, so many times when i'm out on long island if i don't take my car i'll rely on an uber but yesterday i was trying to get one. went on uber, no cars available, no cars available, lyft, no cars available. brian: same thing we were doing a shoot in florida same thing at
5:06 am
night. what they did is they destroyed the car business, the private car business, and then they stopped showing up, because the money doesn't add up anymore , and also, a lot of these democratic governments, local governments are taking aim at the gig economy. they don't think it's fair for people to make their own decisions. ainsley: brian you mentioned earlier in the last hour i think these checks are going to continue, at least through september 6. now they are talking about maybe extending them even longer so people aren't going to be looking for jobs right now. you'll start seeing people look for jobs at the end of august, middle of august because you don't get paid those stimulus checks if you go back to work. steve: well the secretary of commerce should have talked to the people who have been on our program, she says the unemployment number is not because of the supplemental; however, the business owners say it is. watch. >> many people want to work. no, they don't, when you're handing them so much unemployment, so much money, it's backfiring. >> the extended benefits, i
5:07 am
think, are giving people pause, and they are saying hey, let me stay home a little bit longer to figure out what i do next. >> they are incentivizing people to stay home, and that just doesn't make sense. i don't care what side of the aisle you're on that doesn't make sense. >> the employment is not lining up with the demand that we're seeing in the marketplace, and we're having to get really creative on how to bring employees into the business. i would love to take the un out of unemployment benefits and incentivize employees to come back to work. steve: well the march study by the national bureau of economic research showed the boost in unemployment benefits was connected to lower job applications. ainsley: the numbers speak for themselves. only they were expecting 1 million jobs in april to be filled and only a fourth were. brian: they revised the previous estimate down so let's talk about anthony fauci. i'm not sure anybody is listen ing to him anymore, because the stuff he says is so bizarre, dr. scott gotleib and
5:08 am
other doctors on our channel just to show you, it's not just fox. they came out and said i think it's time we're at the point we got to start lifting up the ordinances and wholesale fashion, for indoor living. let alone dining so dr. fauci would says well he does not take into natural immunity, the people that have had it and are now have antibodies, he just says we've got to get 70% of the country immunized and what 43,000 cases dramatically down from the hundreds of thousands of cases still not good enough for him. he says i have a good idea. i'm enjoying wearing the masks so much i think we'll wear them a lot during different times, just so we don't get the flu. listen to him just make things up. >> we've had practically a non- existent flu season this year, merely because people were doing the kinds of public health things that were directed predominantly against covid-19 so it is conceivable that as we go on a year or two or more
5:09 am
from now that during certain seasonal periods, when you have respiratory-born viruses like the flu, people might actually elect to wear masks to diminish the likelihood that you'll spread these respiratory-borne diseases. ainsley: he is saying people might elect to wear them and not , we're going to make you wear them. brian: how soon it becomes a privilege not to wear them. steve: but right now all the things the cdc says they are guidelines. it's not like it's the national mandate, although certain states do have mandates, remember, it was donald trump who said okay, because every state is different , you know, in texas, we're going to have governor abbott take care of things. speaking of governor abbott he tweeted on sunday, since texas opened, 100%, two months ago, covid hospitalizations are the lowest in almost 11 months, five consecutive days with fewer than 2,000 covid cases, covid positive rate below 5% for six straight days, fatalities down
5:10 am
more than two-thirds. ainsley: wonderful. brian: look at san francisco they get 20 cases a day, 70% of the population is vaccinated, why are they having any restrictions at all? i know there's a lot you have to step over homeless people to get to where you have to go but having said that they don't seem to care about them, you should not be wearing masks anymore indoors. doctors are basically saying that, and we should understand that. you can't just say to people, go get vaccinated, your life isn't going to change when go indoors you better put a mask on and when you walk outside the president of the united states wearing two masks because i want to protect you he shouts out over the weekend. from what? it's 96% effective, you can't carry the virus, what are you protecting us from? ainsley: i will say there is so much freedom, i understand there are people that have vaccine residency but we all three are vaccinated and i tell you when i got it it was like okay. steve: a relief. ainsley: now i'm not going to get it, i'm not going to die from it if i do get it. steve: right but it's the people
5:11 am
who have not gotten the shot which, you know, ultimately they are the ones who are in peril, and they are the ones -- brian: making their own decisions. steve: absolutely but nonetheless that's why the cdc is still doing that. when you were talking to -- brian: but that's ridiculous. you can't revise, here are the vaccines, we have all these states giving most back because they've almost reached capacity. you make a decision i have total respect for that because with that decision comes the distancing you want to keep if you have underlying conditions that's the risk you'll take so you go do it so we have an option, we took it with a lucky country that came up with these vaccines we're very fortunate to have access anywhere you go, in this country , you can now get them if you don't choose it that's okay just amend your life that way and let us get back to normal and maybe you have the underlying conditions of the antibodies. ainsley: and people can make their own choices. brian: absolutely. i'm not telling anyone to get it or not get it. steve: right but they have to run by the rules and social
5:12 am
distance and all that stuff. brian: don't let us do it. steve: listen, the worry is that they would infect somebody else who also, like them, is not vaccinated. brian: that's their choice. steve: i understand people are ic majoritying making the choice but ainsley when you were talking to dr. sapphire an interesting thing is they are trying to get to 70% herd immunity which who knows when that's going to happen and she says i think herd immunity is much higher than the government is saying, so that begs the question, why doesn't government do some sort of randomized survey of people taking blood tests and what not to figure out what are herd immunity is right now. if it's 60%, we would like to know that. brian: steve, do you remember the talk about the antibodies? we're going to get antibody tests to find out who had it and whose over it to help us while we wait for the vaccine to come in. now nobody talks about that. dr. fauci never talks about people that have immunity by the way a lot of people get sick because they had it already, they get the shot, and for two days, it's almost like they got
5:13 am
the flu. explain that to people ahead of time, but they aren't doing that , and herd immunity could be something we're all in the same for , but no one likes to talk about that, and i'm really confused by that. they love talking about fear, never want to talk about why 18,000 people went to jacksonville indoors, without masks, and there's no surge in jacksonville. in texas, no surge there. we never study the positive results. we only study the negative results. ainsley: i don't understand why some of these democratic governments are picking and choosing what can open what can't, because doesn't even make sense. for instance you had this interview with the veterans recently and the attorney, there is the memorial day parade that's been going on, it's a tradition on staten island. brian: over 100 years. ainsley: yeah, more than 100 years and our mayor here, bill deblasio, allowing cannabis parades and black lives matter protests and parades allowed a small version a skinny version you might say of the st. patrick 's day parade but will not allow these veterans to have their big parade on staten
5:14 am
island and they are furious. they applied for this permit on february 27th and bill deblasio nixed it on march 9. brian: yeah, here is the attorney taking action, not willing to let memorial day go by without this parade. he's got a plan, listen. >> this is disturbing and sickening what the city is doing with our veterans here and there's a clear double standard being applied and we're asking the city not to play politics with our veterans. this marijuana parade took over blocks of park avenue, of broad way, numerous other blacks of manhattan, police barricades, police personnel on the ground and we're just asking for the same treatment. >> it's ironic because we've lost many people in over 200 years, in the military service and the freedoms to march down broadway with a joint, and we just hope we can remember those people with our parade. steve: the attorney did send a letter to the police department asking for a permit
5:15 am
by today, and if they don't get it, they could wind up dragging the city into court, because it does not seem fair, you let one organization have a parade, and you're not letting us it seems like hypocrisy. brian: it's not fair. ainsley: unconstitutional. brian: you don't have to go to a parade. if you feel you're at risk and you don't want to take the risk you didn't get vaccinated, like most seniors in this country you don't have to go. give people the option, you don't have to watch, either. give people the option to go or not go. that's called choice. it's not a privilege, it is a choice. we reached out to mayor mayor deblasio's office and we also know he sleeps until 10 and they have the keys to wait outside for him to wake up and get to the office. ainsley: veterans have are saying it's a slap in the face. steve: absolutely. brian: absolutely, 30 years, a special ceremony for them. ainsley: some of these men and women are getting honored and getting awards. it's going to be outside. steve: yeah. brian: it's nuts. they say outside without a mask totally okay. steve: let's see what they do.
5:16 am
brian: and a way to inspire people to get a vaccine who might be reluctant to say i don't want to miss this parade i'm going to get it. steve: well the attorney made a good case and let's see if the police gives them a% mit. ainsley: maybe deblasio will open it backup, because he opened it up because of the backlash, so reach out to his office, if you feel like you're one of those that wants the parade to continue. steve: we would like the news to continue and for that we turn to jillian. jillian: good morning, overnight , a delta flight was forced to make an emergency landing after a bird struck the cockpit windshield. the plane was taking off from atlanta en route to d.c. when it happened. the pilots were able to safely return the aircraft to atlanta. no one on board was injured. >> bob baffort hads is denying any and all wrongdoing after kentucky derby winner tests positive for steroids and the trainer is now banned from churchill downs if promising his
5:17 am
full cooperation ahead of the saturday preakness. >> i got the biggest gut punch in racing for something that i didn't do, and this is really, it's disturbing, it's an in justice to the horse. i don't feel embarrassed. i feel like i was wrong. jillian: this is the second time he has faced cheating allegation s. he will join america's newsroom later this morning. >> starbucks is considering leaving facebook over online haters. the coffee giant is getting an overwhelming number of negative comments on its woke social media posts about social and racial justice issues. starbucks saying we believe in bringing communities together both in person and online and we stand against hate speech. >> how about this. tom brady first-ever nfl touch town ball hits the auction block. the receiver who caught the first of many brady scores back in 2001 launched the ball into the stands in celebration. well, a pats fan tested in a
5:18 am
bank safe deposit box for almost 20 years only visiting it before playoff games and the current bid is at nearly $79,000 and the auction runs through june 4. how much do you guys think that goes for? brian: it's going to go for a lot and probably a good investment with tom brady. ainsley: have they vary verified the signature? brian: could you look into that jillian? jillian: sure. ainsley: i was a remember of an organization and they asked me to get a signed football from a celebrity and i said sure, and so i had someone reach out to, so i got the ball in the mail and i gave it to the organization and they verified the signature and it was not the guy's signature. they could not put it on the auction block. i was so embarrassed because it wasn't my fault. i just asked for it. steve: well you didn't say you'd get that person to sign it, you just wanted that person's off. brian: i did it. that's a scandal.
5:19 am
ainsley: why isn't the football part of the auction? they are like um we didn't want to tell you but we couldn't verify that signature. brian: jim thorpe isn't signing footballs anymore. ainsley: 18 minutes after the top of the hour coming up as progressives push to pack the supreme court, a washington post op-ed is now pressuring justice bryer to retire so democrats can find a more liberal replacement ben domenech will sound off on that plus dan bongino will join us live later in the hour. >> ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ not everybody wants the same thing. that's why i go with liberty mutual — they customize my car insurance so i only pay for what i need. 'cause i do things a bit differently. wet teddy bears! wet teddy bears here! only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪
5:22 am
my nunormal? fewer asthma attacks with nucala. a once-monthly add-on injection for severe eosinophilic asthma. nucala reduces eosinophils, a key cause of severe asthma. nucala is not for sudden breathing problems. allergic reactions can occur. get help right away for swelling of face, mouth, tongue or trouble breathing. infections that can cause shingles have occurred. don't stop steroids unless told by your doctor. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection. may cause headache, injection site reactions, back pain, and fatigue. ask your doctor about nucala. find your nunormal with nucala. ask your doctor about nucala. e tseallow w tirifto w r. ol w.. wke it me annoh kp erneorki a gig r thr vis. eye t iny,whh lirs wi st t yo intnedoha
5:23 am
enncyo oinpeen thvefaered it me annoh kp erneorki a gig r thr vis. th is rkth irdy,whh lirs wi st t oo fm rae ofelblops and abt r sttg steve: well that dismal jobs report at the end of last week not stopping joe biden from pushing his $2 trillion infrastructure agenda to gop senators this week, but the
5:24 am
attempt at bipartisanship not sitting well with some in his own democratic party. >> generally i don't agree with that. look, the bottom line is the american people want results >> the senate is a very slow- moving process. i would begin starting this work immediately, if republicans want to come on board, seriously, great, if not, we're going to do do it on our own. steve: so there's bernie sanders an independent, here is ben domenech, he is a fox news contributor good morning to you, ben. >> good morning, good to be with you. steve: so it sounds as if the president is going to be meeting on wednesday with chuck and nancy, kevin and mitch, and they are going to try to find common ground, mutual agreement on something they could get behind, but at $2 trillion, republicans are only going to get behind infrastructure that's actual infrastructure. >> [laughter] it's a total hand waving approach to bipartisanship,
5:25 am
which is really all that we can expect at this point from the biden administration. they haven't been interested in including republicans in any of their prior negotiations, they basically said here is what we want, and if you want to have a debate about how we pay for it that's fine, and that's basically the extent of the white house bipartisanship agenda. in this sense, i think that they are going to run a couple of risks though, because infrastructure, unlike some of their prior legislative efforts is not really something that you can argue as being attempted in order to satisfy the needs of the pandemic or swage ms. iowa unfortunate difficults that have come from it and there have been proposals in the past on infrastructure that actually were attempts along the lines of having a centrist moderate approach that had democrats and republicans on board so the fact they are skipping right past
5:26 am
those and essentially pouring money out, designed to go to blue states to give them a slush fund of cash to play around with , it really doesn't pass the smell test when it comes to any kind of bipartisanship, and i think republicans on capitol hill will not be satisfied with anything that biden has to offer when it comes to their meetings. steve: let's see what happen, fingers crossed because a lot of republicans would actually like to build bridges and tunnels but not so much the other stuff. >> of course. steve: also the washington post had a headline that said justice briar should learn from justice ginsburg's mistakes and retire now making way for a successor would protect his supreme court legacy, so his supreme court legacy. now they just want younger blood in there, so that they can dominate the court going forward that's pretty easy. >> this is a piece from uc berkeley's whose a respected leftist mind when it
5:27 am
comes to the courts. he's making the argument that br iar needs to avoid this mistake made by ginsburg, and a lot of different liberals who would have liked to see her replaced by someone of like mind this is though, i think, playing with fire, because the reality is if you had a court nomination happen right now in this evenly- divided senate i think it be a very different situation than some liberals night like. they might end up with someone who isn't necessarily as far to the left as they might get in a future, and so to the extent this is kind of an admission that they see a backlash to this presidency coming in the mid-terms, that could fundamentally rip away their ability to pass anybody through the senate who shares their leftist agenda, and i think that republicans should feel very good about that. the more these calls increase, the more it indicates a lack of confidence in the democratic agenda going into the mid-terms. steve: you know, ben, what i
5:28 am
haven't heard lately is i haven't heard people say we've got to pack the courts that was like a month or two ago and now it's like forget about packing the courts. let's just lower the age average , down into the 50s so that these people are going to be there for decades. >> yeah, i think that pack the courts sort of montra is not something that tested very well when they actually put out those polls they aren't showing us. there's a reason why you heard a lot about it, you know, 30 days ago and now they are a little bit more modest in their demands steve: you know, speaking of demands if people are watching you right now, ben, and they are thinking i wish i had more ben all the time, you can listen to the ben domenech podcast at fox newspodcast.com, so go brew up another one, okay, ben? >> [laughter] absolutely. great to be with you. steve: good to have you. all right, coming up on this monday, bar stools dave portnoy opening up exclusively to tucker carlson on why people should not rush to judge before inciting cancel culture.
5:29 am
hear from el presidente tucker. the first survivor of alzheimer's disease is out there. and the alzheimer's association is going to make it happen. but we won't get there without you. join the fight with the alzheimer's association. new projects means new project managers. you need to hire. i need indeed. indeed you do. the moment you sponsor a job on indeed you get a short list of quality candidates from our resume database. claim your seventy five dollar credit, when you post your first job at indeed.com/home. ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ comfort in the extreme. ♪♪
5:30 am
the lincoln family of luxury suvs. >> tech: every customer has their own safelite story. this couple loves camping adventures and their suv is always there with them. so when their windshield got a chip, they wanted it fixed fast. they drove to safelite autoglass for a guaranteed, same-day, in-shop repair. we repaired the chip before it could crack. and with their insurance, it was no cost to them. >> woman: really? >> tech: that's service you can trust, when you need it most. ♪ pop rock music ♪ >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪
5:31 am
i'm erin. -and i'm margo. we've always done things our own way. charted our own paths. i wasn't going to just back down from moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis. psoriatic arthritis wasn't going to change who i am. when i learned that my joint pain could mean permanent joint damage, i asked about enbrel. enbrel helps relieve joint pain, and helps stop permanent joint damage. plus enbrel helps skin get clearer in psoriatic arthritis. ask your doctor about enbrel, so you can get back
5:32 am
to your true self. -play ball! enbrel may lower your ability to fight infections. serious, sometimes fatal events including infections, tuberculosis, lymphoma, other cancers, nervous system and blood disorders and allergic reactions have occurred. tell your doctor if you've been someplace where fungal infections are common. or if you're prone to infections, have cuts or sores, have had hepatitis b, have been treated for heart failure, or if you have persistent fever, bruising, bleeding or paleness. don't start enbrel if you have an infection like the flu. visit enbrel.com to see how your joint damage could progress. enbrel. eligible patients may pay as little as $5 per month. jillian: good morning we're back with your headlines. colorado police are searching for a motive after a gunman killed six people, before
5:33 am
turning the gun on himself. the shooting happened at a birthday party yesterday morning the victims were all adults no children were injured. >> [inaudible] it's just like sad because somebody lost their mother right before mother's day. i don't want that happening to my family. jillian: police believe the gunman was the boyfriend of one of the victims. >> tennessee residents getting a mother's day scare with at least two reported tornadoes touching down. the national weather service is expected to survey the damage near mumford today. trees were uprooted and debris scattered across yards no injuries were reported. >> barstool sports founder dave portnoy plans cancel culture saying those who push it don't consider the facts. listen. >> one of the things i think a lot of people who hate me don't do which i've done is i do research. i see just because somebody says something about a person or whatever, i go back and see ,
5:34 am
i'll dig into it rather than just trusting somebody. >> you can get tucker's full interview exclusively going live on tucker carlson today on fox nation at 4:00 p.m. that's a look at your headlines i'll send it back to the three of you. steve: thank you very much and of course famously a month or two ago, he was talking about the stock game stop that went way, way up, and he said wall street is designed to keep the rich guy rich and the little guy struggle. the power is held by a select very few, and they can manipulate the market and it is very hard to win it as the little guy, and that's why he supported the grassroots effort by people who were buying into game stop and it went through the roof. ainsley: i wish he would run because we love people like this he was the little guy at first, his business has been so successful and so funny, he's a funny guy if you follow him on instagram, follow barstools? brian: right. ainsley: the videos are great and then he raised all this money, he donated $500,000
5:35 am
of his own money and raised $40 million and blessed all of these businesses more than 300. brian: well, so, too, he said one of the keys the reason he's sticking around is he fights back on everything. every time someone tries to cancel or someone tries to attack him, he blasts back, and he just refuses to step back. ainsley: he plays offense instead of defense. brian: yeah. it's a better way to say it if i could say it again. ainsley: you like that. brian: yeah, i wish we rehears ed. steve: we'll redo this for the west coast. he also said he would never run for office, because when you're in office, you can't get anything done. ainsley: that's sad. that's sad you get more done just being a regular guy, a civilian. steve: so far he's been able to do plenty. ainsley: he's amazing. brian: the whole small government concept has been so effective and how we're going away from that now is so scary. steve: you can see the entire interview with dave portnoy at foxnation at 4:00 this afternoon , tucker carlson today. meanwhile, today on our program,
5:36 am
still ahead, the new york city police department is searching for a person of interest, after three innocent bystanders were shot in times square over mother 's day weekend, including a four-year-old girl. dan bongino is going to join us on the latest as a heroic officer speaks out about what she did. we believe at newday usa we have a noble purpose. we want to be known as america's mortgage company for veterans and active-duty service people. some of them are giving their lives right now, today, for the freedoms that we have here in this country. so for us, at newday to help those people at this point in time. it's a labor of love, it's a noble service, and that's what we're all about.
5:37 am
we're carvana, the company who invented car vending machines and buying a car 100% online. now we've created a brand-new way for you to sell your car. whether it's a year old or a few years old. we wanna buy your car. so go to carvana and enter your license plate answer a few questions. and our techno wizardry calculates your car's value and gives you a real offer in seconds. when you're ready, we'll come to you, pay you on the spot and pick up your car, that's it. so ditch the old way of selling your car, and say hello to the new way at carvana. why choose proven quality sleep from sleep number? because a good night's rest is where muscles recover, and our minds are restored. the new sleep number 360 smart bed is temperature balancing. and it helps keep you asleep by sensing your movement and automatically adjusts to keep you both effortlessly comfortable. perfect for those relaxing weekends.
5:38 am
proven quality sleep, is life-changing sleep. only from sleep number. my husband and i have never eaten healthier. shingles doesn't care. i logged 10,000 steps today. shingles doesn't care. i get as much fresh air as possible. good for you, but shingles doesn't care. because 1 in 3 people will get shingles, you need protection. but no matter how healthy you feel your immune system declines as you age, increasing your risk for getting shingles. so what can protect you? shingrix protects. for the first time ever, you can protect yourself from shingles with a vaccine proven to be over 90% effective. shingrix is a vaccine used to prevent shingles in adults 50 years and older. shingrix does not protect everyone and is not for those with severe allergic reactions to its ingredients or to a previous dose. the most common side effects are pain, redness, and swelling at the injection site, muscle pain, tiredness, headache, shivering, fever, and upset stomach. talk to your pharmacist or doctor about protecting yourself with shingrix.
5:39 am
shingles doesn't care. but you should. clara heard gain scent beads could make her gain scent last way longer. but she wouldn't believe it until she sniffed it. so, when her sheets still smelt amazing days later, she was surprised! the more nights that go by, the more surprised she gets! her husband ron, he's plenty surprised too. try gain scent beads for scent that lasts longer than detergent alone. guaranteed!*
5:40 am
out here, you're a landowner, a gardener, a landscaper and a hunter. that's why you need versatile, durable kubota equipment. brian: we're back with a fox news alert. a manhunt intensifying for the person of interest and look at this video, in a times square shooting that injured three people. steve: f thearakhan month homan ed's brother told the new york city police department that he meant to shoot him, his brother after they had a dispute, instead, he shot three innocent bystanders including a four- year-old girl. ainsley: an officer is hailed a hero after she was seen rushing that young little girl to the ambulance, describing her her as the strongest little girl i have ever seen. let's bring in dan bongino, fox
5:41 am
news contributor, former nypd officer. very touching when you see that officer. this is exactly why we don't need to defund police and we need more officers. she said she became a cop, dan, because she just wants to help people. what do you think? >> yeah, it's incredible video. listen, the era of social media and cell phone cameras haven't been great for everything. we can probably all agree, but sometimes in moments like this we really need to see this stuff, ainsley. i mean, why think about this , right? if you're a leftist, not necessarily a democrat a lot of democrats realize this defund the police thing is a disaster, just read their post-election analysis, but if you're a liberal, a radical leftist and you think defunding the police is a good idea you probably also believe, it's probably a fair assumption, that stereotyping people, based on collective group characteristics is a bad idea, right? i'm just trying to walk through some logic with the left. stereotyping people because of their race, their whatever their sexual preference, whatever it
5:42 am
may be that's a bad idea, correct? so why is it okay to do it to cops? i don't understand that. i'm really, i'm asking a serious question. so the radical left has this ac ab saying which is not friendly for the air, especially all cops are you fill in the blanks it's not a nice word, all cops, that's what acab stands for , leftist spray painted all over the place , these radicals so it's okay to do that to cops but it's not okay to do it to everyone else, and you wonder like are these sane people any more? and i'm really glad you saw that video because again, you see that these cops out there are doing their job for almost no money, by the way, are not doing it for fame and glory. they are doing it for moments like that to save people's lives and it's really a disgrace and i want to tell every police officer out there listening, i will use my time on fox news from now until they have me, until the day they let me go or i go to the grave, to advocate for you guys because i know what you do every day and 99% of you are busting your butts to keep
5:43 am
people's separates streets safe. brian: and dan, they cut $1 billion from the force, they cut 4,000 people from there, they can't get close to getting 100 people for an academic class , which is a joke, and meanwhile, when you go on, you're looking to get out to a less divisive culture out in nassau county or suffolk county so having said all that, now they want to all of a sudden, we'll secure the place, for tourists. we want tourists to come back. do you nowhere that happened? 42nd street and what happened at 7:45 the same night? a guy got stabbed in the chest with a screw driver and chamber street, a beautiful neighborhood area and you want cops to be de funded, you want to dismantle law enforcement, and then ask tourists to come back? forget it. >> one of the great intellects of our seem is a legend on this network off and on but really a genius and he says all the time i'm not quoting him directly but the gist is this.
5:44 am
only an intelectual couldn't figure this out, right? so let me get this straight like liberal intellectuals and engage in bail reform effectively letting bad guys out on the street so there's no penalty for their crime and you'll then attack the police and the media pretty much everyday, jump to the conclusion in every use of force incident that the police is a bad guy before giving them due process. you'll pay them nothing and then you'll pull the qualified immunity so they can lose their house, their bank account and everything, and only an intellectual or a liberal is sitting here going gosh, why is it we can't recruit any police officers? i mean, the same people watching their show is like yeah, yeah, that sounds like kind of a crappy job right now even though the mission of a more is still one of the most heroic we have. brian: and it is police week this week. steve: absolutely, dan last week we were talking about how facebook said no, donald trump we aren't going to let you back on to our platform and now, as people are going, you know, are these tech companies too big
5:45 am
, nbc did a poll, and asked, does social media do what to the country? about two-thirds say that social media divides the country. so you know, they call it social media because it sounds like everybody is being social, but it sounds like it's pretty toxic >> yeah, you know what's interesting the report you guys sent me to do this , i'm in that nbc news thing. my name, because my facebook page is either one or two in the country on any given day based on crowd tangle which is facebook's tool and that's based on reach and other things. i don't say that as a pat on the back i say it because who better to comment on this story than me, but this is an absurd story, number one facebook and twitter had left wing companies we get it let's not pretend it's social media, it's left wing propaganda. they editorialize all the time but dividing the country, social media, you know whose dividing the country? leftists. again, this is one of the things
5:46 am
only an intellectual can't figure this out or a liberal. when you all day everyday focus on calling a political opponents racist, homophobes, any word with an phobe at the end, and then you wonder why the country is divided? you have an honest disagreement on taxes, school choice, you're definitely a racist, it's like wait, what, what are you even talking about, school choice but that's the left and then you wonder why the country is divided. brian: i got to bring up this one other story that just struck me over the weekend the fox & friends weekend covered and few other people did the daily mail has a story of the hunter biden e-mails that hunter biden in knee deep with these chinese companies, one of which spy and disappeared since then, and it shows he's been offered opposition research to his dad joe biden who happened to be running and winning a presidential campaign. excuse me, china was helping the bidens win an election. will someone examine this story and tell me why you're not if
5:47 am
you don't? >> think about this let's pay to could traits for you. what was the story we just heard two weeks ago the mainstream media was all over it. they said oh, my gosh we have proof of the russia collusion hoax, paul manafort shared opposition research trump's former campaign manager with a russian asset who, by the way, was an obama state department source. it was a huge story all over twitter. you know, the allege social media company and now we have evidence right now that an actual chinese citizen associated with the spy chief of china, shared opposition research and whose talking about it? the answer is only us on fox & friends. i thought sharing opposition research was a big deal, with spies. not if you're a democrat. then they say okay, folks no worries at all. brian: crickets around the country. nobody wants this story. it's amazing. >> what a joke. what a joke. brian: no one denies it either. >> no, but why would they? only we're talking about it.
5:48 am
steve: good question. ainsley: dan thank you so much. it's 47 minutes after the top of the hour, coming up a veteran in austin, texas takes on his homeowners association after he says they told him to take down the american flag he's been flying for nearly two decades he will join us live next but first let's check in with bill and dana. >> dana: that's a big fight in texas. >> bill: how about dan at twitter the allege ed social media company. [laughter] good morning, guys we got a big interview coming up bob baffort is the best horse trainer and most well known horse trainer in america maybe the world and his reputation is online and the outcome of the kentucky derby is now hanging in the balance. we'll talk to him. >> dana: also we'll have maria bartiromo to talk about the economy which there's red lights flashing for inflation, as those prices start to go up and businesses can't find employees and charlie hurt and harold ford on a monday, we're trying a new thing.
5:49 am
hemmerino, tell us what you think we'll see you at the top of the hour. hooh. that spin class was brutal. well you can try using the buick's massaging seat. oohh yeah, that's nice. can i use apple carplay to put some music on? sure, it's wireless. pick something we all like. ok. hold on. what's your buick's wi-fi password? “buickenvision2021.” oh, you should pick something stronger. that's really predictable. that's a really tight spot. don't worry. i used to hate parallel parking. [all together] me too. - hey. - you really outdid yourself. yes, we did. the all-new buick envision. an suv built around you... all of you. when i'm shaving down there not just any razor will do an suv built around you... new venus for pubic hair and skin with a patented irritation defense bar for a smooth shave with blades that barely touch skin ♪ i'm my venus ♪♪
5:50 am
5:51 am
5:52 am
5:53 am
name is gary pirix, and he says he received two letters stating his flag's location hanging from his tree violates their policies and u.s. flag code but it argues it's the best place to put old glory on display. good morning, to you, gary. >> hi how are you. ainsley: thank you for coming on tell us what happened here. >> yeah, we moved into the ave ry ranch neighborhood in 2004, and immediately after moving in, we went ahead and put a flag up, an american flag on our tree in our front yard. i did that because i'm a navy veteran, as you said, the flags important to me for several reasons. one is both my father and my wife's father were world war ii veterans. i served in the united states navy, as an officer in south carolina during the vietnam war so that flag does several things it basically honors my service to the country, and our father's
5:54 am
service. i had three classmates in high school who died in vietnam, so that flag honors them, and also, the basic thing is it just shows my pride in this country which i think is the best country in the world. that flag has been flying on that tree for 17 years with no trouble. as of december of last year, i got my first letter from the av ery ranch homeowner's association and their management company called graham manners that said that my flag was in violation of the covenants and i had to take it down. i called the graham manners management company, asking them what was going on and they said a third party had filed a complaint. i asked them who that was, they said they couldn't say who it was. i said i'm not taking the flag down. i thought that was it until march of this year, when i got a certified letter, saying that our flag was in violation $50 fine, i had to take it down by
5:55 am
april 2 and i haven't paid the fine and i haven't taken the flag down, so that's where we are right now. ainsley: okay well gary we asked the homeowners association to send us a statement and they sent us a long one, but no individual was ever told to remove the united states flag. the state flag or military flags. the individuals were requested to fly the flag in accordance with the hoa policy, texas property code 202, texas flag regulations 3,100, and the u.s. flag code. the individuals were requested to display the flag by mounting it in an approved fashion. it was to be mounted from a building or from a stationary flag pole in the open. they say they are pro-flag, gary they are pro-veterans. they just said the placement is what they have the issue with. would you be willing to compromise and put it next to your door or just make sure that you're in accordance with their laws? >> no, i would not, because first of all, that flag has been there for 17 years.
5:56 am
what's the problem now? that's my response. also, you can't see it from our house, we have a lot of trees in front of our house. also, the other thing is to put up a flag pole well that's expensive, so again, my point is the flags been there for 17 years, why are they suddenly deciding to enforce this now? ainsley: it's a beautiful flag. we thank you for your beautiful act of sacrifice and i'm sorry you lost friends in the war. god bless you, thanks for being on with us. >> thank you. ainsley: you're welcome. more fox & friends moments away. [sfx: psst psst] allergies don't have to be scary. spraying flonase daily stops your body from overreacting to allergens all season long. psst! psst! all good
5:59 am
from prom dresses to workouts and new adventures you hope the more you give the less they'll miss. but even if your teen was vaccinated against meningitis in the past they may be missing vaccination for meningitis b. although uncommon, up to 1 in 5 survivors of meningitis will have long term consequences. now as you're thinking about all the vaccines your teen might need make sure you ask your doctor if your teen is missing meningitis b vaccination.
6:00 am
>> i guess we're not good enough for brian kilmeade. >> i'm here and also on 7:00 tonight all week. same-out fit i wear in the morning. >> lots of long hours, brian. how will you do this? >> bill: good morning, here we go. fuel to half the country and all hands on deck to fix it after a cyberattack shut down one of the largest pipelines in the country. fears of possible fuel shortage is where we begin today. hope you had a great mother's day weekend. i'm bill hemmer. good morning to you. >> dana: we're trying it out. i'm dana perino. we'll see how it goes. it's "america's newsroom." >> bill: this colonial pipeline is long, substantial, it's 5500
239 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on