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tv   FOX and Friends  FOX News  May 24, 2021 3:00am-6:00am PDT

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months. todd: proud father finished watching gavin's game. see more it in about a week. soldiers, they are still fighting, guys. you have to remember. there are still people out there overseas giving so much for our country. we cannot forget that stories like that. jillian: we thank them all. "fox & friends" starts right now. ♪ >> captures incredible video of dozens of immigrants making a rub for it across the border. >> that video tells the story of what is happening almost every single day here. >> absolutely insane. >> repeat offender for the rules for thee not for thee department gretchen whitmer violating her own social distancing guidelines. >> white house hoping to entice senate on it infrastructure plan. >> biggest gap is not the money. the biggest gap is defining what infrastructure is. >> anthony fauci admitting
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covid-19 could orange nate in a chinese lab. >> are you still confident that it developed naturally. >> no, i'm not convinced. woe should continue to investigate. >> implications for china nationally and globally would be massive. >> here it is, biggest moment of the legendary career. phil defeats father time ♪ i want to put on my boogie shoes and boogie with you. steve: i think i would take my shoes off if i'm going to walk on mirmingts beach. good morning, myrtle beach, 72 trees. going for a high today in south carolina of 88 trees. ainsley: nice. steve: speaking of south carolina, just up the coast where phil mickelson made history yesterday becoming the oldest guy to ever win a pro. ainsley: it was awesome. he was kia island.
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he won at 50. brian: not like he was on a roll. he was not making cuts week after week. asked a couple weeks ago are you going to play the pga and use the special exemption for having won before? he said i don't know. i don't know if i will do it. i think he made a great decision. brian: you were in the crowd. i know you were excited. brian: i thought it was underplayed. not only was it unbelievable to see them follow phil mickelson up the court the way they used to follow hank aaron after he hit 715 in atlanta. you usually don't see this. keep in mind, we had a pandemic that would have prevented nip from going. the whole tournaments were canceled a year ago. now, look at that i don't believe everyone is wearing a mask either because they don't have to. ainsley: i remember we went to the ryder cup there. my dad and people thought i was his wife. he would see people from high school. that is so weird. is this your wife?
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i was like okay. there is a big age difference. steve: well, that's something. more on phil in a little bit. in the meantime, we have got some extraordinary video from the fox flight crew. that's our drone team flying down over our southern border. they were able over the weekend to catch an extraordinary sight of 40 migrants rushing the border. largely single adults no, kids. according to melugin, to guys were handcuffed together. did they escape from the border patrol earlier? was it a jail break? was it just some weirdness? nobody knows for sure. but, nonetheless, as you look at this. that southern border is wide open despite what we have heard so many times. >> some were scaling fences. some were stumbling over these marrow streams that you see on the ground. one border agent chasing them. then you sought the white vehicle there was another border
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alleged who was trying to trace them, too. they were overwhelmed because there were just two agencies that were down there. >> a bunch of guys. >> ainsley: the governor said is he going to aide. brian: what good is the federal government if it can't it control the border. if you cannot control your own country, what's the sense of having a federal government and having border patrol at all because they have no control because once they get in, they have got to let them go or put them right into the heart of the country where we can't track them. they say they are turning around most single adults. i would like to see that video of somebody being turned around. about 50 to 20 migrants were taken into custody also in front of our people, but they just decided not to flee. they want to be turned in. they thought their chances were too great to stay. why do they risk getting it. separate group of 5. migrants reportedly from venezuela, guatemala, honduras and romania. fantastic. come one, come all.
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why is anyone trying to do this the right way when can you do it the easy way and just run across the border? ainsley: brian and steve on friday night they just migrant 16 guns in his possession he was trying to take them back down to mexico. brian: is that a big deal? i guess note. steve: look at the amount of meth and look at the amount of fentanyl. enough, according to the governor of texas, enough fentanyl has already come into the country via probably texas because greg abbott was talking about it to kill every man, woman and child in the state of new york. which is crazy. so, what's interesting though about what we're seeing in that particular drone video is over the last number of months, ever since joe biden took office, and he made it very clear, you know, you get to the united states border and you're going to get your hearing and stuff like that. and if you brought a kid, you would pretty much be escorted directly into omaha, nebraska, or wherever you have got relatives. but with these young single men,
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you know, maybe they are being turned around because they don't want to, you know, unlike a lot of things that we have seen, they are not going up to the border patrol to just say okay, i'm turning myself in, obviously they are running away from it. brian: get aways. >> . there you have got the guy who runs the border the secretary of the department of homeland security and do you know what? i hope he watches this video today. because he has said a number of times that that that can't happen because it's closed. think i'm kidding? here he is. it? >> we are elevating our messaging so that the individuals do know that they cannot come to the border. the border is closed. >> precisely that the border is closed. >> the message is quite clear. do not come. the border is closed. the border is secure. the border is secure. the border is closed. we have been unequivocal in
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that. brian: he knows better. steve: it's not closed. brian: he used to be the deputy of homeland security he knows how to do it and they are choosing not to do it. if you try to get in and out of canada do you realize how strict it is. people with visas on both sides. the questioning and protocols you have to go through in the middle of a pandemic president biden had medical cover, so to speak. he could have said listen, i want to open up theward like my left wing wants but we are in a pandemic. i'm testing people before they go see a game. how can i open the border from guatemala, honduras and venezuela. you understand the left wing, he had a medical out. he chose to let it go. he doesn't visit. the vice president doesn't go down. she does zoom calls with other leaders. and she, in june, says she might go down at some point to see guatemala. ainsley: they ignore it ben domenech weighed in on this.
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listen. >> we all know what our border patrol agents have to deal with on a daily basis. it's absolutely insane. and they're overwhelmed. given the circumstances that are involved here. we need to have a secure border. not just for our own security but also to protect against things like what we just experienced with the global pandemic. and, yet, i think that the biden administration has unfortunately been able to spin enough journalist, convince enough corporate media to turn another eye, to look away, to pretend like what they are spinning us with is true when we all know and we can see right in front of us it's false. steve: do you know what we can see right there? we are seeing a different kind of a video than we have seen over the last couple of weeks. how many times for instance when melugin was sending stuff to us it was family. and when they toll their stories to him your heart goes out to them it's like okay, we had to leave our country for a variety of reasons.
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then you look at this. where they just are scattering across the southern border, it's such difference where that just looks out of control. >> brian: i think they are going to pay the political price. we already saw 13 separate counties go to donald trump hispanic predominant in the last election. how can you possibly want to keep a party in power that allows that to happen in your doorstep. literally on your doorstep if you are in new mexico, you are in arizona, you are in florida -- excuse me, in texas and in california. i mean, this is just unbelievable. ainsley: let's talk about michigan rules for thee and not for me. governor gretchen whitmer she was caught, she was sitting at a restaurant, sitting in a restaurant, a bar with 12 people. the state guidelines prohibit groups larger than six. and require a mask indoors. she says we were all vaccinated but she did have to apologize yesterday for violating her own
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social distancing guidelines. steve: let's take a look at what she broke. you can only have six people or fewer at the table. she broke that 6 feet between tables, broke that because they pushed tables together. indoor capacity 50% and indoor dining allowed until 11:00. this is just another one of those times where she has gotten caught and somebody who is actually one of the 12 people took a picture and posted it and then it blew up. and now they have deleted it and we can't show it to you. nevertheless, it's one of these things we are going to have the safest state in america, she says. but at the same time, i'm not going to follow the rules. brian: here is the problem. her rules are stupid. they shouldn't be in place. if you are vaccinated you should be indoor and outdoor. if you are not vaccinated it's up to you to take your life into your own hands, get the virus, beat the virus, whatever. because she put these restrictions on, not only are they dumb, are they antiquated
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because she is not keeping up with the science, but she has no intention of keeping up with them, period. so, you know about the rules she violated. do you know that she is -- this is what her explanation essentially throwing wrong throughout the pandemic i have committed to following the public health protocols. yesterday i went with friends to a restaurant. more people alive the tables were pushed together because we were all vaccinated didn't stop to think about it in retropeckive i'm human i apologize. we're all doing that pushing tables together. you saw what happened with phil mickelson. do you think south carolina is different than michigan numbers are the same. opening up anyway especially when you have no intention of abiding by your rules. ainsley she has a track record. look at this. ainsley: back in may of last year. remember when her husband earns he tried to jump in front of the line and said i need to get my family boat out for memorial day weekend is. brian: you know who my wife is.
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ainsley: then he got busted june of last year joined the floyd protest violating the governor's social distancing order doing that february of last year g.o.p. legislature calls for investigations into the handling of nursing homes and long care nursing facilities under covid. that evidence just vanished. weave couldn't get it then in april a top aide traveled to florida for spring break. two aids traveled and when they weren't supposed to. then she got private plane to go visit her dad down in florida. brian: a cost of $27,000 but she paid 850. ainsley: what in the world? steve: that's a good deal. ainsley: she violated the coronavirus orders at this dive bar and that's what we are talking about. steve: the land shark bar. ainsley: bar and grill. steve: hypocrisy so says tori. they have been at loggerheads with the governor. they say governor whitmer's
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redixzless restrictions need to end immediately. she isn't even abiding by those rules. a year after the boat episode and whitmer and those around her still don't see their code rules apply to them. ainsley: then she got the profile in courage award for the handling of covid-19 that was given to her by caroline kennedy in the library. one of seven. brian: so one way or the other and deserving. stripped of her title by legislation for her absolute monarch abilities. steve: i'm sure whoever posted that photo on twitter probably thought oh, i thought it was okay. ainsley: i think it's wonderful. i'm glad that she is out about and about but shea needs to change the rules. brian: beautiful michigan day and she goes and breaks the rules and says i'm sorry. doesn't work. ainsley: did she not think someone was going to take a picture of her at a restaurant? brian: go back to phil mickelson one much great stories you will see in sports. we need a good one. not only were people allowed to
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show up at pga p which. when phil mickelson started leading this in day one or two. people thought this is a good story. who thought he could turn back the clock not playing that well as of recently and hold on. yesterday according to the golf expert. the conditions were terrible. hard and dry. twafs going to be a matter of survival. when he had a few bad holes there he goes the 50-year-old is showing his age. sometimes he can reckless he doesn't like to pullback. then everybody else started failing and he started getting hot again. steve: yeah. it was extraordinary. take a look here he is after he just beat -- what's his first name brooks koepka on the 18 hole. it came down to the wire. watch this. >> here it is. biggest moment of the legendary career phil defeats father time. [applause]
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ainsley: and he looks fantastic, too. i don't know what he is doing. but he is in the best shape of his life. the crowd was awesome. it was so great. everyone was happy to be together. steve: the crowd was out of control. after 17, brooks koepka said he had already lost. he was trying to protect his surgically repaired knee. he said it would have been cool i didn't have a knee injury. i got kinged this in crowd they didn't give a blank. clearly lost control. they were celebrating not only phil but we are out and with people. brian: special thanks to the crowd they were 6 feet apart i could tell by the overhead shot. so here is some -- here is some inspirational tweets of support for phil. truly ininspirational to see phil mickelson do it again at 50. con grads. tom brady, that's my quarterback, three exclamation points. phil mickelson i thought this was the most inspirational quote we all should learn some.
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this means society and golf. i failed many times in my golf and career, because of this i learned a lot. instead of feeling defeated countless times. i have used it to fuel to drive me to work harder. today join me in accepting our failures. let's use them to motivate us to work even harder. ainsley: that's amazing. if you are going through a hard time. let him be your inspiration. tomorrow is a new day actually today is a new day. brian: fasting for 36 hours, drinking a lot of water and a special ethiopian coffee which i don't know if dunk kin donuts has it's unpronounceable: it's water and ethiopian coffee. ainsley: you should starts that a influencer. brian: see if it's on my dunkin donuts app. ainsley: we get coffee as a team every morning. and brian has recently discovered at dunkin' donuts cold brew that's been around. brian: changed my life. i saw they just invented it. steve: you know, at the beginning of the week, draft
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kings rated him, phil mickelson at 300 to 1 odds. somebody bet $1,000 that he would win it all and they are $300,000 richer. ainsley: that's great. steve: nobody took phil seriously as somebody who could win the pga this week. now, when you think about it, who is going to bet against him for the u.s. open ains this is his sixth career major. second time he has won this tournament. brian: 30 years as his first. as an honor to phil jillian should play lefty. best golfer on the staff. jillian: sure, why not? i have a question for you, brian, when it documents his inspirational words? what are you going to do with that because have you never failed at everything? brian: once in a while i don't reach my goals. i can't think of any right now but that's a good point. for those of you others that can't relate to failure not me, of course, jillian. for life i'm playing a perfect game. jillian: yes, always.
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good morning. go ahead and begin your headlines with a fox news alert. about 200 south carolina officers are on foot searching for an armed and dangerous murder suspect. police say they are confident they have tyler it cornered. on the run. four homicides over multiple states. keep you updated. customs and border patrol officers 100,000 pounds of meth hidden in a shipment of watermelon. locating the drugs in san diego. its street value is worth more than $2 million. it was the second substantial meth seizure within a week at the facility. the driver was arrested. charles barkley calls out the nba's failure to push lebron -- to punish lebron james for violating the covid protocols why attending a promotional party for a tequila brand. take a listen. >> the nba they got no chance of lebron james.
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ain't no [bleep] way lebron james is going to be because of safety protocols. jillian: the laker star won't be suspended for the violation because, quote, the event didn't rise to the threat level of virus spread. >> >> living up to new lamented icon award with a touching performance with her daughter. watch. ♪ sunshine ♪ shower me with good time ♪ ♪ >> live performances were held outdoors but several were pretaped. morgan what len winning three awards despite his recent racial slur controversy and the weekend wrapping up 10 wins. he won top artist. top male artist. top hundred songs for blinding lights. top r and b album for after hours. that's a look at your headlines. send it back to you.
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ainsley: i love that pink performance. how sweet is that they put their heads together. brian: you can sing and go ton a trapeze. that's some talented people. steve: and get dizzy. brian: we should try to do our show from a swing. steve: do you think so? [buzzer] brian: my problem is i don't have an outfit. ainsley: it's 6:20 on the east coast. one washington state congressional hopeful wants to make crime illegal again. the man fighting to bring law and order back to the streets of seattle is going to join us live. ♪ i'm so excited ♪ i just can't hide it ♪ i'm about to lose control ♪ and i think i like it ♪ i'm so excited ♪ and i just can't hide it ♪ financial plan that can help grow and protect your money. an annuity can help cover essential expenses in retirement.
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♪ brian: it's almost been a year since seattle summer of lo remember that? left the city in a shambles hasn't recovered. exposed leadership failure in many ways. their inability to handle crime and lawlessness. my next guest has it had. is he vowing to make crime illegal again. setting sights on capitol hill. matt larkin joins us now challenging kim sthir represent the washington state eighth district he joins us now. matt, this district borders a very blue area of seat. you won it before in the a.g. race. are you confident can you win it for this race? >> i am. i'm very confident. we won it not close. we won it owith over 51%. and the reason is because people are sick of what's going on. people want leadership on these issues.
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especially in the eighth district. and it's because they don't want these crimes and this violence creeping out of seattle and into their communities. brian: right now othese stats is stunning. the police budget cut 20%. smaller than last year. seattle finished last with the highest homicide rate in decades and increased response times. and your officers have quitting in record pace and no one is making an effort to retain them. could you really change something should you get this seat? >> oh, absolutely. you could change by speaking up. the big problem with our police force is morale. they feel like nobody has their backs. and these are men and women who bravely put their lives on the line every day for us. and nobody is getting their backs and from congress it's a shame. the radical democratic left isn't saying a word about any of this stuff. and it's time someone like me went back to congress and had the backs of our men and women in blue. and by doing that you create a leadership. you create the ability to speak up on these issues and you can
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draft laws to fix this stuff. brian: so a mayor a year ago talked about the summer of love where people in the middle of a pandemic, we're going to forget about laws and gather in the city. and not allow cops to come in. but, yet, there wasn't much pushback. and when the president at the time, president trump tries to put some national -- some national federal law enforcement officials in there, there is blow back. do you think some people have been converted? people thought that was a good idea? do you think they have really changed that much? >> i think they are coming around, yeah. because a lot of these crimes affect them. they are shop owners and people who have businesses in the area. they can't even conduct business. they are getting broken into, robbed, vandalized. these people are hungry for a voice. they are hungry for someone to stand up for them and they feel like the city leadership has abandoned them. this isn't just a seattle problem. this isn't just a problem in washington state. we're seeing this problem all over the country. and that's why i'm running for
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congress. we're only five seats from taking back the house and telling nancy pelosi good riddance. this is a swing state. i mean, a swing district that i'm running in. we can actually win this district. and i did win it with over 51%. brian: right. >> in my last attorney general race. we know there is a path to winning it. five key seats to taking it back and we're going to do it. i know because we have already done it. brian: big push and progress being made for law enforcement reform and many pro-law enforcement people are for it you can put more money into training. put more money into quality candidates. maybe raise the pay rate and get beater people at least. 20 large u.s. cities reduce their police budgets in some form adding $840 million collectively. trying to stop in a place where it all started in seattle. matt, best of luck. >> thank you so much. thanks for having me on. brian: you got it coming up straight ahead. florida parents are outraged over their school's board bough
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♪ jillian: good morning and welcome back. we begin your headlines with this. today testimony continues in the mollie tibbetts trial. christian rivera charged in the murder of the death of the 20-year-old. tibbetts went missing in july 2018 while on a run in brooklyn, iowa. her body was found a month later in a cornfield. on friday, a crime lab criminalist confirmed that bad matching tibbetts was found in his trunk. we will keep you updated on that. meantime a manhunt intensifies for a gun nan charged with killing two people in new jersey. hour outside of. >> phil: phil philadelphia. no arrests have been announced. state police have scheduled a press conference later this morning. 15,000 seats sold out during game one eastern conference between the new york knicks and atlanta hawkeyes.
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hawks. largest gathering since the start pandemic. 90% of those in attendance were fully vaccinated. the hawks came out victorious 107-105 win. game two is on wednesday. you might want to save up for the new $100 sandwich being offered at disney land in california. the sandwich is part of the new marvel themed park and based on ant man and the warp. big sandwich meant to share with 8 people with ham, salami and pof lone. less hungry fans and visitors can get a smaller sandwich for about 15 bucks. that's a look at your headlines. send it back to you. steve: thank you very much, jillian. palm beach county florida school board has got a plan to tackle racism. that plan is taking heat. the board's mission statement vows to, quote, dismantle white advantage which is not explained, in the school district and florida parents are
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steamed. >> your statement is dividing us and insights racism. being a parent of hispanic and caucasian student this equity statement lead me to you are viewing their academics by the color of their skin and ethnic background. we want clarification for this. my children will not be divided. steve: that was jessica martinez a mother of two in palm beach county and she joins us from her home. jessica, good morning to you. >> good morning, steve. >> school board earlier this month put out this equity statement. what is it about that statement that really has you and hundreds of other parents angry? >> what has the parents outraged over this statement, steve, is our board lacks transparency. we have been reaching out with them for the last several weeks in reference to mask mandates within our school and then a group of over 100 parents and counting called unmask the kids in palm beach county. we realize that not is our mask
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policy a permanent policy they placed in november of 2020. we came across this equity statement. when we read that line just like you said, they went dismantle programs rooted in white advantage. we were both questioning what does that mean? we emailed the board. we have reached out to the board. and to this day no one has sent us clarification. so it's pretty upsetting as a parent like i stated in the meeting. i have both hispanic and caucasian child in the school district. what division are they looking to create. steve: that's such good question. they use the phrase white advantage. >> they never explained it the statement said the school is committed to dismanhattan ling structures rooted in white advantage which they did not explain and transforming our system by hearing and elevating under represented voices, sharing power recognizing and eliminating bind redistributing resources to provide equitable
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outcomes. so when you read that, it's like wait. why didn't they explain that? it sounds like, jessica, they are going to change the language because it hit the fan. it sounds like they are going to change it on wednesday. but are they going to change what they are doing. >> that's a good question. not only are they having a workshop. so i don't know if they are going -- so this coming wednesday, they are having a workshop from the hours of 1:00 to 6:00 p.m. to discuss it. now, woe have a new board member. and i want to quote her. she stayed in the meeting we had last wednesday and i quote she wants a blank check for her time refunded, end quote that she spent building this equity statement. she wants the board to stand by this. have you ms. brill, ms. mcquinn who state they know knew this was going to create division. they still have not explained it they said it is to have public comment. work shops are made during working hours when we are not available to go there and discuss these issues with them.
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why are they bringing this into our school system? they should be focused on our children's academics. helping them become productive members of society. not push ideology on them. steve: jessica, they may changes language the question is whether they will change what they're teaching. >> correct. steve: before this, you have two kids, i believe in high school. >> correct. steve: what they're coming home to you and talking to you about at the end of the day, does it sound like your school is teaching something like the critical race theory, which we have heard so much about these days? >> it is border line. testing the waters. my children are very vocal. we speak openly in this household and we talk about many subjects. they have had books they have had to read over the summer that raise a lot of questions that seeks to divide. children see each other as peers. they don't see each other based on race and religion. they see each other as
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americans. dr. alveda king said we are one race. we are the human race. why this is being pushed in our schools is a question to all of us wanted. and to label such words that creates such division such as white advantage we're really not okay with that i don't think any person should be. steve: you are not alone. you have hundreds of thousands of people behind with you your group. we did reach out to the palm beach county school district. they have not gotten back to us. thank you for joining us in palm beach county. thank you and good luck. >> thank you for having me. steve: all right. coming up, fauci's flip flop. the doctor fueling speculation the coronavirus did not develop naturally after insisted the lab leak was just a sham. try to get to the bottom of that coming up next. you are watching "fox & friends" from new york and washington. ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ ♪ >> are you still confident that it developed naturally. >> no, actually, no, i'm not convinced about that. i think that we should continue to investigate what went on in china until we find out to the best of our ability exactly what happened. steve: well, that's something new. apparently dr. fauci not sold on the theory that coronavirus developed naturally and jumped from animals to people. even calling for further investigation into its origins. ainsley: well, that's a lot different from his stance. brian: you think so? ainsley: at the start of the pandemic shutting down the possibility of that lab leak. brian: here to react fox news contributor and new york columnist meranda divine. why does he sound like tom cotton all of the sudden? >> hi, brian, well, i mean he has to flip flop, doesn't he? he has to change from his
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previous position because that's what he does. now we have seen that he is sort of inching towards a position where he has admitted that everything he has told us for the last year junt wasn't right. it was wrong. and, you know, maybe it's because he has been rumbled now. he is conflicted on this issue of the lab leak hypothesis because he was providing part of the funding from his institute to the wuhan lab virus. and so maybe he just was not wanting to face up to that. the fact is that he has told lies. he has admitted it over the past year object pandemic. he lied about mask. he admitted that and about heard immunity and about other things. so he has betrayed his role as a sort of authority and someone to be trusted. and polls are we flecting that now there was one by gibraltar the other day it confidence in
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dr. fauci has has plummeted by more than 40% in the last year and that's why. steve: the "wall street journal" has an exclusive. they have cited information that apparently three people who worked at the lab wound up going to the hospital in wuhan in november of 201. and first documented case in beijing was something like the first week in december. so, if those three people went in with covid rather than just the flew, that could be the smoking gun. miranda, it sounds like they wanted to get ahold of the blood samples from those people and china has said no, but now they say okay, you can have it but they won't release them. >> well, we know china has been covering up from the beginning. there has been all sorts of smoking guns that the intelligence community has discovered about that period in wuhan at the wuhan lab. you know, there was satellite images of a lot of activity happening around the lab around the time that those three people
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went to hospital. so much evidence has been discovered not because the chinese have been forthcoming but because our intelligence agencies and various internet have discovered information. this is not the way it should be. we shouldn't have to be putting things together like detectives. china should have been open about it but, of course, they are not. they try to cover up their own complicity and it's just not good when you have got agencies like the world health organization. like dr. fauci. like peter daszak from ecohealth alliance who all are doing the chinese' dirty work by covering up the origins of this virus. and unfortunately dr. fauci was in a position in america where he really could have come clean and also reassured people, given them the correct information from the beginning, but he hasn't. he has been so conflicted, he has told so many lies.
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he has gone backwards and forwards on his recommendations. i'm not sure why he is still in that lofty position. i don't know why anyone listens to anything he says. and the problem is it's not just about one man. it's about, obviously, the public health community. they are not trust both. they think they can lie to us to shape public behavior. and that's a worry especially when political agendas creep in. ainsley: definitely needs to be an investigation. and fauci is calling for that we also need to figure out about this gain of function research. because this is how these covid -- these viruses get spread throughout the world. and we don't want this to happen again. and we don't want to fund these types of research -- this type of research. thanks so much, meranda, for coming on with us. all right, adam klotz is in the house today. welcome back, adam, good to see you. steve: he is out of the house. ainsley: back in the building was here earlier. hey, adam.
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>> back in the building and in fox square. a nice day after a weekend where temperatures were the in 90's, hot and sticky in new york city. cooler in new york city. that's not the case everywhere. there is really warm summer like weather. take a look at weather graphics. what are we talking about? today's forecasted highs as i said a lot cooler in new york city. only 67 degrees. ethics stream heat that bubbled up over the weekend is still around. 89 degrees in chicago. 81 degrees in minneapolis. 90 degrees in raleigh. take a look at that strong cold front. i know you if you live in the west it's not been very summary. right around that frontal boundary a chance of severe weather. maybe some hail, strong thunderstorms, isolated tornado. all of that is possible. that's something we're going to be watching as the day continues on. good to be back, guys, i'm tossing it back inside to you. ainsley: things are getting back to normal. thanks so much, adam. coming up, moving out. a record number of americans are leaving record states like california for red states like texas. meet a man who just fled for
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ainsley: texas leading the way for relocation from liberal states like california with more
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than 82,000 californians moving to the lone star state in 2019. our next guest moved his family from outside of san francisco two months ago to start a new life down in fort worth, texas. scott joins us with more. good morning. >> good morning. ainsley: beautiful pictures of your wife and three sconce. >> 12, 5 and 3. >> why did you decide to move out of the state that you grew up in. >> me and my wife were both naturally born and raised in california. we decided to move them. at the start of the pandemic my oldest son played baseball. did competitive swimming also did football. liked football. we watched both their baseball seasons cut short, ended then no other sports. taken out of school. tried to do in school learning for kindergarten for a 5-year-old was not happening. we just saw a year of their life basically taken away from them.
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they couldn't go parks. they couldn't go outside. they had friends that weren't allowed to play. ainsley: what has texas given you? >> it's given us freedom. it's given us our life back. both my kids, two older ones were in little league this year. they played. they have been in school every day. they have been able to be kids. i have been able to take them to like kids play parks and stuff like that and just live a normal life. ainsley: and you all took a trip down to texas during the pandemic and that sealed the deal for you, right? >> yes, we took two trips. one in october and one in january. october when we came, they were -- the kids were back doing normal stuff, pop warner football was going on. we were able to go out to restaurants. we were able to live a very open, free life but still controlled. then in january we brought our oldest son with us and he enjoyed it and liked and it didn't want to go home that kind of sealed it for us. ainsley: you all were making
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good money in california, six figure salary combined income. it still wasn't enough. are you able to have more money in the bank account in texas? >> yeah. so i actually make less money per week gross wise but my take home is a lot more. it's a couple hundred bucks more per week. ainsley: that's awesome. >> no state income tax is the huge beneficiary. you know, vehicle registration. cheaper gas. just overall cost of living is over all cheaper for us. ainsley: more money to spend on your son. >> absolutely. ainsley: i'm glad you are happy. use offed to live in texas. it's an awesome state. great state. great people down there, great food. >> the people are another thing that helped us a lot. ainsley: thanks so much for joining us. i wish all the best. god bless you and those boys. more "fox & friends" coming up. ♪ ♪ i've got the brains... ♪
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they should be focused on academies. >> fox news has captured exclusive footage of migrants running across the border trying to dodge border patrol. >> tells us a story of what is happening every single day there. >> right under him the race has been called with 14 to go. there is chase elliott and he is the winner. ♪. that takes me back. you hear a song. this is such popular song in new york. brian: andrew yang doesn't know who sings this. he had no idea. he doesn't know any jay-z songs. steve: remember we would go to yankees games they would play this in the sixth or sixth inning. 24th day of may. i would like to say happy birthday to my wife kathy doocy we have been married 150 years.
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ainsley: that's right, you were talking about getting her gift the other day. brian: not anymore. that was it. there you go. how would you like it mentioned on national television. steve: i have no idea what she is talking about. great. loofs lips sinks ships. ainsley: she is knows she is getting a gift i know where you went to get it. i don't know what it was. i have to ask you in the commercial break. steve: she knows i got it too. brian: do you know how much it was? ainsley: no. steve: happy birthday. ainsley: glad you were born, kathy. steve: indeed. busy, busy monday, mark meredith joins us from washington, d.c. as fox news uncovers crime is surging nationwide. mark, is that a headline i think we have known that for a while. >> the sad headline and certainly a reality that a lot of people are deal with. it was a violent weekend in major u.s. cities and the numbers do vary quite a bit by city. some of the numbers that stand out local news in philadelphia
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reporting that the city has now surpassed some 200 homicides this year alone. it was at least 15 people shot between friday and sunday night. the city of brotherly love homicide rate reportedly up 36% year over year. back where you guys are in the big apple 22% jump in murders compared to 2020. this weekend nearly 30 people shot in new york. out west in chicago another bloody weekend, local news reporting 48 people shot there over the weekend. 11 of them fatally. this week we expect to hear a lot from lawmakers, not only about violence in major u.s. cities but also about police reform that's because we are about to mark one year since george floyd's death. while there has been no comprehensive police reform legislation passed out of congress, some lawmakers who are working on these reform measures admit there is a lot of work still to be done. >> the profession itself here in new jersey applications to the state police are at historic low. about 90% less people even
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applying to be new jersey state troopers. we have a crisis of policing in america. it's not new but we have to come together and fix it. >> we've are expecting to hear a lot more from lawmakers what needs to be done to reform police departments nationwide. we saw marches in honor of george floyd in minneapolis. his family was there marching. tomorrow they will be here in washington meeting with president biden. steve, ainsley and brian back to you on a soggy morning in the nation's capitol. steve: it looks like it. mark, thank you very much. ainsley: scary crime is up, all that's police departments are talking about -- residents are talking about defunding, all these leaders are defunding our police departments. if you look at the numbers, there is evidence to show after all of these departments have been defunded crime has gone up around our country. and some small cities, even louisville, ken keep, there is a "new york times" article about this and here is a portion of that, it says it is a trend near across the country where crime
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is skyrocketing in many big cities putting liberal leaders under pressure to balance the demands of activists against the concerns of some residents about rising violence. even smaller cities haven't been spared the rise in violence. louisville last year set a record for homicides with 173. and this year is on pace to surpass that. brian: outlawed 20 large u.s. cities. defunded the police $240 million. contracts police in schools. you know what's happening also with the colleges. they are considered the bad guys. so in turn you have things like philadelphia, 200 homicides for the year already. 15 people shot over the weekend. new york city 30 shot other the weekend. in figure 46 shot. and in chicago their police union went and had a vote to of no confidence in their mayor and the mayor turned around and said i consider that a badge of honor. that's how bad things are you are cutting the budget. people are more in danger than ever. cops are quitting or demoralized
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or just saying it's not worth it for me to do this job anymore. guess hot victims are the people that need the most protection. people in working class community urban environments. steve: look here in new york city. they talked about defunding the police to the tune of a billion dollars. they got rid of the anticrime unit. the anti-gang unit. so little respect on the street. remember going back over a year. a year and a half ago where we showed you the images of people throwing pails of water on the cops. brian: those are like the good old days. steve: people hitting cops with the home depot puckets and things like that. it would be one thing after a year of unrest and you realize hey, wait a minute, it turns out, we don't need as big a police staff. but fast forward to today, we need more cops. that is very clear. except in st. louis where coming n 10 minutes we are going to do a segment. they just elected the city's
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first black female mayor last month and she wants to defund the police and shut down a jail and a couple of days ago she told the telegraph she said more police doesn't prevent crime. she said we have in st. louis two separate police unions. one for black police officers and one for white officers. if they can't trust each other, then how can we expect the public to trust them? brian: back what cory booker was saying they are making progress for police reform. there is a lot of police officers in departments not against it because they want more training. they want more funding. and if you want to raise the salaries you are going to get more quality people. right now they can't fill up academies in the most prestigious highest paying departments, they can't fill up their academies. used to be you wait forever once you take that test to get a call. now they are calling you. ainsley: remember when all the progressives said defund, defund, defund police and then had you jim clyburn in south carolina saying this is not a good message. this is not what our
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constituents want. this is not. brian: that's why they almost lost the house defund the police. ainsley: you are right. it wasn't waying message. they told the democrats stop saying this it's not working. brian: they keep saying it anyway. steve: bad messaging. brian: what the larkin was on a shorts time ago. self-running for a district just outside of the bright blue seattle hear. -- area.he has a great campaign make crime illegal again. >> people are sick of what is going on. people want leadership on these issues. especially in the eighth district. it's because they don't want these crimes and this violence creeping out of seattle and into their communities. they are shop owners, they are people have businesses in the area. they can't even conduct business. they are getting broken into, robbed, vandalized. these people are hungry for vice. they are hungry for someone to stand up to them. they feel like the city leadership has abandoned them. this isn't just a seattle problem.
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this isn't just a problem in washington state. we are seeing this problem all over the country. steve: why police departments have vacancies. why do they have vacancies? think about it in if you are in that business and you have got a lot of activists talking about you know what? we have got defund the police. essentially those people who have police jobs they have got to job security. fast forward, and there's no -- there is so little respect. who would want to be a police officer these days? unfortunately, not enough people. a lot of people answer the call. but given what's happened politically in the last couple of years, would you want to be a police officer? ainsley: a lot of people are moving to different locations they are going down south where they are appreciated. where people love them. >> steve: in new york they retire with a pension. they have go down to florida and they have an easier job. brian: there is another story plaguing our lives pun intended that's when the origin of this virus. for the longest time senator tom
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cotton was the first one to come out and say there is a pandemic. something is brewing in would wn area. i'm watching the way people are being thrown off the street. look out something is happening at wuhan lab. athletics thing you know we have almost 600,000 dead americans. still can't get underneath this vicious virus. staggerly there is such little curiosity as to how it started. who started this? why are the chinese lying about it the minute you bring it up you are xenophobic. you are causing asian hate crime. no, we are trying to find out why a communist country poisoned the world and they won't tell us how it started and scientists say we can't stop it unless we find out how it started. we can't ever test for it unless we find out how it started. so, when you bring up things, up until recently about the origin of the virus, people said that's conspiracy theories. twitter takes you down. facebook bans you. now all of the sudden a voice in the wind. a voice of i think common knowledge. "wall street journal" broke a story yesterday that three wuhan
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lab workers became sick with covid-like symptoms and hospitalized in wuhan in 2019 december 9th of 2019 -- excuse me, november. december 9th is the first recorded case. they were hospitalized in november. if it came from a bat who bit another crazy animal and someone ate it, why is the wuhan lab, who is doing some very risky research, why are three workers coming down with this virus and why do we have to beg china to tell us the truth? steve: well, you know, if you are right, brian, and if there are three members of the same team who worked on the same lab on the same problem went to the same hospital with the same symptoms before the pandemic started, officially, that would really be something. but china has not helped us. and there have been so many people, you know, over the last year who goes there is no way it was a lab leak.
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at least that's what dr. fauci said until he sat down with politifact and they did an interview with him a couple weeks ago. it was not really picked up by the mainstream media or anybody else somebody noticed it over the last couple of days. now he is starting to question whether or not that jump from a bat to a person is possible. here's dr. fauci. listen. >> are you still confident that it developed naturally? >> no. actually, no, i'm not convinced about that. i think we should continue to investigate what went on in china until we find out to the best of our ability exactly what happened. brian: now he's curious. couldn't very backed up donald trump when he said that from the podium? ainsley: donald trump said that republicans said this dr. facebook keeps flip-flopping. he changes his opinion. he said you don't need a of course that. then he has double masks on.
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i don't understand why he is the leading expert on this because everything he says he changes. steve: well, he is a doctor. but he has been in washington forever. is he also a politician. is he a politician. and that's why we have meranda mirandadevine on with us 40 mins ago. that's why dr. fauci is a flip fronter. >> he has to flip flop. he has to changed from previous position because that's what he does. now we have seen he is sort of inching towards the position where he has admitted that everything he has told us for the last year just wasn't right. it was wrong. the fact is that he has told lies. he has admitted over the past year on the pandemic. he lied about masks. he admitted that and about herd immunity and about other things. so he has betrayed his role as a sort of authority and someone who be trusted. brian: china should be writing the world a huge check because they're responsible for all this. the lying made it worse. australia was one of the first
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to bring it up and strawtians got hit with all these types of tariffs. they said we are not going to take any more of your wine. there will be retribution. they went after president trump and tom cotton called him a lunatic. i actually disagree, ainsley. i think dr. fauci knew the whole time there was a chance there was a lab leak. he is now realizing i can't duck this anymore. ainsley: why we lie about it then? brian: because he thought it would never come down to it. nih funding went to third party to donated to wuhan to do risky research. ainsley: he said they didn't use that money to do research. brian: talk to wade science reporter and jamie metzl who worked for and adviser at w.h.o. ainsley: who are you going to trust, dr. fauci? brian: no. steve: perhaps he didn't want to bring attention to the fact that there are countries that try to represent nice things like coronavirus. china does -- you have got to figure every major country tries to do that and he didn't want to bring a spotlight to it and now
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fast forward and it looks as if it is real. ainsley: we want to know the origins of this so it doesn't happen again and china is not cooperating. brian: president biden is not curious. he says i'm going to let the w.h.o. do that. steve: if it was proven it was a lab leak will china apologize? brian: i want a check. i don't want an apology. their economy recovers and we are stuck with the virus. steve: they can apologize with a check then. anyway, a quarter after the top of the hour, thank you very much for joining us. jillian variety over there this h. to check behind camera one. and she joins us now with the news. jillian: good morning, begin with this. amazing video. drone captures a grouch 40 migrants rushing the southern border in texas. the group of mostly men scaled fences and stumbled over narrow streams. a single border agent was seen chasing the group on foot before a second agent chased behind in his truck. about 15 to 20 migrants were taken into custody. it appears about half of the group managed to get away.
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unbelievable video. a prominent black lives matter activist in the united kingdom is reportedly in critical condition after getting shot. the guardian reports sasha johnson was found near a house party in southeast london. the details of the shooting are limited at this point but police do not believe johnson was targeted. michigan governor gretchen whitmer facing backlash for violating social distancing glinelz. she appeared with a group of unmasked people at a restaurant. whitmer apologizing in a statement quote because we were all vaccinated we didn't stop to think about it in retrospect i should have thought about it i'm human. i made a mistake and i apologize. whitmer is receiving a profile in courage reward for her response to the pandemic despite residents saying her orders threatened their livelihoods and freedom. and now to this. phil mickelson makes history becoming the oldest player to win a pga championship. watch. >> here it is.
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biggest moment for the legendary career phil defeats father time. jillian: so great, right? the 50-year-old describes the final moments on 18 saying, quote: slightly unnerving but exceptionally awesome. fans cheered for him as he held his league all weekend flocked to the 18th hole to witness mick win his first major since 2013. that's a look at your headlines. steve: inspiring. brian: meanwhile, state ahead as crime surges across saint lewis the city's progressive mayor remains firm on budget cuts for police. sounds off on policies. i'm not done reading yet. lebron james on the nba defense after the basketball super star gets a pass despite breaking covid protocols. ainsley: they are not going to bunch him? brian: i don't think so. late.
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♪ steve: the city of st. louis missouri murder rate skyrocketed to 50 year high. the mayor is defending proposals that have taken an ax to the city's police budget and completely cut funding for one of the jails. here with reaction is air force vet conservative columnist and st. louis native stacy washington. stacey, good morning to you. >> good morning, steve. steve: okay. so, jones was just elected the city's first black female mayor last month. is this what she ran on? >> yeah. i mean, she is progressive. now, she wasn't openly defund the police any more than cori
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bush was when she ran for congress. they are leftist. they're progressives. this is a part of their agenda. it's unpopular in the suburbs but in the city there is no chance of a republican winning, steve. steve: so she wants to defund the police and she wants to shut down a jail. and she has said this more police doesn't prevent crime. research done in the police department shows that 50% of calls can be answered by somebody other than police. so why not deploy somebody other than the police and free up to police to do the work that they were trained to do in our academy. you know, and if that were true, it would be great. but over the last year, we have seen other people go in certain localities to answer police calls and that doesn't necessarily always work out exactly the right way. >> so one of the most prevalent calls that police receive are domestic disturbance calls and also the most dangerous call. a police officer is more likely to be shot on that call than any other. i'm not sure what research she
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is looking at. 81% of black americans in poll after poll the most recent one being a gallup one saying they want more police in their neighborhood. they want better policing. they want better relationships with the police. i'm not sure what she is looking at, steve. steve: well, she looking at her political left flank and they are pushing to defund the police. but, you say she could be the greatest mayor in the history of st. louis if she did, what? >> first of all, let's eliminate this kind of language that comes from last year's political season and move into actual mayoral activities. more training opportunities for police. more opportunities for the police to build their relationships. better equipment for them. fully fund their equipment. make sure that every public facing officer has a body cam. and in her communications, instead of vilifying the police. partner. steve: sure. st. louis proper, the metro area
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of st. louis, she is the mayor of that. and that's where she wants to defund the police and shut down the jail. what about the ring of suburbs around st. louis? how many of those towns want to defund the police? >> >> absolutely zero. the good news is we have our own police. in my little town we have our own police, chesterfield which is the largest municipality have their own police department. defundingsing the police at large is impossible. it's still a danger for all of us because we travel downtown for the ballgame and go downtown to shop. we need to have actual policing that works all over. steve: well, let's see what happens. homicides are at 50-year high and that is a terrible legacy. stacy washington, thank you very much for joining us from missouri. >> thanks, steve. steve: all right. see you later. all right. meanwhile, coming up on this monday, liberal media instilling fear about the threat of covid in kids. dr. saphier is separating fact
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from fiction. she is going to join us live. you are watching "fox & friends" live from new york city. it's monday. ♪ ♪ before nexium 24hr, anna could only imagine a comfortable night's sleep without frequent heartburn waking her up. now, that dream... . ...is her reality. nexium 24hr stops acid before it starts, for all-day, all-night protection. can you imagine 24 hours without heartburn? germ proof your car with armor all disinfectant. all-night protection. kills 99.9% of bacteria and viruses. oh, it was terrible. i was totally stranded. no tp? nope, empty roll.
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jillian: good morning, we are back now with headlines for you. the notre dame class of 2021 has graduated without biden giving the traditional address. condemned biden for pro-choice policies ahead the graduation. sending a letter to the university's president imploring him to block the president from attending. that letter garnered more than 4500 signatures. the white house says biden had a scheduling conflict. and italian cable car plunges 11 people. the lone survivor a 5-year-old boy is in the hospital in serious condition. authority say it appears the cable broke but the cause of the crash in northern italy is under investigation. fire service vehicle reportedly overturned while responding to
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the team but no one was injured. the u.s. is condemning forcing a passenger plane down to arrest an opposition journalist. the country faked a bomb threat to divert the aircraft and arrested yavitch. the ambassador to belarus condemning the arrest as dangerous and abhorrent. an indiana father it turning from deployment gives the surprise of a lifetime. hugging for the first time in months. look at this. returned from afghanistan with his national guard unit when his mission was cut short after two months. a proud father finished watching gavin's game. i'm sure that was the best game that two of them enjoying. ainsley: that's great. still embracing. the media inprovoking fear in parents that their children are at risk for contracting coast.
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next guest says you shouldn't believe in all of that hype. she writes an op-ed: fox news medical contributor author of panic attack that hits store shelves tomorrow dr. nicole saphier joins us now. good morning, dr. saphier. >> good morning, ainsley. ainsley: good morning. i read your op-ed and i love your message. why did you think this was important? >> well, listen, ainsley. the pandemic may be far from over but the emergency certainly is as we have now hit all-time low for daily deaths, new cases as well as hospitalizations. we have gotten to a level of acceptable risk previously during bad flu years and other circulating respiratory viruses now over 60% of u.s. adults have gotten one dose of that vaccine and being extended to adolescents it's time to acknowledge the emergency is over and move forward especially when it comes to young children as we have known for a while but we continue to have more data that young children are less severely affected by this virus and have a less risk of
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transmitting it new data from the cdc just out last week shows the biggest way to prevent viral transmission in elementary school is not by unmasking the children improving ventilation and unmasking teachers. that was before we had a vaccine. we have data that showing if you are vaccinated you are not spreading the virus. it's time to get children back in school. it should not be contingent on vaccinating children or them wearing masks. ainsley: 40% of hospitalizations covid-19 were overcounted. you write about this in op-ed. to say put it bluntly because hospitals have instituted universal testing of parents, incidental positive cases were found when kids were admitted for other reasons, including mental health disease and orthopedic fractures not from symptoms of covid-19. if we are truly to follow the science, we must allow children to resume their normal activities. how are these numbers inflated? >> there is nothing nefarious going on here, ainsley. sty all the time patients coming in biopsy and doing covid tests.
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if they were positive we said we had to wait. they didn't have symptoms but they were positive. same with children, 46% of those kids were asymptomatic to code but they were treated as a covid hospitalization because they were in the hospital and they tested positive. there is a perceived level of risk when it comes to this virus in young children. that perceived level of risk does not equate to reality. now, listen, sars cove v 2 is a tricky virus. i don't want anyone to get it that's unpredictable. that isn't to say some children aren't severely affected by it there are other pathogens circulating we have deemed okay risk that we have not halted life. and when it comes to sars cov 2 in children i believe that risk is very low and time to resume activities for them because we know the consequences of not doing that will far outweigh the virus itself. ainsley: tell us about your new book that hits shelves tomorrow panic attack. >> ainsley, come on, you know i have been working on this book for a long time now, one thing
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that's continuously happened throughout this entire pandemic is fear. there has been a lot of fear and questions asked that people don't have answers to. so what i wanted to do in the book. i think the most controversial topics that people had a lot of confusion about. i broke through the confusion. i put only facts. in because i feel if you educate yourself with facts, it takes away the fear. facts over fear. i challenge why weren't we allowed to discuss the possibility of a lab leak? why did the media hate hydroxychloroquine so much why was dr. fauci the it white knight and president trump the villain. you saw censorship of any con many of which have turned out to be true. i actually divulge into were those lockdown protesters right all along? we tackle the most controversial topics including face masks, school closures and hydroxychloroquine and others viral origin we break through all of this pipe hype and get to
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the facts. therefore, if you have the facts you have your own opinions you don't need the media to give to you. ainsley: so proud of you and all of your success. we know your story. you are a dear friend of mine and i'm so happy for you. >> thank you very much, ainsley. available everywhere tomorrow but you can preorder it now. ainsley: i will do that right now go to amazon and preorder. thanks, dr. saphier, panic attack is the name of her book. go pick up a copy. millions are turning to a new social media platform as big tech continues to silence conservative views. the founder of rumble introduces us to his youtube alternative right after this. ♪
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♪ ainsley: as free speech becomes increasingly restricted by silicon valley more americans are ditching mainstream media for conservative sites like rumble. steve: the youtube alternative rumble has added 81 million viewers since last august and caught the attention of venture call much capitalist peter thiel and d.j. vance. brian: joining us now founder of rumble. chris, congratulations, what do you think prompted this switch? >> thank you for having me on. so, back when we started in 2013, what i noticed was that a lot of these incumbent platforms were de-prioritizing the small creator. giving them less distribution and less reach. and they were completely prioritizing all the big brands, icons, influencers and they left the small creator completely behind. we built this platform on the promise of helping the small creator. fast forward to 8 years.
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we're 2021 now and seeing preferencing and censorship across the spectrum with small creators. our aunts and uncles can't reach their friends on all these other incumbent platforms the same way they could 10, 15 years ago. we entered the market with the idea of helping the small creator bringing them the same tools that large creators, large influencers have. distribution, monetization. et cetera. and that's what has prompted this surge in growth on rumble.com. steve: and, at the same time, you were talking a little bit about creators and things like that. but there are a number of conservatives who feel that they are not served by facebook or twitter so, they are going to your sight because you are not in the censor business. >> yes. so, the preferencing that's happened over the last 10 years has been -- has just rapidly increased. and in 2020 we saw all types of different types of censorship happening. you couldn't really communicate
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with your friends and family the same way that you could. on rumble what we are doing that's different is that when you open up the app., you have a chronological feed where when you contribute -- you upload your own video. your friends and family are going to get that video. it's not going to be overtaken by somebody else's page or somebody else's channel ha has more shares and more likes. you're going to get the content that you subscribed to the same way as if you are phoning somebody through your phone you will get exactly who is phoning you. it's not going to be preferenced and we are not going to control the remote control like these other platforms do. you are controlling the channel and what you see. and you are getting the content that you want. ainsley: that's great. you are not going to tell us what we can and can't watch. what was your reaction when president trump was taken off these platforms? >> obviously when the president has taken down any country from any platform that's a very concerning thing. it's not something we like to
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see. it's something that definitely that i was quite shocked to see happen. any president from any country being removed from any platform for just communicating to the people that want to hear him. brian: chris refresh your recollection concerned that your success could warrant scrutiny from people that hold the keys to you actually getting out there? i mean, you saw what happened with parler, came back. the site has not regained the momentum it had. >> i'm not concerned at all. there is two things that we do much differently. first wee have a really strict moderation policy when it documents racism, anti-semitism. inciting violence. we are not dependent and reliant on the other cloud services out there. we have kind of put servers all around the world, our own. and built our infrastructure the old fashioned way. we are not dependent on
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incumbent platforms. that's one of the things that this investment we received recently going to do. we are really going to start expanding that infrastructure so that other businesses can come work with us and they can feel safe and secure on our infrastructure. steve: that was the problem for parler, you know, their infrastructure was owned by amazon and they pulled the plug on them. you know, chris, it sounds like you are trying to be right down the middle, fair and balanced if you will. does it astound you that some social media companies and sites they are so politically far to the left they have excluded half of the country. if you are in business, you want everybody to be part of your team. >> yeah. you know, that's another thing that's shocked me quite a bit in the last 10 years and more so in the last couple years is everyone -- all these platforms, they want to jump in on the conversation. they want to start fact checking. they want to start moderating posts on opinions we all
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disagree. we all have different viewpoints. one thing atriumable i want to hold core to is not getting involved in other peoplens views. if you have a view that's your view and can you communicate to your follower, your subscriber however you like we are not going to control that remote on you. we are going to act just like your cell phone provider or where you can text message all your friends. we are not going to jump in and start telling you hey, you can't write that you are not allowed to write that. that's not something we're going to participate. in nor could we. become a media company where we are fact checking it's not something we are into. brian: chris, thank you so much. appreciate it. ainsley: congratulations, chris. >> thank you for having me. steve: i think a lot of people just signed up forummable. just saying. ainsley: adam klotz has the forecast. tam cam nice day on the fox square this morning. a little cooler than we saw yesterday. that summer like feeling is still around for a whole lot of folks. dive into that national forecast where we are going to begin with
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our temperatures across the country. current temperatures 60 degrees in new york city. buff you see a lot more warmth a little farther off towards the west and very defined cold front. it's been snowing in the rockies. it's summer for some folks, winter for some others. your forecasted highs before the day is over. going to be up close to 90 degrees again in chicago. 80 degrees in minneapolis. 90 degrees in raleigh. there is a lot of meet. it's along that frontal boundary where i told you scold air off to the west. that's where we see the possibility of severe weather today. severe thunderstorms, hail, wind damage, all possible. maybe an isolated tornado. should be weakening though over the next couple of days. that's going to be a spot we are watching. back out here on fox square. beautiful morning, giles, i'm so happy to be back tossing it back to you guys. ainsley: so glad you are back. back in the building or outside of the building. thanks, adam. we appreciate it. steve: progress. ainsley: coming up next. lebron james and the nba on the defense after the basketball super star gets a pass for breaking covid protocols.
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♪ ♪ brian: all right. lebron james being accused of dropping the ball on nba covid
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rules. listen to this, the laker's super star violating rules last week tequila parties investing in tequila. the league proving prediction by charles barkley right not suspending him ahead of the game losing to the phoenix suns. >> the nba ain't got no chance of sitting lebron james. ain't no [bleep] way lebron james is going to be set out because of health and safety pro-coals. lebron james is playing sunday guaranteed. brian: here to react clay travis from outkick.com. how did he violate? he doesn't seem to have gotten the covid-19 having seen for some reason he goes to a party anyways before the game. >> yeah, look. i mean, the nba has multiple rules for multiple different players. first of all, thanks for having me on. barkley nailed it what he knows so many of these ridiculous
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protocols are cosmetic theater. coaches still standing on the sidelines with masks on. you have players socially distanced on the bench. all of it is primarily a sham in terms of the impact that it's likely having in the nba. and i think lebron just basically called the nba's plouffe here. -- bluff here. i'm going to show up star studded gala to announce the debut of this tequila. i know there is nothing the nba will do to me i'm lebron james and the rules don't apply to me. that's what so many sports fans are over, brian. they are ready for us to get back to 100 percent normalcy in sports. brian: that's fine. now it means anybody else i don't care if you are a starter or coming off the bench you just ignore the nba from now on. this is what they said a violation of the agreed upon protocols and as we have had in other comparable around the league addressed with the team. they have not reached the 85% threshold of getting vaccinated.
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that's all we do know. once again, special rules for super stars. he lost yesterday and he did seem to have a shoulder injury. let's talk about a great injury. phil mickelson now over 50. goes ahead and holds on to a four-day lead. and wins the pga championship. put that in perspective. >> i think given the age and i think that's an important qualification here. given the age, it's the most impressive thing that anybody has ever done in golf. several years ago tom watson at the british open had a chance at 59 to win a major. but tough go all the way back to jack nicklaus in 1986 in order to point to anybody who is the same age. tiger of course a couple years ago 2019 masters off all the issues he has. phil mickelson turns 51 next month. this is the oldest player to ever win a major. i think what it does is extend the range of when we can expect top players to be dominant on the golf course. it's an extraordinary performance and incredibly difficult course. as you mentioned this wasn't
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some sort of fluke. mick led basically from the thursday all the way through sunday. i think given his age, it's the most remarkable achievement we han in the history of golf. brian: he has a form of arthritis had to redo his diet one of which ethiopian coffee. water, fasting. whatever it does, it is going to sell a lot now. even tom brady saluted him. i love this quote because you do more than sports, clay. this to me incapsulates everything we have been debating. i fell many times in my life and career because of this. i learned a lot. instead of being defeated countless times i have used it as fuel to drive me to work harder. today join me in accepting our failures and motivate us to work even harder. the whole premise is opportunity and not results. >> how unexpected this performance was by phil
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mickelson. you can get him 300 to 1 to win the pga championship if you were a gambler at think about that 300 to 1. america is about the equality of opportunity. not the equality of outcome. that's honestly why sports met for of the larger american condition right now. if we expect everyone to be equal, that defeats the entire purpose of competition. the best man or woman should win. on sunday the best man was phil mickelson. brian: like it or not, only one winner meritocracy wins out in golf anyway. thank you. >> thanks for having me. brian: fox news captures exclusive individual overmigrants running across the border trying to dodge border patrol. was the same old story for years. trying this. doing that. spending countless days right here.
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do not take trelegy more than prescribed. trelegy may increase your risk of thrush, pneumonia, and osteoporosis. call your doctor if worsened breathing, chest pain, mouth or tongue swelling, problems urinating, vision changes, or eye pain occur. take a stand and start a new day with trelegy. ask your doctor about once-daily trelegy. and save at trelegy.com. steve: fox news captured exclusive footage of migrants running across the border trying to dodge border patrol. >> that video tells a story of what's happening almost every single day here. >> the white house is prepared to change course on infrastructure. if they can't drum up gop support. >> if they aren't coming forward we've got to go forward alone. >> the only way they can pay for it is by having the largest tax hike in american history. >> the violent weekend in major u.s. cities, philadelphia reporting 15 people shot. the big apple it's nearly 30 people shot. in chicago, reporting 48 people shot. >> we need to have actual policing that works.
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ainsley: millions are turning to a new social media platform as big tech continues to silence conservative views. >> you're coming the channel, you're controlling what you see and getting the content that you want. >> here it is, the biggest moment of the legendary career. >> [applause] >> ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ brian: all right, getting used to life without drew brees perhaps, it's true he retired and now he ha to make a ton and not get tackled but it's most important to point out what happened over the weekend is two things. phil mickelson wins at 50-plus years old, between first and last majors he won its been 30 years. number two is the crowds. i mean, it was just so good to see crowds, shoulder to shoulder and on the golf course it looks totally out of control by the way. steve: it was. brian: but just to see him walk up and try to finish out this victory and being surround ed by thousands of
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people where eight months ago, they were saying nobody could go watch these guys and the lpga play. ainsley: so great i'm so proud of south carolina for hosting this , it's kiowa island they have the ocean course there and it's beautiful. steve: look at the crowd. well phil himself said it was awesome, but he said it was un nerving because, and one of the was it cbs, nbc cameras caught a guy just coming up behind him and grabbing him with both of his arms and his security limited as it was, kind of peeled him off, but still, and you know, brooks kep has a bad knee and just had surgery and apparently he got dinged in so it was a little crazy. brian to your point i think the people of south carolina and who were at the ocean course they were ready for a party, and he gave them an awesome reason to celebrate and that is what they did yesterday. ainsley: they did, my brother is somewhere in that crowd. he was there.
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steve: he could have been the guy who jumped him. ainsley: [laughter] that wouldn't surprise me. he wouldn't surprise me though. brian: let's bring in louisiana senator john kennedy, we show the wide shot of new orleans a short time ago. senator welcome. i tell you, it's kind of disturb ing but it's all too familiar our flight team, our drone team was able to capture people just running full sprint, one of which two guys were in handcuffs, across our border. why is there not, why can't there be a bipartisan sense of outrage everywhere in seeing this? >> well, the department of homeland security has announced that the border is closed, but they lied like they breathe. i mean, i don't mean to be ugly but they lie like they breathe. when i heard the secretary say the border is closed, my mind
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went back to that image of president clinton looking to the american people in the eye saying that i did not have sex with that woman. we know how that turned out. i've been to the border. if you believe the border is closed, you believe in the tooth fairy, the easter bunny and that jimmy hoffa died of natural causes. we'll have 2 million people come in to the united states this year, illegally, thanks to the biden administration. they have no idea who they are, except they're coming from all over the world. the biden administration has almost completely halted any kind of deportation of people already here illegally. america has become one giant sanctuary city, and the same of all of this is is that in addition to violating the law and being dangerous, it undermines legal immigration. most americans support legal immigration.
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i do. we welcome a million people to come into our country. brian: you'll never get reform as long as this is happening, ever. canada is sealed, the northern border is sealed, the southern border is chaos. romaine yankeeses are coming through. >> well, president biden has put around him, i know he's a nice guy, he is a nice guy, i've talked to him but the people he's put around him are extreme ly radical. i mean, they can live in crazy town. they need an exorcist. these folks really believe that vetting people at the border is racist. they think that unlike any other country in the history of the world, we are supposed to just welcome anybody who wants to come in without asking any questions. brian: crazy. >> that just, american people don't support that, and president biden knows it, so that's why i say so many of his people lie like they breathe.
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ainsley: you mentioned the dhs secretary mayorkas talking about the border being closed we put together a montage of him saying that over and over. listen to this. >> we are elevating our messaging so that the individuals do know that they cannot come to the border, the border is closed. >> precisely that. the border is closed. >> the message is quite clear. do not come. the border is closed. the border is secure. the border is secure. the border is closed. we've been in that. ainsley: the border is not secure you can look at all this video. we play it almost every single day of more groups coming through. what's your reaction? >> well, i know the secretary. look, here is what d.c. is all about. the thing that most people in washington d.c. want is to keep their jobs, and i'm sure the secretary wants to keep his job, and i'm sure he's been told
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by the biden white house to just say okay, the border is closed, and so many people around president biden believe that the american people are morons and that they will just believe whatever they see on television and they aren't morons and they don't believe it because it's not true , and i think they know that , but this just shows you the contempt that so many people in the biden administration have for the american people. steve: and that is why we are showing those images from our drone team, the administration may say it's closed but clearly, it is wide open. senator, i know on capitol hill the number one priority right now seems to be to try to get for the republicans an infrastructure bill. your suggestion is about a third of their latest. there seems to, however, have been a little compromise, because the president came back,
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he lopped about a half a trillion dollars off of it and this is what one of his senior advisors said about the infrastructure, along with bernie sanders, and where it could go next. >> he wants a deal, he wants it soon, but is there meaningful negotiations taking place in a bipartisan manner, he's willing to let that play out, but again, he will not let inaction be the answer and when he gets to the point where it looks like that is inevitable, you'll see him change course. >> we would like bipartisanship but i don't think we have a seriousness on the part of the republican leadership to address the major crisis facing this country and if they're not coming forward we've got to go forward alone. steve: so in other words bernie sanders wants to blow off the system, do a reconciliation, however, as we heard from the first advice joe biden is willing to change course if the republicans don't deal. their offer is still three times more than what you guys are willing to do, so he's going to
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have to change course, isn't he? >> well, as soon as president biden puts an infrastructure bill in front of me, i will consider it, but right now, his infrastructure bill, he's basically asking to buy a car to get the cupholders, only about five, maybe 10% of his infrastructure bill is infrastructure and the rest of it is the green new deal, the federal takeover of child care, and repirations. now if the president wants an infrastructure bill, we can put one together with our democratic friends in the senate very quickly. it'll be six to $800 million, it'll be roads, bridges, ports, sewer, water, broadband. we can tell him how to pay for it by repurposing some of the coronavirus money, and by scrubbing the federal budget a little bit, but he doesn't want to do that, and i don't think the white house is really interested in infrastructure bill.
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they're more interested in a federal takeover of child care, so they can control the curriculum and a green new deal and that's why we haven't been able to come together. brian: well we all know why it tells you -- >> but if i see a real infrastructure bill, i am most of my republican colleagues we'll pounce on it like a ninja. we just hadn't seen one yet. brian: you're at 600 billion you'll go up a little i'm sure but not when you have to pay for elder care, school lunches as well as preschool, and you got to militarize the irs to go raid and find some way to get more money out of the most successful people in this country and continue that villification process. my sense is, with inflation, with every single thing that we buy and use, now doubling in price from gas to lumber, the american people are not going to be okay with this , maybe they might have been okay with it three months ago, but not now. don't you think that there's a sense out there that things
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getting out of control with the spending? >> well, the biden white house is spending money like a sailor onshore leave. in fact there's a bill senator schumer has a bill in front of the senate right now that's going to cost probably $250 billion and he says we need it. it's backed by the biden white house, to fight communism and make us more competitive and it's probably going to pass because some of my republican colleagues have swapped brains with the democrats and they are going to vote for it. they want to give $60 billion to big tech. now we all know big tech is broke. they want to give $60 billion, that's 3 billion a company, to big tech so they can make a better algorithm to more quickly sensor us. i mean, it makes no sense. brian: like they agreed to do with china. >> yeah. ainsley: and biden, he ran on
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that student loan forgiveness but it's not in his latest, his upcoming budget. he told the new york times, the idea you go to penn for 70,000 a year and the public should pay for that i don't agree, but he ran on that. what message does this tell the 42 million americans that were going to get $10,000 lobbed off their student loans, many went to the polls to vote for him and he's not fulfilling that promise. >> well i think the white house is being realistic. they don't have the votes to pass it number one, and number two, the american people don't support it. i don't understand why all loans don't matter. why student debt, why not credit card debt? why not car loans. ainsley: that's next. >> and what the president was asked, he was asking the american people, many of whom didn't go to college, to pay for those who did go, and what about the people who have already paid off their student loans? brian: true. >> here is what our policy on
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student debt ought to be. number one, you borrowed money. number two, pay it back. problem solved. brian: right. steve: it's that easy. senator, always a pleasure to spend a little of our monday mornings with you, thank you for joining us today from louisiana. >> thanks, guys. ainsley: thank you. jillian has more headlines. jillian: good morning and let's begin with this. today, testimony will resume in the mollie tibbetts trial. illegal immigrant christian rivera is charged with first degree murder in the death of the 20-year-old. tibbetts went missing in july of 2018 while a run in iowa. her body was found a month later in acorn field. on friday a crime lab criminalities confirmed blood matching her was found in rivera 's trunk. >> a man who said he was going to kill an officer drives a car into a maryland police department overnight. the driver then got out and started attacking officers. he was tased and taken to a hospital. several charges are pending no
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officers were hurt. >> and this just in, new york city public schools wilfully reopen in september, with no remote option. mayor bill deblasio announcing that all students in the country 's largest school district will be expected in the classroom this fall. now, it is unclear what restrictions will be in place; however, teachers will be required to be in-person. >> and as the billboard music awards pink living up to her icon award with a touching performance with her daughter. watch. >> ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ >> live performances were held outdoors but several were pre- taxed morgan wallen winning three awards despite not being invited and the weekend racking up 10 wins after being snubbed by the grammies including top artist and top r &b album for "
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after-hours" those are a look at your headlines. steve: looked like that with pink. brian: i think every single should be forced to do a trapeze jillian is going to get on that right away. meanwhile at 14 minutes after the hour, still ahead, rules for the not for she, michigan governor gretchen whitmer is forced to apologize after getting caught again violating her own ridiculous restrictions ben domenech on the latest example of covid hypocrisy next. ainsley: plus we'll talk to missouri senator josh hawley and dan bongino. >> ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ how am i doing? some say this is my greatest challenge ever. governments in record debt; inflation rising and currencies falling.
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steve: michigan's governor is under fire again for violating her own covid guidelines again, after getting caught unmasked dining out, with a bunch of friends, about a dozen. the governor responding in part, "i went with friends to a local restaurant, as more people arrived the tables were pushed together, because we were all vaccinated, we didn't stop to think about it. in retrospect i should have thought about it. i am human. i made a mistake. i apologize. " fox news contributor ben domenech is here, with reaction, good morning to you, ben. >> good morning to you, peter, i too am human. steve: hold it, my name is steve you're thinking of the tall guy at the white house! >> oh, i'm so sorry [laughter] steve: you're as bad as she is! >> i just think that the one of
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the things that is going on here is that you have a governor who has been so viciferous in chiding her people, in undercutting them, in bringing them down and going after them in so many different respects and yet, when you look at this , you know, situation, you have someone who has repeatedly violated her own orders, or stretched them in different ways. you saw the whole experience with her husband going, wanting to go out on a boat and cite ling, you know, do you know who i am, earlier and that's what we've seen from all of these politicians through this whole process where they are unwilling to grant grace or forgiveness or understand humans who are going to make mistakes or violate rules in different respects. instead they go after them hammer and tongs and yet want a different standard for themselves. steve: sure this latest instance where she broke her own rules there were about a dozen people. the rules are six people or
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fewer at tables, they put three or four tables together, distances of six feet between tables, indoor capacity at 50% or 100 people, on and on, and you look at it and you know what you mentioned her husband and of course, in june of 2020 she joined the george floyd protest, violated her own social distancing rule, republicans called for investigations into her handling of the nursing home s, top aid traveled to florida for spring break after being told don't do that. she went on a private plane to visit her father and then the latest thing is she violated it at the landshark bar. but ben, she's a politician. does anybody really expect her to follow her own rules? come on! >> well of course. i mean, you know, obviously, politicians are better than the rest of us. that's the thing that we all have to understand. you know, they are our ruling class, our elite and so the rules shouldn't apply to them. they should be able to get away with all manner of things, that's what we learned during
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the entire hunter biden experience that you don't even actually have to be a politician you can just be related to one and then the rules just don't apply to you. in this case, though, i think seriously looking back at the way that this pandemic was treated these lockdowns were treated not just by whitmer but by gavin newsom, by so many different officials across the country, we've seen these repeated violations of the rules that they've setup for us and my response to that is, we shouldn't have the ability of these politicians that to setup these rules in the first place. their emergency powers turn out to be a lot more powerful than i think all of us really expected them to be, and their ability to crackdown on american citizens, and take takeaway their freedoms quickly, turned out to be more significant than we thought in the first place that's something we needed to go back and revisit and one thing in particular i think this is a situation where we ought to have more of an ability to recall governors across the country, just as they do in california. whether it results in them not being elected or not, it will at least have that threat put in
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place that makes them think twice about violating their rules in these ways. steve: you know, ben i've got friends down in florida who spend the summer in michigan, they aren't going back, because of the restrictions that were put in place at the beginning of the pandemic, when we didn't know a lot, fast forward we know so much more and now people are going wait what exactly did we give hads away the kind of point that you macon the ben domenech podcast available at foxnews podcast cot dominion. thank you so much. >> thanks so much. steve: coming up on this monday, anti-semitism on the rise with attack against jewish americans taking place from coast to coast. senator josh hawley will join us next on the action he's taking to condemn the rhetoric he blames for those crimes. limu emu... and doug. so then i said to him, you oughta customize your car insurance with liberty mutual, so you only pay for what you need. oh um, doug can we talk about something
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jillian: good morning and welcome back let's begin your headlines with this today marks the grim two year anniversary of jennifer dulos disappearance. her five children are healthy and well, according to a close friend. her family seeks justice as courts reopen amid the pandemic. the 50-year-old is believed to have been attacked in her connecticut garage in 2019. her body has never been found.
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her husband and main suspect in the case, committed suicide last year. >> a car goes through the roof of a house landing just feet from where a couple was sleeping the two teens in the chevy malibu were on their way home from a graduation party in missouri. the driver lost control, went up a ramp, rolled down an embankment and flipped over a fence into the home. they got out by walking out the front door. no one was injured. wow. >> okay, charles bar clay calling out the nba failure for punishing lebron james for violating covid protocols. the nba they got no chance of lebron james. ain't no way lebron james is going to be doing safety protocols. >> espn reports the lakers star won't be suspended or need to quarantine for the violation because the event didn't rise to the threat level of the virus spread. clay travis joined us earlier to
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weigh in. >> i think lebron just basically called the nba's bluff he said i'm going to show up at this star-studded gala, and i know there's nothing the nba will do to me because i'm lebron james. jillian: when asked about the violation after the laker's game, lebron dodged saying he be ready for game two. that is a look at your headlines brian i'll send it to you. brian: moments ago, joe biden addressing the surge of anti-semitism across the country , tweeting the recent attacks in the jewish community are despicable. they must stop and icon dem this hateful behavior and it's up to all of us to give hate no safe harbor. this is his own party grossly increasingly divided over the conflict in the middle east. gop senator josh hawley introducing a resolution to con department rhetoric and he says it contributes to these crimes we're seeing from los angeles all the way to new york. and he joins us now, senator, are you surprised it took this long? >> i'm surprised he took this long, and he shouldn't have , and now he needs to call members of his own party, and
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tell them it's time to stop this rhetoric. i mean when you say things like calling benjamin netanyahu an f no nationalist on the floor of the united states congress, when you call israel an apartide state which democrat members of congress have done on the floor of the united states congress that's incindiary rhetoric brian and we've had almost 200 incidents of violence reported now against jewish americans. again that's just reported we don't know what else is out there, that's too many that's too much and this rhetoric is contributing and its got to stop brian: yeah especially when bernie sanders says it's right wing extremists are the problem. it's unbelievable he got a pass on that on "face the nation" so look at these numbers, anti-semetic incidents 193 are reported in the week, after the crisis began. that's up 47%, and you see this palestinian advocate and said i'd do it again. so there's no remorse at all.
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senator, the other reason why we have this here is because as much pushback as there's been from facebook, from amazon, from youtube, from twitter, with people being exiled off like the president of the united states, it doesn't seem to have worked. they are more powerful than ever your book addresses this. is this push to expose big tech is it just going on deaf ears? >> well, you know, i don't think so. i think the american people understand what's going on. where there needs to be action is in congress and it is absolutely time that we got what we put forward a new trust- busting agenda for the 21st century and got serious about breaking up these companies. that's what the book is about by the way i'm glad to say it is a best seller, officially. the attempts of the corporate publisher to cancel it and the attempts of the tech companies to cancel it didn't work and now we've got to take this message all over the country. the american people deserve to
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have their freedom back, they deserve to have their choice and some competition back, and that's what the books about. brian: right, but is it working all the push, all the pushback, facebook is more powerful, their stock is more valuable. twitter as well. you see what's happening with apple. you see how they still cave to what china wants to make sure their products are for sale there and as we put the spotlight on them as more pemex press outrage at the size and scope of what they do more times have been brought to congress they've only increased in value. >> yeah, no that's true and they are only getting more brazen, brian and i think a big reason for that is they've got a big defender in the white house. they spent millions of dollars supporting joe biden in the last election and they think now that they will be able to get by with everything, anything, because he will stand by them, and that's why we've got to increase the pressure, we've got to break these companies up. there's just no two ways about it. i salute the states by the way going after these tech companies that is a great development. the state attorneys general who
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are going after them that's a great development. we've got to push forward on all fronts and that includes congress. brian: but aren't they log lobbying you guys too? >> oh, heck, yeah they are the most powerful lobby in washington. there's no doubt about it. no doubt about it. they have spent millions, maybe hundreds of millions by this point, on lobbyists, on think tanks, on even academics over the last decade and its had a huge effect. i talk about this in the book and this is why we've got to stand up and be bold, call them out on it, and say the solution here is more competition, more choice, more freedom for the american people, that's why we've got to break them up. brian: what do you say to people when they come out and make statements like we want new regulation, they say nothings been done since 1996. what do you think they mean by that? >> well, when they say when tech says they want more regulation, that means they don't want to be broken up, that means they want to write the regulation. so their message is, we'll write the regulation and then you could put that on us and then we'll be fine and by the way we'll write the regulation in
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such a way that our competitors won't have a chance. that's what they want. that's why i say no more alliance between big tech and big government. breakup big tech. get competition back in the market and give the american people their freedom back. brian: absolutely. senator josh hawley congratulations on the book. it is now a best seller despite losing your publisher and getting a new one. people really want to hear that message. thank you, senator. >> thank you. brian: all right, coming up straight ahead the new york times finally admitting crime is rising after democrats starve cities of funds for policing, dan bongino will sound off next. 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,
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mark, good morning. reporter: steve, ainsley, and brian good morning to you guys. police departments nationwide had a busy weekend with multiple deadly shootings especially in major u.s. cities, in philadelphia, local news reporting that there were at least 15 shootings over the weekend between friday and sunday evening, the cities homicide rate up 36% this year, and over the weekend a really grim milestone, philly now surpassing 300 homicides this year, excuse me 200 this year alone. new yorkers can relate data last week shows murders up 22% compared to a year prior with many fearing more violence is coming this summer. in chicago, another sad story with local news reporting 47 people shot, including nine deaths. the spike in violence comes as supporters of police reform continue to demand action, on sunday george floyd's family marched in minneapolis, this comes tomorrow as they mark one year since floyd's death. >> [chanting]
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reporter: tomorrow, floyd's family is going to be meeting with president biden here at the white house this all comes as the administration was really hoping to see some progress on a comprehensive police reform bill by the anniversary of his death. that is not going to happen. that legislation is stalling at congress, we'll see if there's any new movement after the president meets with floyd's family tomorrow. steve, ainsley and brian, back to you. ainsley: thank you, mark let's bring in dan bongino, fox news contributor former nypd officer. dan we're seeing all of these crimes across the country. we're seeing numbers go up. the new york times is actually admitting this defunding thing is not working. they say it is a trend mirrored across the country where crime is skyrocketing in many big cities putting liberal leaders under pressure to balance the demands of activists. even smaller cities haven't been spared the rise in violence. louisville last year set a record for homicides with 173, and this year, is on pace to
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surpass that. it doesn't work, the depending doesn't work and why these politicians ran on that, just blows my mind. what's your reaction? >> well, defunding the police is the single dumbest idea in the history of liberalism. now, think about it. that's saying a lot right there, because liberalism is, i mean, their thing is dumb, that's their thing, it's like their campaign slogan. vote liberal, we have dumb ideas , that's their thing, right like fork over a lot of money to the government, they can spend it better than you and everybody is like really they don't know anything. they can't even get their heads out of their butt and then you say things like well let government take over your healthcare, really i don't even like going to the dmv, so liberalism which is the epitome of stupid ideas, the single dumbest idea is let's defund the police. the thin blue line between insanity and chaos and civilized society yeah let's take that away who needs that, right and
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reminds me of that line everybody screws up you know that fool me once shame on you, fool me twice, shame on me thing well what about fooling me 7,622 times? like we've actually, liberals have tried this before. remember, you guys have been in new york for a while, right? brian, steve, ainsley, remember the old david dinkins days where they were like oh, we don't need the cops and they were like 3,000 homicides a year, we've tried this before. have we not? like how stupid do you have to be like yes let's go back to those days. they were fantastic and yet, people keep voting in these morons. it's incredible. steve: you may say it's a dumb idea messaging wise and there are a number of democrats who actually agree with that but you couple that with the fact that like here in new york, your former hometown, you know, you got the no bail thing, so if you're arrested unless you've done something really bad you're going to be out in 15 minutes, so where is the deterrence? >> there is no deterrent.
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i mean, gosh i love the network for giving me this opportunity, i do, to talk about these police issues a lot but this is really one of those things. like are people really dumb so let me just put this down on a white paper like you're a liberal and pitching this to a focused group of voters like i've got an idea. this broken windows thing that cut the crime rate in new york city down so dramatically one of the safest big cities on the planet let's scrap that. let's go back to remember broken windows when we arrested people for committing crimes? let's not do any of that anymore let's just let people commit crimes and steve you accurately brought up and if they commit crimes, i've got a better idea, my white paper. let's not even put them in jail. let's do a bail reform thing where they get right back out to commit more crimes and the liberal and the focus group are scratching their heads like the verdict is in, and a little gavel for my show here, that's a great idea. what could possibly go wrong, is this amazing like we're the only
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network that said guys, i'm not so sure this is going to work. everyone else was like i'm not so much let's give it a sox de fund the police. i mean, it's really stunning. we are living in a vacuum of stupid right now that is so -- brian: again you know what the big picture is? >> it's impossible to get away from. brian: the people defunding the police are the same one who hate our history, the same one who hate our allies like israel, they hate lieu and order, they don't like anything about this country. they are just trying to throw it on its head, without any solutions. >> yeah, but that's my opening point in this segment, you just book ended it whether you knew it or not. liberalism, it is about stupid ideas. i mean, think about what you just said. liberals like what could go wrong, let's teach a bunch of school kids america sucks. what's the problem? let's teach a bunch of school kids that entrepreneurship is terrible and everything is determined by the color of their skin. what could possibly go wrong? like do you understand this is liberalism?
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let's defund the cops, what could possibly happen? brian: all happening at once. >> how do you wake up in the morning saying to yourself like i'm a sane person leaving this garbage. ainsley: dan i know you have a new radio show that starts streaming on fox nation from 12- 3:00 p.m. eastern time, tell us about it. >> well i mean what an honor. it really it's hard to put in words, i don't want to get choked up on the air, i don't want to ruin my image here and turn in my man card but seriously i grew up listening to the grates that talk radio including the greatest of all-time, rush limbaugh. there's no replacing rush, okay? none. it's never ever going to happen, but me being in that time spot, i really hope to do some honor to his legacy on many of the stations there's no replacing him ever. listening to shawn and mark levi n and brian whose done, by the way i don't want to put you on the spot but brian whose donna mazing work. i'm just starting to learn this radio business. brian is like everywhere. you can't swing a dead cat
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without hitting a station brian kilmeade is on around the country, you all have donna mazing work and it's a huge honor. i've got president trump coming on at 1:00 p.m. eastern too. steve: live on fox nation if you don't have fox nation it's another good reason, you can watch the radio. brian: and you follow us on a lot of markets now, dan. >> i know, imagine that. me and you on the radio for six hours. brian: it's hard to know whose sexier we'll have to decide on the break. >> hands down, brian kilmeade. brian: not this time, i think you're right. steve: we have to keep you in separate studios. dan thank you very much good luck today. ainsley: congratulations. okay, coming up, skip bedell is firing up the grill, with tips on the perfect summer barbecue, but first let's check in with bill hemmer and dana perino for what's coming up. hey guys! dana: good to see you. ainsley, that green is amazing on you. i think that you should -- ainsley: you can borrow it. bill: steve and brian your
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blue looks terrific. brian: thank you, bill was waiting for that. dana: starting off monday with compliments. brian: i'm sorry dana doesn't like it. dana: brian you're amazing always. bill: good morning guys, dana, go. dana: we have mike pompeo, we'll talk to him about that wuhan lab leak possibility remember he talked about that before i've got questions for him. bill: we do have questions also is the biden agenda dead? everybody is right about this about how do you get the vote to get anything through, i've got great analysis dana: also maria bartiromo and bill is going to be grilled by an eight-year-old, at the end of the show. bill: her name is emmy and she's sweet and she's got great questions, see you at the top of the hour. i've lost count of how many asthma attacks i've had. but my nunormal with nucala? fewer asthma attacks. nucala is a once-monthly add-on injection for 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.
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ainsley: have you been wanting to step up your grilling game? just in time for memorial day weekend home contractor skip bedell is here with how you can customize the perfect outdoor kitchen. hey, skip. >> hey, ainsley how are you thanks so much for having me back. ainsley: you're welcome. >> so yeah, memorial day weekend is just about upon us and is the official start of the grilling season, last year, i showed you this amazing kitchen that i built in just a couple of hours with rta out door living they are the innovators in the business, and they just made an amazing
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kitchen and i love it. they have promotions going on in these kitchens for memorial day so there is special deals happening you can get these and new styles they have. what i really want to tell you about is brand new today, never- before seen, it's just released five minutes ago on the website for fox & friends viewers, is this brand new system. this is the mox, modular outdoor kitchen system so this whole system ships to your house flat in a box. we have an installation video you can go ahead and roll that video real quick. what's so cool about this system is that the whole thing comes in flat-panels, you can assemble the entire kitchen in about 30 minutes using no tools whatsoever and it's a really genius system so they use these panels that are marine-grade composite, and they have this channel and groove system that allows you to slide the panels together that means you can lock together this whole cabinet with no tools whatsoever very very easy to do and very lightweight in fact it's so lightweight the kids can help you build it. it has a solid surface top on it
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which is non- pourus, so it looks like granite but it's a quarter of the weight so this is a bar/island. you can prep, cook, and serve your guests right here in one spot, all staying in one spot never having to leave, go back in the house and i love how they combine the built-in things like a cutting board and the sink. you have all of the appliances you need so you don't have to run in and out of the house to get your condiments and it comes with really high-quality professional 304 stainless alliances which makes it great, and it comes in a lot of different sizes so this is an l -shape. it comes in a straight 8-foot section like this , a 6-foot section, and then what's really nice, ainsley, is that it's totally modular so even if you buy a straight kitchen like this one, you can add to it every year. you can keep adding pieces to it which is great. so there's six designer colors there's two shades of grey, there's a navy blue, a bronze, a black, and a white. so you have time less colors and
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it's a really great system, mainly because you can get it right now. everybody knows if you want to get an outdoor kitchen or anything outdoor entertaining there's real shortages right now , ainsley, so you know, people are trying to get all types of things in the backyard because we're all entertaining and spending so much time at home. you can't get anything so most people if they are ordering something like this they won't get it until the end of the summer. these typically ship in one to two weeks and again, they just became available, they've never before seen anywhere in the marketplace, there's nothing else like it. you can find it right now and i have special links on my website at skipbedell.com and you can find them and actually get them so there's a limited rollout that just started this morning. we have the first 50 pieces going out to the viewers out there and then they are going to be rolling them out from that point forward, so, really great system. lightweight, easy to use, easy to install. allison and i built this one in 30 minutes yesterday, if you can believe that, ainsley. ainsley: you're amazing. that's so great!
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thank you so much, skip. a lot of people are staying home right now, so this is a great idea. thank you, skip. for more information on how you can customize your kitchen you can visit skipbedell.com. he's wonderful. all right, we have more "fox & friends" just moments away. >> ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ trelegy for copd. ♪ birds flyin' high you know how i feel ♪ ♪ breeze drifting on by you know how i feel ♪ [man: coughing] ♪ it's a new dawn, it's a new day... ♪ no matter how you got copd it's time to make a stand. ♪ ...and i'm feelin' good ♪
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>> well, that concludes our program once again. happy birthday to kathy doocy. if you see her today say happy birthday. >> don't forget to download the app. if you have some time run for the radio show. watch that on fox nation, too. >> have a good day, everyone. >> bill: thank you, guys. good morning. previously undisclosed intel on the possible origins of covid. the "wall street journal" reporting several researchers at a lab in wuhan, china, became sick, were treated at a local hospital in november of 2019. follow the timeline as we work through the story. hope you had an awesome weekend. welcome to a new week. >> dana: i'm great. how are you? happy monday. i'm dana perino, this is "america's newsroom." the story about the lab is huge in 2020 and now

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