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tv   FOX Friends First  FOX News  May 12, 2021 1:00am-2:00am PDT

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americans can go to >> americans due to vaccine.gov or they can text their zip code to excuse me, i misspoke i could, text to 4388829. >> numbers are tough, very tough. gutfeld is next. >> wednesday may 12th, fox news alert, israel heading hamas hard and gaza during a day of deadly rocket attacks. we are live in tel aviv with the latest on the conflict that is putting new attention on president biden's middle east policy. plus. >> we should be careful to investigate where this virus came from. we have not funded gain of function research on this virus.
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>> it got a little heated. senator rand paul demanding answers from doctor fauci over federal funding for the wuhan lab as the head of the cdc is grilled over a new report accusing the agency of exaggerating covid guidance. ashley: panic at the pump, the white house taking no action is americans mob gas stations sending prices surging even higher, "fox and friends first" wednesday starts now. ♪♪ jillian: you are watching "fox and friends first" on wednesday morning. todd: we start with the fox news alert, american struggling to
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find gas, the biden administration is our to address shortages across the southeast. >> jenkins live in washington is more stations run dry. >> taking off objective brown may be the perfect song because it is getting harder to fill up from texas to new york, the lines are getting along, prices are rising, take a look at the percentage of gas stations without gas as of midnight, 60% north carolina, 10% in georgia and virginia, 8% south carolina and almost 3 and a half in florida. governors in north carolina, georgia, virginia and for declaring states of emergency this as the epa issued emergency fuel waivers to illuminate shortages in 12 states and the district of columbia, these waivers allow those states, it could be summer or winter pressure through the end of this month to bolster fuel supplies. meanwhile at the white house energy secretary jennifer greenehome is urging drivers not
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to panic. >> let me emphasize there was no cause for recording toilet paper the pandemic, nurse cause for recording gasoline especially in light of the fact that the pipeline should be substantially operational by the end of this week. >> colonial pipeline's latest updates as they are prepared for an additional 2 million barrels of gasoline when those systems restart this as the cyberattack which happened last friday on the nation's largest pipeline has leaders trying to put the hack into perspective which former obama cyber security chief did not sugarcoat. >> think about if this occurred, obama had that pipeline it would be inactive for. it is harder with cyber but that to me is straightforward. >> all of this will be front and
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center today when schumer, pelosi, and mccarthy sit down face-to-face with the president, the first formal gathering of the big four and it comes as disagreements over the president and first researcher plan are upset by pain at the pump. >> the story everyone is talking about, appreciate your insight. jillian: another fox news alert, violence between israelis and palestinians escalates toward an all-out war, dozens now dead after an hours long exchange of rockets. >> those blast leveling buildings causing widespread damage and gaza as well as tel aviv. amy kellogg live with her first look at the aftermath. >> reporter: there has just been an antitank missile fired near gaza at a car and we understand there are serious injuries. medics are being hampered by a barrage of rockets going off at
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this moment as they tried to tends to those who have been wounded. more information on that later. in the meantime we are standing in tel aviv buy a house that was destroyed overnight. let me show you the damage. it really does give a sense of the randomness and horror people are living on both sides and have lived overnight. take a look, the couple and their daughter who lived here managed to get to a shelter which you can see in the frame, they managed to avoid any serious injury but their house has been completely leveled, there were 130 rockets fired in tel aviv last night and five people in israel as a result over the last day of been killed by these rockets. it was basically last night in tel aviv all kicking off at 9:00 an ultimatum given by the militants in the gaza strip
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saying the israeli defense force continues to hit tall towers they would send missiles, rockets flying towards tel aviv and that is exactly what they did and israel said that it is going to continue to target those high-rise buildings and gaza where militants are taking refuge for using them for infrastructure. the iron dome missile defense system in israel has been pretty effective but still some rockets are getting through, 90% efficacy rate, you can see some of the images of rockets being intercepted but since this, this is quite dramatic, since it all kicked off on monday militants in the gaza strip have fired 1000 rockets towards israel, 800 or so have entered israel airspace and landed here or been
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intercepted and 500 were actually intercepted by this iron don't which had problems yesterday but that has been fixed, nevertheless it is not 100% effective which i mentioned operations are continuing this morning the gaza strip for 35 people have been killed during this operation, 12 open children, many more injured. todd: the images you have been showing are absolutely shocking. appreciate your report, please stay safe. jillian: to the conflict between israel and palestine spilling over into the us as rival demonstrators are clashing outside the israeli consulate in new york city as a large group of pro-palestinian supporters marched through the streets, a similar scene in washington dc where protesters received carrying a float in the shape of the tank calling israel a terrorist and racist state.
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larry kudlow says there's a link between the pipeline hack and attention in middle east. >> i believe the cyberhacking in the us southeast is absolutely linked to the hamas shooting war on israel. i see it and president biden is being tested and so far he has not shown any strength. these ran somewhere cyber hackers are in fact russian cyberhackers. they may be moonlighting but make no mistake they are russian cyberhackers and this is their boldest strike yet. as far as hamas is concerned, a terrorist state, iran itself is a terrorist country. who was iran's biggest backer? you guessed, russia. jillian: he says president biden needs to take a harder stance and confront our adversaries.
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todd: two california police officer and then two text deputies killed in line of duty within 24 hours, detective lucas was shot and killed while serving a search warrant monday evening. he was a 12 year law enforcement veteran. in stockton, california officer jimmy in was killed responding to domestic violence collated been with the department for five years leaving behind a wife and 3 children. in texas two deputies were shot and killed while responding to a complaint north of boston, jeffrey nichols facing capital murder charges in that case. jillian: the nypd releasing a photo of the man suspected in the shooting, mohammed is still at large after allegedly opening fire on three people including a 4-year-old girl. one victim saying she's happy to be alive. marcelo was shot in the foot, quote, i survived something that could have been much worse. all three victims are excited to
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recover. >> the director of the cdc defending covid guidance after new york times or port reveals exaggerated the risk of transmission outside. jillian: marianne rapidly responds, pretty interesting. >> reporter: your odds of catching covid outside are lower than we thought, 10% chance, your risk is less than one% according to a new york times report. >> go outside without masks or worrying about outdoor spread. two important, less than one%, less than one% of spread is outside. >> reporter: the cdc chief defending guidance about outdoor spread based on a study in singapore which misclassified cases at construction sites which may have spread indoors. >> there is a made analysis from the journal of infectious diseases published in november i
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believe where the top line results of all studies that were included in the systematic review, less then 10% of cases were transmitted outdoors. >> reporter: this comes the same day doctor anthony fauci and senator rand paul got into a heated argument during a senate hearing on the origins of covid 19 and whether nih funding was used for roots each -- research at the wuhan lab. >> we should investigate where the virus came from the >> i fully agree you should investigate where the virus came from, but again, we have not funded gain of function research on this virus at the wuhan institute of virology. there was research done. >> senators hong kong also accusing doctor fauci of being less than transparent. >> tony fauci may be a good scientist but doesn't seem to
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know much about constitutional self government. he was disrespectful to the united states senate and he appears to have disregarded the direction of the obama white house. >> reporter: the senate foreign relations committee will hold a hearing on the pandemic and president biden will deliver remarks on covid response and vaccines. >> pressure is mounting on president biden to allow a veteran group to hold its decades long memorial day tradition in the pentagon parking lot. >> confirming permit for the role to remember the motorcycle rally, but reversing its decision due to covid. florida congressman, urging the president to override the pentagon's decision. coming up in the next hour. things that don't understand. coming up, border crisis, fuel crisis in middle east crisis
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after four months, are things spiraling out of control? at the forefront of foreign policy under president bush, he weighs in next. jillian: san francisco schools are set to reopen only for one day. it is a short return to classrooms. do you have a life insurance policy you no longer need? now you can sell your policy, even a term policy, for an immediate cash payment. call coventry direct to learn more. we thought we had planned carefully for our retirement. but we quickly realized that we needed a way to supplement our income. our friends sold their policy to help pay for their medical bills and that got me thinking. maybe selling our policy could help with our retirement. i'm skeptical, so i did some research and called coventry direct. they explained life insurance is a valuable asset that can be sold. we learned that we can sell all of our policy or keep part of it with no future payments, who knew? we sold our policy. now we can
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relax and enjoy our retirement as we had planned. if you have one hundred thousand dollars or more of life insurance you may qualify to sell your policy. don't cancel or let your policy lapse without finding out what it's worth. visit conventrydirect.com to find out if you policy qualifies. or call the number on your screen. coventry direct, redefining insurance. an unthinkable genocide took the lives of six million jews and thousands of jewish survivors are still suffering in poverty today. god calls on people who believe in him to act on his word. "comfort ye, comfort my people." when i come here and i sit with lilia i realize what she needs right now is food. these elderly jews are weak and they're sick. they're living on $2 a day which is impossible.
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this now, is how god's children are living. take this time to send a survival food box to these forgotten jews. the international fellowship of christians and jews urgently need your gift of $25 now to help provide one survival food box with all of the essentials they critically need for their diet for one month. when you call right now, your gift's impact will be doubled to help save lives. no vitamins and no protein so my legs and hands are very weak. oh, oh, oh let's make sure that we bring them just a little bit of hope. by bringing them a little bit of food. for just $25, you can help supply the essential foods they desperately need for one month. when you call right now, your gift's impact will be doubled to help save lives. i just want to encourage all of you to join
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with yael eckstein and the wonderful work of the international fellowship of christians and jews. god tells us to take care of them, to feed the hungry. and i pray holocaust survivors will be given the basic needs that they so desperately pray for to survive. todd: president biden has been in office four months but after border crisis, cyber security breaches and rising tension in the middle east are things spiraling out of control under the biden administration? here to discuss, george w. bush's secretary of state, robert charles. biden's leadership, why?
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>> the bottom line is as an old diplomat told me if you pull your head out of the bucket the water fills in fast behind you. when reagan challenge the legitimacy of the soviet union and trump challenge the legitimacy in the actions of china, those adversaries are back on their heels. we've got 800 rockets since 8:00 pm last night, and issues in colombia, and it is the fundamental item, engagement of the presidential level or the level of the secretaries of state or defense is critical. the world is safer when the us conditions and uses sanctions. >> donald trump agrees with you. here's what he has to say, quote, when i was in office, the
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peak presidency, and strict retribution when attacked. your second career if you do what you're doing that would be history professor at dartmouth college. when has a nonthreatening foreign-policy ever worked to dissuade an enemy. >> all of history says peace through strength, telegraphing action, and not really engaged, and the interaction between human beings so we know if someone is engaged there is deterrence involved and we have to look at places like history,
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1973, 1991, there's weakness, bad things happen, there is strength, good things happen. will: i want your thoughts on cyberdefense but does the average american appreciate how poor our cyber defense, and how high they were going to the biden administration. >> i would say no. the average american doesn't understand cyber security is critical of the federal and corporate level. what we are seeing in colonial is a reflection of failure to anticipate and don't think for a minute some of our adversaries are all over that, stop spending crazily, don't raise taxes or low interest rates to go up and recognize the private sector ultimately is the one that generates, it is the engine and we have to let the private sector do its job and get out of the way. todd: we appreciate your time and insight. jillian: a mother fighting for justice after learning the
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suspect in her son's murder may be facing this jail time. she is leading the recall to george gascon's story next. ♪♪
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the first person to survive alzheimer's disease is out there. and the alzheimer's association is going to make it happen by funding scientific breakthroughs, advancing public policy, and providing local support to those living with the disease and their caregivers.
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but we won't get there without you. join the fight with the alzheimer's association. wanna help kids get their homework done? well, an internet connection's a good start. but kids also need computers. and sometimes the hardest thing about homework
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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. jillian: heartbroken mother leaving the recall charge against controversial los angeles da george gascon, the suspect in her son's murder would pay a small price thanks to the top prosecutor, gascon continues to tout his progressive policies. >> a very clear platform of ending use of enhancements. in the first hundred days in
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office we had a reduced prison sentence by 8000 years. jillian: her son julian was killed in 2018. sorry for your loss. what did you think when you heard that clip? >> it discussed me. every time i hear his voice he discussed me. when he celebrated his 100 days in office he thought it was a celebration. i don't understand where he feels someone's life is worth the price tag. he feels keeping people out of jail or in prison are saving taxpayer money. i don't agree, if we save taxpayer money it shouldn't be on releasing murderers, rapists and child molesters and child abusers, and let those that. i don't get his logic and it is disgusting.
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>> you are leading this recall ever it is the way your son was brutally murdered and the fact the people responsible for it, the suspect in this case could get off pretty easy. tell us what happened to your son and what the suspect could be up against now. >> i decided to be part of the recall movement, this is a hard month for me, this marks 3 years of my son's death anniversary and it is a tough month. may of 2018 my son was kidnapped from his grandparents home, and take into the room and brutally beating to death, start with a glass pipe on his face and beaten with a rock. he was then transported to the canyon near my parents's home
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and he was dumped on the side of the road as if he was roadkill. prior to him being thrown off the cliff, my son must've made some type of life in these guys stomped on his head, continue to beat my son until he succumbed to his woundss. these guys, total of 5 suspects, kidnapping, robbery and lying in wait, those enhancements, the das were directed to dismiss those charges. at that point, no way i was going to let this happen. my son's life mattered, i am going to fight with all i could because my sons did not deserve
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this. these guys are facing life without parole, when george gascon came life without parole is off the table, no more life, no more death penalty, now they are facing 25 years, 80% of that time is 20 years which is crazy because the oldest one was 21 years old. that is too young, something my son was cheated from. they are reunited with those families, i ever be reunited with my son, in a box, that is how i have my son these days, in a box. ashley: so sorry for what you had to go through. the recall ever, you guys have submitted to the register of voters, and any word on where this is, george cast:has not
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reached out to you are not surprised by that. we did reach out to george gascon's office for a statement. so sorry for your loss. --
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lets us get back to spreading the word without spreading concern. before we can safely come together, we need the facts on covid-19 vaccines. visit getvaccineanswers.org so you can make an informed decision when vaccines are available to you.
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>> think of the millions of kids locked out of school for over a year in places like california, that has ramifications for years and years. someone will come up to me and say thank you for keeping us open, you saved my job and business, we know if we are in new york, i know my business would be gone so we are proud of
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the success we have had. we have more to do going forward. the damage those lockdowns will reverberate for a long time. >> florida governor ron desantis warns about long-term impacts on covid 19, others are trying to get america back to work by injecting federal funds for enhanced unemployment benefits. here to react after losing half of his staff to the pandemic, jesse, thanks for being here. your governor made a similar move. do you agree? >> that was a great move on our part, it will help small business owners. >> fiscal year 2021 and it is pretty stark, february to march, more than half 1 million more job openings mid-april wasn't a shining beacon of filling jobs when the jobs report came out. how is that limiting your come
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back and supposed to be a banner year for business. >> opportunities are certainly there. a lot of us question whether the hospitality industry and catering would rebound at all and it has done so in a big way. the floodgates have opened, people are ready to get back out and have events but the labor and workforce to make this happen have been a real issue and we are coming back slowly but the ready workforce the wanted to come back to work would help even more. todd: the response i hear is why not raise wages? answer that question. >> in some cases we have. in some cases we have been forced to.
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it is a competitive marketplace, we are having to convince people why they need to come back to work and in some cases money talks. todd: here is what the white house is saying on this. take a listen. >> $300 checks that are going to americans as the reason for the unemployment report, lower than expectations. we are not seeing that in the data. todd: the white house and their economists say their data doesn't agree with what you are seeing on the ground. your response? >> hard to say. the audience at the white house may or may not be polling or receiving, that is hard to say but the consensus of small business owners and large business owners for that matter who went from 300 employees down
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to less than hundred and trying to get those employees back i can tell you we feel like the stimulus moneys that have been given and continue to be received by people are definitely part of the issue. todd: i don't know where they are getting information either. people come on every single morning at 4:30 in the morning to tell us they can't find workers and they have other things better stuart 4:30 like sleep, they come on air with us and talk about this issue if it wasn't an issue. i don't get what they are looking at, i get what you guys are talking about, appreciate your time. >> thank you for having me. jillian: the crisis at the border, rests reach a 21 year high during the month of april, cvp reporting 173 migrant encounters. the number of migrant children traveling alone decreasing,
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exclusive video showing the moment a surge of migrants cross the rio grande for a second day as the biden administration works to fix a deteriorating 14 mile stretch of border wall in california. dhs blaming the trump administration saying, quote, in proper soil and construction materials along the wall segment constructed by the prior administration is causing dangerous erosion. south carolina senator tim scott slamming the left's calls to defund the police, listen. >> the way i deal with defund the police it is the dumbest thing i ever heard in my life. we always want police officers around when necessary, we need to provide more resources, more money, the training to intervene and de-escalation. all those training dollars are incredibly important. we don't need less money for the police, we need more. jillian: a republican lawmaker is open to working with democrats to pass the george floyd police reform bill by the anniversary of floyd's death on
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may 26th. former nfl star colin kaepernick putting out more anti-police sentiment a new book announcing he will edit and publish a book titled abolition for the people, movement for a future without policing and prisons. it is slated for release in october. is national anthem protests began over police brutality. todd: heart stopping moment during the mets orioles game. >> austin hayes, a warning track, dropped it and smacked the wall face first. he is hurt. todd: wow. that is why they have a warning track, didn't give much of a warning. slamming full speed into the outfield wall while chasing a flyball, receiving a standing
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ovation, tweeting are caught it. he will undergo more tests, we hope he is okay. time now 37 after the hour, tim depotw's second chance has some calling white privilege. jillian: download the super 6 apps and play for a chance to win 10,$000. all you need to do is predict 6 outcomes in the super 6 quiz show, topics range from entertainment to sports, free to play the super 6 apps.
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>> reporter: i could clearly see a fight from someone pulling in one direction and 70 cars waiting from the other direction. >> i am lucky. >> don't have any regular gas. all we have is premium.
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>> let me fill up. jillian: panic at the pump taking over social media. todd: carley shimkus here with reaction. carley: jennifer granholm urged americans not to panic by poured gasoline and that is exactly what is happening right now. videos and pictures posted to social media news footage show long lines at gas stations across the east coast. many on social media dubbed this the new toilet paper of 2021. another twitter user posted a sweet saying looks like tesla owners are getting the last laugh. mississippi, tennessee of the east coast from delaware to georgia are most likely to experience limited fuel availability. a big topic of conversation which is why you are having georgia's state representative live coming up to talk about the gas shortage.
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jillian: this is unbelievable. some san francisco high school students are going to return to school for less then a week before the school year ends so schools will be allowed to get this $12 million qualified to get $12 million, the deal is being described as a blatant money grab, students, and it is kind of insulting they are trying to make up for a loss of over a year with a few days. probably wouldn't even be my own school with my own teachers and reopening advocacy group at the san francisco chronicle saying what message does this give about what they are worth and how adults take care of our vulnerable population. this shows a matter or the money
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matters. the san francisco chronicle broke this story, they did not return request -- request for comments, not the spirit of the law in terms, reopening 1 to 3 days. todd: these kids, we are giving up on our kids. that didn't take long, the outrage machine coming. >> there is outrage on social media over tim teboww signing for the jacksonville jaguars, calling it white privilege because colin kaepernick has not been assigned to a team. out there, stephen packwell posted tim teboww finding a team
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and colin kaepernick can't. white privilege nfl style, tebow castro, never could, never played tight end and hasn't played in, what, eight years. explain it to me like i am 5. mendez ryan chimed in, he is angry about this, tebow hasn't played an nfl game in nearly a decade. it is that simple. no hate but you got to be kidding me. a reminder here in 2019 colin kaepernick was given an opportunity to work with the nfl but it ended up total mess, he left over a media dispute. some people on social media calling this white privilege. jillian: i understand the frustration, not necessarily pertaining to race but the frustration that he hasn't played a long time and it is all in who you know. carley: he is a great announcer. whether on the field are off he will have a great career. >> it is to get media attention
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on tebow to focus on the job of quarterback does not have all the distractions. carley: probably annoying for people working hard to get a spot on a team and can't. todd: who is this actor they talked about? should i know him? carley: i didn't think he was an actor because i knew you would point that out but in case you knew it you would be like isn't he the actor? it is lose/lose. todd: i walked in here. carley: see you guys. jillian: we are talking to georgia state representative about the shortage in the southeast. todd: from d funding police want to the bill signed by the governor of georgia. we will explain what is in it coming up next.
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which shows will you be getting into tonight? 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. okay, that's just showing off. you get all of this on x1. so go on, get really into your shows.
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you need a breath mint. xfinity. it's a way better way to watch. wanna help kids get their homework done? well, an internet connection's a good start. but kids also need computers. 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.
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'cause we are. todd: california woman caught on camera, a man tried to make off with her car, she took a fist through the car window stopping him in his tracks, she ran after him. louisiana house brew moving jail time as a punishment for marijuana possession. anyone, 14 grams or less leave because of a $100 fine but would not go to jail. state senate will consider the proposal next, to legalize recreational use of marijuana in louisiana over a house vote.
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todd: jillian: florida, virginia, north carolina declaring a state of emergency over gas shortages this week. look at this video, panic at the pump causing 1000 gas stations to run dry. joining us to discuss, appreciate your time. how much of a wake-up call is this. >> it is a huge wake-up call. we are seeing this issue in georgia, the governor declared a state of emergency and cut red tape to make sure addressing price gouging and suspended the gas tax in georgia to help consumers and make sure we have the supply but this is a real issue. look at the decision like it was made at the beginning of the biden administration to cancel the keystone pipeline that is something as we move forward we've got to have energy independence, this is a major concern. jillian: there is no definitive
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answer who is responsible although there's a lot of speculation it is russian linked. let's pull of russia's statement reading, quote, russia has nothing to do attack her attacks and has nothing to do with previous hacker attacks. how important is it we get to the bottom of this? >> we have to figure out how it happened and punish -- this is a major issue, we have to get supplies back out in the marketplace, keep prices low but also address the issue long-term, we have to get to the bottom of how this happened. jillian: let's pull up colonial pipeline's statement, the colonial operations team is executing a plan that involves an agreement to process that will facilitate returned to service in a phased approach by the end of the week so they are hoping to get a lot accomplished in the next few days but you being a congressman from one of these states that is deeply affected what is your message to the people of your state this morning?
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>> remain calm and make sure we are being smart. there's a lot in the media about this issue causing folks to make quick decisions. colonial by the end of the week hope to get back to normal operations and we will work around the clock to make sure we have the supply in the marketplace. jillian: we will stay on top of this. georgia governor brian kemp sign a bill to bring but local governments from defunding the police, this is just in time for national police week, this reads, quote, counties cannot cut spending by 5%. your reaction to this? >> i was proud we got this signed into law to stop local governments from defunding the police. we've seen calls to do so in
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georgia, and places like minneapolis that have cut police budgets, crime is skyrocketing in the city, we want to make sure that doesn't happen in georgia. grateful for the governor signing it and look forward to making sure -- it is national police week, we need to thank our men and women in blue and appreciate their service keeping our family safe in georgia. jillian: if you look at the overarching picture of the defund the police movement if something is broken you fixed, put money into it you have to fix it, you don't just let it sit broken. if people truly think there's a problem and police need to be reformed in this country the thing you don't want to do is let it sit there and not fix it so part of fixing problems is putting money into things, putting training into a lot of these programs. i don't understand why people don't see that you >> now is the time to invest in
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the city of atlanta crime is up right now. murders are up 60%. now is the time to invest in law enforcement and increased training, increased pay of law enforcement, that is the time to invest, not defund the police. jillian: seems like the opposite of what should be happening. thank you for joining us this morning. have a good day. todd: reporters have to get quotes approved by the white house before publishing them. according to one major press outlet. jen psaki is defend to get. some reaction from joe concha. that is coming up in the next hour. don't go anywhere.
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jillian: fox news alert, panic at the pump. long lines stretching across the southeast as drivers rush to fuel up before gas stations run dry. live in washington as the white house issues emergency waivers. plus. >> i always considered the cdc to be the gold standard. i don't anymore.
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todd: a bombshell report from the new york times accusing the cdc of exaggerating covid's outdoor transmission risk, the reaction on capitol hill. jillian: taking a bite out of crime, one milwaukee bakery got revenge on a sticky fingered feast. "fox and friends first" continues right now. ♪♪ one way or another ♪♪ i'm going to find you ♪♪ i'm going to get you get you get you ♪♪ one way or another ♪♪ i'm going to win you ♪♪ i'm going to get you get you get you ♪♪ todd: what voice is that? just sounds like that. that was new york city by the way. the sun coming up earlier. jillian: oh my gosh. todd: it is beautiful nonetheless. i am happy with everything today. you are watching "fox and friends first". jillian: let's begin with a fox news alert.

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