tv FOX and Friends FOX News May 26, 2021 3:00am-6:00am PDT
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fought for the victims compensation fund even as he was dying of cancer. he appeared on capitol hill less than a month before passing away in july of 2019. you remember jon stewart so tight at the hip there toward the end of his life trying to make this happen. it did. beautiful. jillian: the world less without him. "fox & friends" starts right now. have a good day. ♪ ♪ >> a day of remembrance for george floyd ends in violence and vandalism. >> this as gunshots rang out in minneapolis during a reporter's coverage. [gunfire] >> a fliz violent crime, just to clarify the white house's position on this is that is mostly because of guns? >> we are focused on solutions here. >> most americans do not think this is a gun problem. they think it's a crime problem right now. >> chad day bell and lori value low set to appear in court this morning. >> there is probable cause to believe the day bells willfully
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conspired to commit three crimes that led to the death of three people. >> moderna safe for kid are kids as young as child. >> death in a child is small. >> how much chinese dollars -- that's terrifying. brian: welcome to the latest moment of "fox & friends." ainsley: wake me up before you go, go ♪ plan on going solo. steve: 6:00. this is your wake-up call before you go go. ainsley: good morning. that is the song. why isn't anyone dancing in here? steve: i'm tapping my foot. brian: this is a news show what type of a format do you think we have. steve: sometimes a news show sometimes the animal kingdom.
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ainsley: that made headlines. brian: sound like pen girntion pangolin. brian: overnight a riot is declared this portland as crowds mark the one year anniversary of george floyd's death. steve: this as president biden meedz bheets floyd's family at the white house as you can see right there. ainsley: that was his daughter. steve: promising to deliver on police reform. they said it would happen by yesterday. it did not happen by yesterday. ainsley: he wants the negotiations to play out so he is not holding to that deadline. ainsley: griff jenkins joins us with headlines. >> good morning, steve, ainsley and brian. coast to coast the anniversary of george floyd's death turned violent. police had to declare a riot in portland crowds broke windows and set a dumpster on fire.
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left a trail in garbage in their wake. and in minneapolis gunshots rang out during a reporter's coverage of the peace. street festival honoring floyd. watch this. [gunfire. >> just got to be careful here with some gunshots. griff: this comes as major cities like minneapolis see a spike in crime. you see homicides up 113% which the white house is pinning on cutting on guns rather than cutting police funding. meanwhile the floyd family did spend a day in washington pushing for legislation in george's name. >> if you can make federal laws to protect the bird, which is the bald eagle, can you make federal laws to protect people of color. griff: path forward on police reform is unclear after missing the one year deadline. the president says both sides are making progress and he is hopeful they have an agreement
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after memorial day are they really any closer? qualified immunity is a red line for republicans while progressives like ilhan omar was tweeting yesterday she demands they dismantle the entire system. brian, ainsley, steve? brian: yeah, that's helpful. thanks, griff. i appreciate it only thing know for sure a year from george floyd's death he never should have died. terrible and derek chauvin is in jail because of that. no doubt about it. if you want to make things better. if you want to make things safer, there is no indication that things are any better or any safer, in fact, you have in minneapolis in particular you have 200 less police officers on the beat. you have less money in almost every major city. and, guys, look at the numbers in terms of homicides in major cities. new york up 22%. chicago same thing. atlanta up 50% since may. minneapolis up 113% may to may. oakland you are seeing those numbers. portland up if had 800 percent.
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please tell me where the progress is. ainsley: wow, wow. that is unbelievable. ainsley: the families asking for the george floyd policing act to be passed, set up national registry for police misconduct. to ban racial and religious he profiling, most people agree with that or everybody should. the police won't have the protection. so if they do something. the family. steve: they cannot do their job without it. ainsley: that's the problem. that's what republicans -- this is why it's stalled right now. brian: they are not going to get out of the car. really, you are going to go sue me. ainsley: they don't make a lot of money anyway. brian: come home and say sorry, i'm suspended without pay. and now i will get a court appointed attorney to fight my battle. ainsley: do you know how much an attorney is hundreds of thousands of dollars. brian: precinct able to assign one usually not the best one. don't sign off on no knock
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warrants. you are an officer. a man with a gun on the other side of the door. tough knock and announce yourself? you should have more criteria for no knock warrant, people are signing off on that, i think for tim scott and cory booker, that's a big mistake. andco booker should know better. he was mayor of newark. steve: he was. the protest when you look at what is happening. when you detail those numbers, 800 percent in portland it's jaw dropping. the protest sparked riots which obviously have led to an epidemic of crime because when you think about it, first the left demonized the police officers, then they were talking about defunding them. and in cities that didn't defund them they essentially handicapped or handcuffed the police and then in the name of social distancing, the law breakers were set free and they emptied the prisons and that is one of the reasons why we are where we are one year after george floyd. yesterday, peter doocy queried the white house about this
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jaw-dropping rise in crime. it's a rise in crime and, yet, the white house is blaming guns? watch. >> a rise in violent crime, just to clarify, the white house's position on this is that is mostly because of guns. >> there has actually been a rise of crime over the course of the last year. the start of the pandemic, which actually predates president biden taking office. we are focused on solutions here. that's why we proposed putting $5 billion in the american jobs plan to help address community violent intervention programs to help fund them. that's also why we fought for funding for state and local governments in the rescue plan. something many opposed. there was a lot of republican opposition to that that's helped keep cops on the beat and other public servants in vital roles and why his budget proposes to increase cop for the program
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$3 million invigorate community policing. steve: one of the reasons the white house is saying it's a gun problem because they would like more gun controls. more gun laws. things like that. ainsley: that's why people are buying guns. steve: a crime problem. look at the root causes of the crime. part of the root causes of the crime is the fact that you can do bad stuff in this country right now and not get in trouble. where is the deterrent. ainsley: then he asked her about the homicide rate and she says this predates president biden. this is a trump problem. of this happened the beginning of the pandemic he saw crime going up. he said we are not here to talk about president trump. president biden is now. how are we going to tackle the problem going guard. brian: couldn't hour-to-hour problem more lessen the police and empty the jails. they did both at the same time. the cops say wait a second. i just arrested you, you are back on the street? that's the way it is. it's hard to put someone and
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keep someone in jail. i have no idea what's going on with law and order. everything is backwards. it is backwards. it's a backwards year. and please tell me how police reform is going to do it. one thing people can get on the same page on is universal training. give these smaller towns a facility to train in to learn to deescalate and to learn to use your firearm after leaving the academy. they don't have it in these areas. they certainly don't put it into salaries. so if there be the big cities helping the smaller cities and smaller towns with where everything senators would indeed work. that isn't the only big story breaking today. steve: it is not. yesterday we were talking about how there are now people in washington, d.c., serious people who are saying you know what? we should look into that lab thing, lab leak thick. maybe the virus started in a lab. let's get in the way back machine. a year ago the president and members of his team were talking about that. but, now, dr. fauci says i'm not so sure it just occurred naturally. then you have got the three people according to the "wall street journal" who worked in
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the lab and got so sick they had to go to the hospital. then you have the republicans in congress last week say we have got undeniable circumstantial evidence that it was a lab leak. and now we are discovering that at the beginning of the biden administration. they pulled the plug on essentially an investigation in the department of state into the origins and the lab leak. so the trump administration was looking into it. and then the biden administration said, you know what? we will look at it in other ways. so that's just very disturbing because, obviously, as we were talking yesterday, the whole lab leak thing a year ago was political but now it looks like it's actually what happened. ainsley: $500,000 people in our country alone died because of this. this sudden not be a republican or a democratic thing. this should just be something everyone that wants to know about. find the origin so we can prevent it from happening again. could you imagine going through this again? brian: they are expending on the w.h.o. and other investigators to do something that obviously,
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we, again, should be taking a lead in investigating. the w.h.o. had a shot at it. they got their report and said we weren't giving access we were supposed to give. i suggest we go back and look again. it gets kicked to the biden administration and then they said well, let the w.h.o. look at it. they already did. senator tom cotton within a week of this thing before it hit our shores was saying look out for the wuhan lab. he cannot believe this is still an issue. listen. >> the media lies and spins all the time about production. but what really matters that the american people understand what happened in wuhan. imagine if it turns out that the chinese communest party through its negligence and deceitfulness was responsible for unleashing this plague on the world. we need to demand answers. the biden administration needs to demand answers. not continue to participate world health's organization white washing of the chinese communist party men november lens. they need to demand answers. if they don't get answers, they need to impose a penalty for not
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giving us those answers. until then, i think most americans are reasonable in using their common sense to presume this vice most likely came from those laboratories. ryan brian senator tom cotton so measured in saying this. he must be like now you bartok me. now you are on the train. steve: brian, it's so easy, the reason tom cotton was able to do the math so early on. brian: logic. steve: breaking out in wuhan, china. what goes on in wuhan, china? oh yeah they have got that lab where they're looking at coronavirus. it's a coronavirus. brian: the bat that could have had it was 1,000 miles away that's the closest it was to the wuhan lab. ainsley: president trump kept say nothing count in my mind it happened in this lab. when he said that then democrats said we are not focused on that lab. not going to look into that lab just because president trump said it now they are interested. brian: yesterday anthony fauci and the nih director francis collins testified toe congress that the nih budget request,
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wanted funding for next year, they said by the way we did give 600,000 to the wuhan lab not for the research you think. viruses can transmit from bats to humans. please tell me how that's responsible? they gave millions to a third country but this be third organization. but this directly to the wuhan lab. do you think he could have mentioned that to rand paul two weeks ago when he said oh i gave 600,000 but it's not for -- it's not for function research. it's for something different. but, this is a huge story. how does anthony fauci still have a job? please, is there anybody who seems to make more mistakes who has to go and run over his own statements without ever admitting that he was wrong the first time or ininaccurate? steve: that's why congressman warren davidson is it fired act. fired is acronym fired incompetence requires early dismissal. the congressman said dr. fauci is at odds with the cdc is
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repeatedly put political science ahead the science on covid. brian: no question. ainsley: staying with the china topic. john cena. that actor used to be a professional wrestler. is he promoting the next fast and furious movie f 9 that opened yesterday in the u.s. opened in china last friday. it has grossed a lot of money. more than $100 million there. so he was promoting the film. and he said that taiwan is the first country that can watch f 9. well, that made china upset. brian: why? ainsley: it's a self-governing island they consider part of their territory. he apologized in manned doctrine. listen to his apology. [speaking mandarin]
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steve: let's examine what this big tough guy in the movies did. so, on tuesday, he said taiwan is the first country you can watch. and the chinese were furious because they feel like it's thought a country. it's part of us. it is one of our provinces. it's a country. john cena was right the first time on tuesday. brian: and they were an ally. steve: cena was right yesterday taiwan is a country. he was wrong yesterday for apology gition for making the mistake. he never explained what the mistake was. he didn't say i shouldn't have called it a country because it's part of china. instead he said i made a mistake. the mistake simply was that he mentioned taiwan. and that was the mistake that he was apologizing for. otherwise, if he really wanted to kowtow to china he would have
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said, you know, i'm so sorry the chinese are right. taiwan is under their' thumb but he didn't do that he just said i made a mistake. the mistake was simply saying the truth. which is nuts. brian: it is nuts. but it's so consistent. it's consistent with the nba jumping on the general manager of the houston rockets when he came out and discussed in tweet support for the hong kong freedom fighters, same thing with mh and m and nike wanting to do biz with the billions of chinese make their stuff and buy their stuff. will cain had a great take last night with gutfeld and special thanks to ains loy stayed up and i asked her to tape this on her vcr and she has this. >> we can't hold john cena to a standard that the united states of america doesn't hold up to. how much chinese dollars control every single person's mouth in this country. we will censor ourselves if you
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pay the right price. john cena or anyone else. that's terrifying. ainsley: an example of how important is to bottom line. pressured by folks making this movie. brian: i never felt so bad taking german in high school. will he chose to take mandarin instead of german. steve: there are hollywood celebrities who lecture america about our flaws. brian: every day. steve: all the time. when it comes to china they go quiet about human rights and democracy. isn't that curious? we will talk to dean cain, superman will be in the house 8:20 this morning. brian: take a stand against the golden globes but don't take a stand against the uyghurs or muslims being tortured in concentration camps. steve: a lot going on. good morning, jillian. jillian: fox news alert. overnight several people killed in a crash on a virginia
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highway. police say multiple cars were involved. the cause of the crash and number of deaths have not been released. virginia state police are investigating. this is a developing story. we will continue updates as necessary throughout the morning. today the defense will resume making its case for the illegal immigrant accused of killing mollie tibbetts lawyers for christian rivera are trying to convince jurors that his confession was coerced. listen. >> there is a pressure that's what the evidence has shod shown to you close this case to arrest someone instead of continuing to work the evidence. they just submitted it to you. ainsley: defense attorneys attempting to down play what prosecutors call overwhelming evidence against rivera. he faces murder charges for kill the iowa college student in 2018. the state of california will pay more than $1 million to settle a lawsuit with a los angeles area church. the harvest rock church of pasadena took the state to court over covid-19 restrictions imposed by embattled governor
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gavin newsom. the case went all the way to the supreme court which ruled the state could not impose rules on religious gatherings. newsom faces a recall election in part because of his strict pandemic restrictions. and the nba finds maverick's star 50 grand after being seen at a nightclub. the punishment coming days after declined to fund james covid related rules. the nba defended the fiancing no player is permitted in social venues but james apparently did not violate the rule because they say he was outdoors and unlikely to spread the virus. but a lot of opinions on that one, brian. brian: so wrong. where is mark cuban now? go to bat for 7'3" center. you got to be kidding me. unbelievable. lebron james has to sell his tequila more than going to a nightclub. so wrong. ainsley: 6:19 on the east coast.
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a woman recalls the heart-stopping moment that she found 4-year-old cash again than's body after he was abducted from his room and then was killed. the shocking story as police continue this investigation next. ♪ how great is it that we get to tell everybody how liberty mutual customizes your car insurance so you only pay for what you need? i mean it... uh-oh, sorry... oh... what? i'm an emu! no, buddy! only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty, liberty, liberty, liberty. ♪
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♪ will. ainsley: such tragic story gripped our nation having us scratch our heads this 4-year-old dallas boy was snatched from his bed and then he was murdered. his body later discovered by a neighbor abandoned on the street with ants crying over his feet. brian: meanwhile our own jillian mele spoke to that neighbor on "fox & friends" this morning. here is jillian. jillian: it's such tragedy. anthony square the neighbor who made that horrifying discovery is opening up about the moment she walked outside and found cash again none in the middle of the street. >> laying out in the middle of the street i see a hand, i see a foot i started screaming and crying. momma this is a baby. i'm scared and angry. no matter how many times i try to move on i can't unsee what i
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saw surveillance video showing brown taking him from his bed. gernon sleeping next to his twin brother while under the care of his father's ex-girlfriend. she tells the daily mail she knew the 18 faces kidnapping and theft charges. waiting on forensic analysis before pressing forward with additional charges. a motive for the killing is still under investigation. send it back to you. steve: so, jillian, the biological father, who left town because of drug charges, has since turned himself in. but, he left the boys in the care of his ex-girlfriend. jillian: his ex-girlfriend. steve and now it sounds like the biological mother is not allowing the biological father to go to the funeral because he skipped out on the kids. jillian: that's kind of the latest information is they are having some disagreements here in the family about the funeral. but the biological mother says she allegedly didn't know that they were -- all of this
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information as to them staying there with her that he was skipping town there are a lot of questions that still need to be answered in this situation. that's for sure. and i think that's part of the reason why this gripped the entire nation. there are so many questions. here you have a 4-year-old boy. we see that video, taken from his bed. steve: that video seals the deal, holy cow. brian: they stalked the family. jillian: he was seen walking around the house. brian: a couple of days. jillian: the neighbor i interviewed her i asked her she said she had not seen the 18-year-old. she did not have any relations with the people who live in that home. she hadn't seen cash or his brother. according to his or her neighbors they have seen him, that 18-year-old around the neighborhood previously. ainsley: if you listen to the biological father's entire apology he apologizes to the biological mother and his mother-in-law and he skipped down apparently in march and left his children allegedly with the ex-girlfriend. that's when this happened. but we can all relate to this if you are a parent because we have
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these videos in our kid's rooms and it's heart wrenching when you see that child being pulled away and knowing what happens next. jillian: that's why one more thing the neighbor i interviewed this morning who found cash's body she has 3-year-old. three kids one of them 3 years old cash and his brother 4 years old. she says day in and day out she is so fearful because of what she saw. shea saw that boy laying there in the street and she has a child about that age. it's just terrible. steve: no doubt. brian: thanks, jillian. appreciate it 28 minutes after the hour. another blow to america's workers dealing with joe biden's climate agenda. the white house reportedly rely on foreclosure countries to supply melt for electric powered vehicles. is anyone thinking in washington? our next coal minor who confronted hillary clinton in 2016 over green agenda. hear from him after the break next. ♪
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>> made here in america. the future of the auto industry is electric. there's no turning back. the real question is whether we will lead or we will fall behind in the race to the future or whether we will build them in the united states or rely on other countries. steve: president biden there saying is he prioritizing american vehicle production to help americans. you heard that in a blow to american workers suffering from climate agenda. the administration is reportedly planning on other countries to supply the metals for these electric cars. not american metal our next guest is famously a former west virginia coal minor who confronted hillary clinton in 2016 about the cost of so-called green policy showed her a
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picture of his family and there is he right there. bo joins us from west virginia. >> good morning, how are you this morning. steve: i'm doing okay. joe biden talk as good game. it sounds like we are going to be building these cars and these batteries and we're going to put americans back to work and now we find out we're going to go to other countries to mine the stuff to make the batteries. don't they have these metals here in the united states? >> apparently only taboo to mine in the united states. apparently we are okay to use metals and things from other countries as long as we don't do it here. as long as we don't take care of the people who live and work here in the united states. at least we are going to put it together. he did say assembled in america. >> do you think he is just going after mining here in the united states which, you know, for a lot of people, they think mining, they think fossil fuels
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stuff like that. there are other important metals in the ground that we can get here in the united states. >> absolutely. and not only that, but, you know, the metallurgical coal that we mine, that's what it is for is to be used to make steel. and other metals and, you know, it's just sad that, you know, it's like you have -- it's like instead of playing to win, you are playing not lose. in a sports, that's the way biden, i think this administration has handled things. it's just trying to do everything can you to undermine what donald trump. trump put america first and trump put american workers first. and now it's like well, that's what he was doing so i have to do the complete opposite. steve: well, you know, if you are in another country and you are in the business of mining those metals, this is great. hey, joe biden just gave me job security. >> oh, absolutely. you know, it's kind of like an extension of obama. we're going to placate to the
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rest of the world regardless of how much it daniels the people who live here and it's sad, you know, i think it's just a direct result of not really so much people that voted for biden but they were voting against trump. and this is the kind of results that you get when you make those kind of decisions. steve: okay. well, apparently they have decided. bo, thank you very much for joining us live today from your home. >> thank you so much for having me. i appreciate it. steve: straight ahead on twhens dhs secretary mayorkas hopes to make significant changes, that's what he called them, to ice. officials are reportedly already frustrated with the changes the administration has made. retired acting ice director tom homan reacts to the potential overhaul coming up. meanwhile, from our friends at fox bet. here's a suggestion. you need something to do today, download fox bet super 6 and you
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numbers. they should be through the roof. because our border is almost wide open. we catch it on video in broad daylight. so, if the changes are bad already, what do you fear could be next? >> i think immigration enforcement is going to be completely off the table. i mean, it already is. you can be an illegal alien in this country and walk up to an ice agent today and tell them i'm here illegally. i entered the country illegally last year. a judge ordered me to leave. i didn't leave. what are you going to do about it? ice officers can no longer enforce immigration law. being here illegally is no longer illegal in the eyes of this administration. illegal immigration no longer a priority of this administration. i think they are going to continue that. you know, what a bad message to send the rest of the world especially with the border crisis. even if you turn yourself into border patrol. even if you lose your case and get ordered to remove. no one is going to remove you because you are no longer a priority for this administration. brian: what i find really disconcerting is that you also
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have a movement to the left of mayorkas if it's possible if there is daylight there to even allow gang members to stay here. so ice can't even pursue outward criminals. >> look, they want to transform an agency that made 32,000 criminal arrests last year. not immigration arrests, arrests where they investigated somebody and charged them with a crime. 32,000. they prevented almost 8,000 people from getting a visa to come to this country because of derogatory information and terrorist ties. 8,000 people they prevented from coming to the country those type of connections. they saved over 1,000 children from sex predators, child exploitation. several hundred women from sex traffickers they seized over 6,000 pounds of fentanyl. they seized enough fentanyl last year to kill every man, woman and child in this country twice this is a agency they want to radically transform is just incredible. brian: it's got to be democratic congress men and senators stand
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up and say this is unacceptable. sinema, gonzalez and cuellar. they have to make the move, then they will listen. meanwhile a great moment for you and your family as your son grawted graduates on the same stage of you in a graduation ceremony he will be joining law enforcement. what was that like for you at his graduation? >> well, look, i'm a proud dad, right? and i did. i went to the same facility. i stood on that stage 37 years ago. and got my first badge. so, you know, not just him. for all the men and women that stood on that stage yesterday. that are willing to take this job on and anti-enforcement environment. especially anti-ice rhetoric going on right now. these young men and women stood th there yesterday. they took their badge and are going to serve their nations despite all the rhetoric out there and going to put their lives on the line. i'm not only proud of but i'm proud of everybody that stood on that stage. this is the finest 1% this country has.
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when you talk about first responders whether police officers, firemen and military. finest 1% this country has. for them to take this on, i'm proud of him and proud of everybody that stood on that stage. it was a good moment for me because i stood in that very same place 37 years ago and it's nice to see that there is men and women still willing to step up and do that job. brian: with father's day just a few weeks away. he watched you do what you do. the sacrifices you made and say i want to do what my dad does. that's got to be a great feeling. >> it is. look, i'm proud of what i have done in my career. and every man and woman i met yesterday. i met them all yesterday before the event. they are all excited about this new challenge. i told them, i said, look, i sat in that very chair down there as a gs 5 in 1984. i never thought i would be the first ice director to come up through the ranks. president trump nominated me. so, you know, there is no end to your dreams. keep doing that job. and keep protecting america you are doing the right thing for this nation. brian: absolutely. i like your hair shorter the way
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it is, tom. great picture of you when you grad. i will tell you i talked to an officer last night. and he has been doing this over 20 years. i said are you going to stay in he said yeah. i'm not going to get forced out. his partner says the same thing. just because there is an anti police environment. a lot decided to double down and do their job even better because they have a lot of prides in their career and i feel like you and your son have the same thing. tom homan, thanks so much. congratulations. >> thanks, brian. appreciate it. brian: that's tom homan of course is he part of our family. and janice dean on fox square. that is not a green screen. janice, that is really you outside? janice: it is, brian. i got to hug steve and ainsley and i'm going to come in and hug you afterwards. okay? brian: sorry i wasn't around for the hug. that was my loss. janice: say something funny because i'm going to cry if you don't. brian: i gave you a huge budget get maps and give us the weather. i see no maps and all i see is the street.
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i could have got that for free. could you please entertain me with information? janice: let's take a look at the maps. we do have the potential for strong storms today a beautiful day across new york city. but the heat is on. we are going to get into the 80's today. a cold front is going to move through and you give us the potential for strong storms, large hail, damaging winds, even isolated tornadoes for parts of the mid-atlantic up towards the interior northeast. and then across the plain states you see that red shaded region. that's moderate risk meaning we could see all the ingredients for the hail, damaging winds and even tornadoes. severe weather outbreak will be possible. that is going to continue through this evening. and then tomorrow move into portions of the midwest and ohio valley, back into the watch those watches and warnings move in these areas. know what to do if there is a watch or warning. there is your risk tomorrow on thursday. take a look at the forecast for the rest of today there it is. 8 in new york. remember those showers and thunderstorms move in this afternoon. and you know cold enough for snow across the rockies.
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57 in billings. we did it 15 months later and here we are on fox square's good to be back. brian: like riding a horse. just get back on. ainsley: usually a bicycle. janice: a horse is good, too. brian: i thought it was like riding a horse. is that not the phrase? ainsley: they are laughing. steve: it's a bike. brian: i should have said bike. i think horses would do. steve: janice, you asked him to say something funny and he did. janice: i love you guys, can't wait to see you inside. ainsley: janice, so good to have you back. we have been talking about it and janice and i have been texting each other. sometimes we would go to breakfast with jillian after the show we can do breakfast again. when i saw you it really hit me. i haven't seen my friends in a year and a half. brian: that means she hasn't paid for gleaft a year and a half. that bothers you. janice: credit card is coming out. i love you guys. ainsley: we will invite the guys next time. janice: sounds good. ainsley: this guy has radio.
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steve: i will come. ainsley: this guy has radio. steve: i know occasionally there are mimosas at those breakfast. ainsley: occasionally. steve: moderna says vaccine 100 percent effective in kids as the cdc investigates reports of teens and young adults having heart inflammation. dr. marc siegel going to address those concerns coming up next. ♪ one step closer to my fiancé.
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dance on stage. spin class! i can't wait for my patients to see my smile again. to hug my students. to give my parents a proper send off. to go salsa dancing. no. i can't wait for you to meet my mom. play my piano for my friends. to give high fives to our patients. i think we are one step closer to being...better people. with every vaccine, cvs is working to bring you one step closer to a better tomorrow. my nunormal? fewer asthma attacks with nucala. a once-monthly add-on injection for severe eosinophilic asthma. nucala reduces eosinophils, a key cause of severe asthma. nucala is not for sudden breathing problems. allergic reactions can occur. get help right away for swelling of face, mouth, tongue or trouble breathing. infections that can cause shingles have occurred. don't stop steroids unless told by your doctor. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection. may cause headache, injection site reactions, back pain, and fatigue. ask your doctor about nucala. find your nunormal with nucala.
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>> mow demeanor planning to seek expansion of covid vaccine after finding it to be 100 percent effective in teenagers. this comes as the cdc looks into reports of heart inflammation in young patients after they're vaccinated should all of us as parents be concerned? let's ask fox news medical contributor dr. marc siegel. >> hey, emslie good morning. >> are literally no one got sick from this few cases tested positive. 100 percent in.
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i want to start off by saying this is matter of choice. that's where it should be. in this group who gets -- is very healthy and if they get covid likely only gates mild case, it should be down to the child and the parent to make the decision. i made the decision to have my 16-year-old vaccinated and he completely agreed because of risks. but, parents should decide, not schools. but, in terms of the risk-benefit which is what we always do, ainsley, the chances are much, much greater of getting a heart issue from covid itself. even in young people than from this vaccine. and israel could give you an idea out of 5 million people vaccinated, 64 may have had this heart inflammation. here in the united states millions of teens and young adults have already gotten vaccinated pfizer 1 to 17, moderna a little bit older. they have had this almost never, very, very rare. a handful of cases out of millions vaccinated. so my opinion is covid is far more risky and you should get this vaccine in 12 to 17 age
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group. that's my decision. it should be a parent and a child deciding. ainsley: i know you talked to dr. fauci and he is open to the idea that it might have come from the lab. what do you think? >> well, you know, dr. fauci is open to the idea but i will brake news on that. he is not convinced. myself i'm much more suspicious than he is. first of all, i don't trust any news coming out of china regarding covid-19. that's what we should be afraid of. china and that virus because we didn't -- we weren't told anything from the beginning. i'm very suspicious of how quickly this mutated this virus, coronavirus don't mutate as quickly as flu does. how come suddenly this crocketed and affected the entire world. how come those researchers got sick per the "wall street journal" and went to the hospital in fall of 2019 that were working in that lab? very suspicious. and that lab was doing research on bat coronavirus and we are never going to be able to get them on trial and hold them accountable. scientists were working specifically to see if they
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could manipulate bat coronavirus to go human-to-human. so, i think it's very suspicious. i'm glad dr. fauci has an open mind about this. but, you know, to me, it's much more likely that it came from the lab. it could have happened naturally but then we need to really find out how this happened. over how many months and exactly what way. ainsley: dr. siegel, you wrote an op-ed on foxnews.com. if folks want to read it that's about fear. that's the next pandemic. all scared about lockdowns and damage and closures and what's that done to all of our lives. too many citizens are clinging to their fears you also write when we should be celebrating. thank you so much, dr. siegel, for coming on with us. >> fear is our problem because it really takes over our brain. thank you, ainsley and thank you for having me on. ainsley: you are welcome, dr. siegel, thank you. more "fox & friends" coming up. ♪
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a chance for more starry nights. more sparkly days. more sunny mornings. opdivo and yervoy can cause your immune system to harm healthy parts of your body during and after treatment. these problems can be severe and lead to death. see your doctor right away if you have a cough; chest pain; shortness of breath; irregular heartbeat; diarrhea; constipation; severe stomach pain, nausea or vomiting; dizziness; fainting; eye problems; extreme tiredness; changes in appetite, thirst or urine; rash; itching; confusion; memory problems; muscle pain or weakness; joint pain; flushing; or fever. these are not all the possible side effects. problems can occur together and more often when opdivo is used with yervoy. tell your doctor about all medical conditions including immune or nervous system problems, if you've had or plan to have an organ or stem cell transplant, or received chest radiation. here's to a chance to live longer. ask your doctor about chemo-free opdivo plus yervoy. thank you to all those in our clinical trials.
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kills 99.9% of bacteria and viruses. >> biden administration stopping a state department inquiry into the wuhan institute of virology. >> the problem with this whole lab leak is when this first came out, the media ignored it and then you had the world health organization cover it up. todd: tennessee banning critical race theory in schools including arkansas, oklahoma and idaho. >> you tell your child trust your teacher and then your steencamp brainwashing children. they should teach things that promote patriotism. steve: mayorkas hopes to make significant changes to ice. >> i think immigration enforcement is going to be off
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the table. >> being here illegally is no longer illegal in the eyes of this administration. >> a california animal rights nonprofit is suing gubernatorial candidate john cox. the group cox to stop using the large brown bear on the campaign trail. ♪ ♪ steve: good morning, miami. 75 right now going to be a beautiful day as we pan over and look at some of the town. it's actually going to be warmer today in new york city at 86 than miami. ainsley: really? ainsley: it's been a little chilly here this week. steve: speaking of this week two days ago i wished my wife kathy doocy happy birthday. today i would like to wish my sister kathy a birthday. ainsley: you are surrounded with all these kathys.
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brian: between that and mother's day you must be out of money. steve: one kathy is a k and one is with a c. ainsley: when i write you i don't ever know what to do is it c or k? steve: it's a k. brian: mr. and mrs. doocy. ainsley: give your wife my best. steve: happy birthday to all the kathy doocys. ainsley: happy birthday kathy with c or a k? steve: my sister a c. >> happy birthday birthday to kathy k and happy birthday to kathy c today. steve: up in ohio. ainsley: i'm not going to remember, this brian. she lives, okay. did she get the shot? did you ask that? steve: she did. ainsley: good. maybe she will make some money. steve: it's still a lottery. we will see. all right. listen, 7:02 here in the east and fox news is confirming now that the biden administration to learn the truth about the origins of covid.
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ainsley: the probe was launched under president trump an attempt to determine where exactly from where exactly this virus came. brian: i don't think they like the quality of the investigation, at least that's their story. rich edson joins us live from washington with more as biden officials call for an independent investigation in the origins, rich. >> they are, steve, ainsley and brian. what we are looking at now, health and human services secretary xavier becerra saying that the biden administration wants an independent international investigation into the origins of covid-19. now, there was a world health organization delegation from a couple of months ago that went to china though scientists say the chinese government is withholding key data about the outbreak. >> information about this. getting it from honest researchers, honest investigators, press inquiries and getting it from the u.s. government is absolutely essential to finding out what happened in the origin of covid which is not only important for understanding what we are still living through and for basic
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questions of responsibility. but most importantly it's absolutely essential to the future. >> this as officials say the hasshut down an effort from forr secretary of state mike pompeo to examine the theory that the coronavirus leaked from a lab. that's a story from cnn. the former officials say pompeo created the team because of reluctance from the bureaucracy to examine whether the pandemic began at the wuhan institute of virology. current state department officials say the administration continues investigating the origins of the virus through normal government channels. dr. anthony fauci has also recently said he is no longer convinced that covid-19 developed naturally. he says the issue needs more study whether it came from a lab after he largely dismissed the lab leak theory last year. some house republicans are now calling for dr. fauci's removal. his defenders say his advice has evolved as we have learned more about this new coronavirus. back to you.
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steve: thank you very much. brian: he plays, i think the best analogy i have for him i think he plays coronavirus jazz. he kind of just wiggles in and out of facts or figures. is he on pod castings 9 or 10 hours a day. at which time you ask the right question make an answer get global news. total bizarre he gets total pass from lock down to masks, problem here. can't go back to school too dangerous. it's okay to go back to school. be responsible and wear two masks. two days later no masks inside or outside. it's incredible. now we find he gave $600,000 the nih to the wuhan lab. he said it was the only responsible thing to do. ainsley: for gain of function. every doctor you talk to dr. siegel thinks it probably did happen in the lab. dr. fauci says he is open to it
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but thinks it probably came from a bat or animal. i talked to one doctor who said there is the htlv receptor on covid which is likely added during gafn function research. and he said that can't come from a bat that would have been added to the covid during the research. steve: right. ainsley: every doctor has a different opinion. we definitely need to get to the bottom of it nikki haley the former u.n. ambassador she said that it's too late though. we should have done this a long time ago. listen. >> we are way past time getting answers from china. we past time getting answers from the world health organization. there is no reason why the u.s. ambassador to the u.n. has not called for a security council meeting with the secretary general there asking china and the world health organization what they knew, when they knew, how they knew it the problem with this whole lab leak is when this first came out, the media ignored it, big tech shut it down. and then you had the world health organization cover it up. so it's hard to know who we can trust and who we can't. but the united states right now
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is giving $10 billion to the united nations. 1 billion we gave to the world health organization in 2019 alone. the u.s. should get a return on their investment to at least find out how 3 and a half million people have died. steve: and half a million americans as well. we heard from the beginning follow the science. but then have you got people like dr. fauci who seem to be more interested in political science. because, in addition to a doctor, he has been in d.c. forever. he sees the politicians. make no doubt about it but, you know, and our white house correspondent has been pushing the white house for answers on why doesn't the president of the united states just call the president of china and say hey, what's the deal? and they say that's not how you do it. but, instead, they say at this point, we can't make any determinations because we do not have access to the data. and so, you know, our correspondent is pushing well, why doesn't the president just ask the guy who rubs china for
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some answers? well, that's not the way it happens. but, if you -- which is just deflection. because, if you are one of the 500,000 americans, who have died and, you know, your families would like some answers and they would like to think that the president of the united states is and actively looking and not just waiting for china to deliver their report on a silver platter. brian: the problem is we have no interest in doing it ourselves. the way we understand talking to jamie metzl and others josh rogin. only thing that will do it global pressure from all the nations destroyed by this economically and physically from india to europe to america -- turn around and say this is going to be -- this is going to be the ramifications until we get answers on this because not only should we get retribution and paid by all of this, they are the first ones to stand up the economy and they're making
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money off this virus. but not only that, we have to stop the next one. and, yet, yesterday, we understand that anthony fauci is really not that curious. he did admit in asking for more money that he gave $3.7 million to echo health and echo health gave $600,000 to the wuhan lab. they tell fbn the u.s. grant money is suspended at this hour. fauci said it was the only responsible thing to do is to have them look into different viruses and how they act and transfer possibly to the human body, really? that's not gain of function research? i don't understand that if you ask him and he has nothing to hide. you think he would come out and say let me just tell you echo health. gave $600,000 to that wuhan lab. i'm looking into making sure that money went to the right place, but, instead. he has to be asked 20 questions. gets in a brawl with rand paul and two weeks later we get a slow admission. ainsley: just amazing how it shut down the entire world.
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some of these countries are still shut down. we're starting to get back in the routine. brian: brian. steve: because we have the vaccine. ainsley: we have the vaccine by the graves government president trump i give him credit for that because he orchestrated all of that and so many of us have gotten that vaccine and we feel safer. there is still fear and dr. siegel wrote about that in his latest op-ed. that's the next pandemic us all going back into fear and how this has all changed our lives. we have seen janice dean for the first time in a year and a half. brian: look also what china did during this time. they also took hong kong. they have been threatening taiwan. we're all distracted trying to figure out how to get through this. they are continuing to expand militarily and economically and take over these enclaves. make their crearns bigger. full of muslims and then they go and destroy the freedom fighters and what was left of hong kong. all these guys and these families they are all in jail right now. >> while the rest of the world
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was distracted. they have benefited mightily from this. steve: you just have to hope if it were a lab leak and we figure it out the biden administration does not let china. ainsley: get away with this. it's so baffling that we are not putting pressure on china. we kowtow to them because we depend on them so much. steve: that's not how it works. ainsley: i know. brian: it would be to pull up manufacturing. it belongs? central america where enterprising people need opportunity. pay more if we can get our stuff out thereof. when you can't get our own masks out of the country. hold everything back if america doesn't behave during the pandemic. then we realize we cannot be held hostage by this outlaw nation anymore. steve: 7:11 in new york city. yesterday the state of tennessee became the latest to ban critical race theory in classrooms. now there are -- others are considering it. but you have got arkansas and idaho and oklahoma and now
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tennessee. also, at the same time, there is this new conservative pac called the 1776 project. what it is going to do is be targeting local school elections to get rid of school board members who support critical race theory. the head of the project was on the channel yesterday. and had this to say about what's going on. >> you tell your child trust your teacher. and then your teacher is telling you things like the police are systemically racist. that our country is systemically racist. if you are white you are born racist. you will be racist your entire life and your parents are racist. if you are not white, you are held back by the system created by our founding fathers. that is what you are told at an early age. that is not having a fair playing field that's brainwashing children. i'm sorry these are state schools. taxpayer funded schools. they should teach things that
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promote patriotism. steve: it is the first national pac to target local school board elections which just shows you how political what used to be nonpolitical jobs like school boards have become. ainsley: one of the people running for a school board position is chip and joanna gaines. chip's sister is running in texas and she is running on this platform. she doesn't want critical race theory taught in the classrooms. they ended up toneating $1,000 to her campaign. brian: let's take a listen. the campaign ad from shannon braun, school board candidate and chip gaines' sister. >> i will vote down anything and everything that further promotes critical race theory in our school district and work remove all critical race theory in our district. brian: no one is saying you don't bring up slavery. no one is saying you don't study civil rights and make these
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people the heros that they're. the ones that fought through it like they did. no one says you don't cover the civil war and what happened after and jim crow. but what you don't want to condemn an entire nation i have never seen anything like this. we have a first place team. our roster is destroying each other from within. enemies are saying you guys can handle it. you are destroying each other. i don't even have to attack you. and seeing it every single day. states have to stand up for our past let alone our present. steve: shannon brown said on her ad she calls critical race theory the single most divisive threat in education today. it will be interesting to watch in the days ahead and aapparently the election is going to be on june the 5th. ainsley: one off election against the incumbent. steve: it will be interesting now that chip and joanna gaines some of the biggest people on
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television, have given $1,000 to the sister who is against crt whether or not there will be a movement to cancel the gainess. ainsley: are they against crt or just pro-sister? steve: pro-sister. you know how social media works these days. ainsley: i know. brian: that's going to be fascinating because i think there will be pressure on them and see if he ends up apologizing in mandarin and in english at some point a little bit later. steve: that is so yesterday. all right. so, a very, very busy day and there are even more headlines and jillian joins us for those. jillian: that's right, good morning. combine with this story we are following as no survivors have been found after a fire fighting helicopter crashes during a training exercise in florida. four people were on board but rescue crews have only recovered one body. the aircraft went down in a march near lease international airport near orlando. the cause of the crash is under
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investigation by the faa. an arrest warrant is issued for a musician, marilyn manson is wanted for schism assault involving a videographer 2019. the charges carry a jail sentence up to one year. the attorney calls the allegations ludicrous. are you smarter than a 2-year-old. the youngest american member of men is a with a genius iq of 146. >> three wound rounds of the government. >> judicial and legislative. >> oldest iq society in the world. and about 17 months kashe recognized the alphabet, numbers, colors and shapes. boy, i feel dumb right now. brian: looking forward to seeing kashe at the meetings. good to see somebody else.
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>> thank you, jillian. steve: two years ago, atlanta police officer jerome turner was shot six times in the line of duty. he spoke to tomi lahren about his road to recovery and the challenges facing law enforcement across the country. that interview is coming up next. >> i challenge every american that feels the law enforcement has to make change, go to your local department and ride with that officer. ♪
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from prom dresses to workouts and new adventures you hope the more you give the less they'll miss. but even if your teen was vaccinated against meningitis in the past they may be missing vaccination for meningitis b. although uncommon, up to 1 in 5 survivors of meningitis will have long term consequences. now as you're thinking about all the vaccines your teen might need make sure you ask your doctor if your teen is missing meningitis b vaccination.
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will. ainsley: on april 1st, 2019, georgia police officer jerome turner was shot six times while he was responding to a routine call and now he is opening up about his road to recovery and the challenges facing law enforcement across our country. >> i challenge every american that feels law enforcement has to make change. go to your local department and ride with that officer and see what they have to go through. and what you have to feel like sitting in that vehicle with a bullet proof vest so that can you go back to your family? ainsley: here with more on that interview host of no
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interruption on fox nation tomi lahren. hey, tomi, what a hero. >> absolutely an incredible human being. as you know, ainsley, law enforcement isn't a job. it's certainly a calling. a calling so many brave americans answer each and every single day. they do the unthinkable. they see the unimaginable to protect often the ungrateful. this officer is proof of that. shot six times. still an officer. as you saw in that clip he is still answering that call to serve. is he still serving his community. he urges those americans that are critical of police, that believe that there is a problem in policing, go sign up, go be the change that you want to see. go spend time with your law enforcement officers and in your community and you will see that these people do amazing things for our communities each and every single day and they don't get the appreciation that they certainly deserve. ainsley: what happened to officer turner on that day when he was shot six times? >> he was responding to a very routine call. there was somebody in somebody's backyard that looked suspicious and the neighbors said he thought this individual might have had a gun and this officer turner showed up and then it
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turned into a shootout. and it's remarkable. you will see it in my episode of no interruption. after he was forced to return fire after being shot. he actually did take down the suspect but after that it was dragged in the media. and officer turner himself was called a racist and a terrorist for protecting and defending his own life after being shot. this is what our officers go through each and every single day. he will recount the whole story in my latest episode of no interruption. ainsley: listen to how he respond about racism in america. listen to this. >> when i sit here and say america is racist? no. do we have racist individuals in america? yes. but, again, does one or two subsets of people, does that really reflect america? no. ainsley: tomi, how does that affect him on a day-to-day basis out there patrolling the streets? >> you know, i talked to him about it. he said it's not something he
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thinks about. obviously is he a black officer and in largely black community and he receives a lot of backlash for being a black officer. a lot of folks don't understand why he would choose to be in law enforcement. he said this is a calling that he has had since he was a little kid to protect and to serve. he doesn't look at america as a racist country. he doesn't look at policing as racist. he just looks at it as a band of brothers and sisters who go out and protect and defend their community. something he is so proud to do. he dual it even if he doesn't receive the appreciation he deserves. i hope that everybody watching this, when they see an officer will go and really express their appreciation because these people do incredible things for us each and every single day. ainsley: would think when he is out there protecting his community and shot six times he wouldn't go back to work. he is back on the street, right, patrol. >> he is you know, and this is something, again, it's a calling. it's not a job. he encourages all those that really do see that calling. i know it's a tough time to be a police officer. we have recruitment way down and retirement way up. if you are an individual out there that wants to serve your
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community, he encourages you to go and be the change you want to see. especially if you are in a minority community. go out and be a police officer. and make the changes that you want to see in these departments. ainsley: thank you for highlighting his story. officer, turner, if you are watching, you are a hero and we thank you for what you do. of thank you so much, tomi. >> thank you. ainsley: no interruption with tomi lahren honoring the badge available now on fox nation. veterans and military get a free year of fox nation if they sign up today through memorial day. just go fox nation.com. still ahead, the biden administration demands a transparent probe into the origins of covid-19 but only after they shut down an investigation that already was started by the trump team. we're going to talk to former state department spokeswoman morgan ortagus about that coming up next. ♪
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jillian: good morning, we are back now with your headlines and the so-called doomsday mom lori value low will appear in court today alongside her husband chad day bell after the couple was charged with the murder of value low's two kids. kylie ryan and jj value low went missing in 2019. their bodies were found on daybell's property in 2019.
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daybell was indicted for the murder of his first wife tammy. believe the couple fringe beliefs motivated the killings. former marine to spain for trial for breaking in the north korean embassy. fighting back in court. >> believe that the truth logic, common sense will -- you know, make the day. ainsley: faces danger of north korean retaliation if he is extradited. alex trebek and larry king posthumously nominated for emmys. king outstanding informative talk show host and trebek's game show host: trebek two other nominations for outstanding game show and outstanding daytime special event. the emmys will be presented on june 25th.
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flaming hot fires. a texas woman loses her job after video shows her climbing into a spider monkey exhibit and feeding the animals hot cheetos. the law firm calling the former litigation assistant's behavior quote reckless. that could be a start as the zoo and el paso police are considering pressing charges against the woman. that is a look at your headlines. brian, i will send it to you. brian: thanks so much, jillian. as a push for the probe of the origins of the coast pandemic intensifies, fox news confirming the effort launched under president trump to get those answers and investigate the wuhan lab leak theory was shut down by the biden administration. here to react former state department spokesperson during those times morgan ortagus. you knew about this, morgan? >> we knew about this theory for a long time. i think it's still a theory. right? there is nothing proven. but what we do know is that we should never believe the first thing that the chinese communist party tells us.
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we should approach it with a ton of skepticism and why so many really smart journalists and scientists and others just wanted to rush, including the w.h.o., wanted to rush to believe whatever the chinese communist party -- brian: morgan, but, specifically, mike pompeo launched an investigation on his own. >> right. brian: some sty bypass the bureaucracy holding it up and stopped by this state department here is a quote. we have concerns about the quality of its work. that's an insult. >> yeah. especially because the people that secretary pompeo would have been using for an investigation are career diplomats, are intelligence professionals. he wasn't using political appointees for this type of thing. it's insulting to the career people who work on these probes. brian: yeah. it hurts us because we don't have an answer and he is depending on the w.h.o. and other investigators to find out. he doesn't seem to care. >> a joke. brian: let's fast forward to
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russia. june 16th announced a summit in switzerland. vladimir putin and president biden. despite the fact that they it completed the pipeline on nord stream 2 no longer stopping that. that's going to bypass ukraine and go through western europe. so we militarily protect them from russia. but they are now glued to russia. thanks to oil and gas. despite the fact that the hack that destroyed our east coast oil flow came from within their borders despite the fact that they're will bullying us out of the artic. we still look to meet do. we have any standards? >> you know, you just gave an excellent summary of what's going on. let me also add to that brian. we have the inf treaty which the biden administration automatically renewed when they come in. at the end of the trump administration, through marshall billingsley, we were trying to get the chinese on board. we were trying to renegotiate that treaty and not just give it a blanket renewal five years.
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that's what the biden administration gave them another pass on a treaty that they were probably violating, you know, the biden administration keeps saying that they want predictability and stability in the relationship with russia. i don't know what that means from a foreign policy progressive when we saw that russia may be amassing troops again in ukraine. biden had two warships turn around headed toward the black sea. all i see is concession after concession after concession to the russians. i don't know what putin has done to deserve this meeting. nor i do understand what the biden administration wants out of russia, out of putin. other than just to sort of get them out of their hair and get them off the world stage, which you know, putin is never going to agree to. so, i would like to understand from the biden administration what in the world they hope to get out of this. they conceded on every major issue that they could with russia leading up to this event so that it's going to be, i guess, we will see? brian: by the way, navalny almost died a couple of days ago. he has come up against him.
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so we have no problem with that evidently. also ally belarus just forced a plane down and arrested a couple of journalists. vladimir putin has to okay all that stuff. it doesn't seem to matter. we will see what happens on jun. next, a hollywood star mark 1500palestinians face exnulings jerusalem. 200 protesters injured. 9 children being killed. sanctions on south africa helped free black people time upon sanctions to on israel free the palestinians, join the call. all of a sudden it realizing it's leading to the anti-semitism fervor he tweeted this story: what's your reaction to this exchange?
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>> yeah, i thought at least he apologized. it was pretty ignorant a lot of his statements they were just factually incorrect. he apologized which is more than we get out of some of the extremist leaders in the democratic party. aoc, tlaib and others who make anti-semitic statements. at one point in time they were actually held accountable when they first started this a few years ago when they were elected. nancy pelosi had them apologize, talked about anti-semitism in the party and that has since been gone by the wayside. you see that they tweet and say these sort of things and there is no accountability. so, you know, actors should really if they want an education foreign policy education i would be more than happy to help them understand. you have a terrorist entity in hamas that is attacking our ally. you have abbas who has not held elections for 15 years. all these people want to talk about helping the palestinians, i have a whole list of things that i could talk to you about helping the palestinians starting with asking abbas why
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you canceled elections for the first time in 15 years. simply because he thought that he was going to lose them. right? what are these terrorist entities doing to help the palestinian people? the trump administration, you may not have liked our policy towards israel and the palestinian people. but we have a conference. in ba bahrain to try to get the palestinian show the palestinian people what it would be like to have a brighter future. i haven't seen any of these sort of recommendations or policies coming out other than the biden administration is saying that they are going to give more money to the palestinian areas to rebuild which they senior state department official admitted may go to hamas over the past few days. if you really care about them, let's talk about democracy. let's talk about elections. let's talk about real reform. brian: we are out of time but hamas controls gaza. if you are going to rebuild gaza money is going to hamas. don't pretend it's going to the palestinian authority who are useless as is abbas.
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a ridiculous meeting with someone who calls himself a palestinian leader but has no authority. >> it's a joke. brian: thank you so much. >> thanks, brian. brian: joe concha sounds off on op-ed that you have to see to believe. and from our friends at fox bet. download the fox bet super 6 and play for a chance to win $10,000. predict six outcomes in the fox bet super 6 quiz show. topics range from entertainment to sports. it's free to download. go ahead and play right now. download the fox bet super 6 app. right now. ♪ ♪ 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 ♪ start a new day with trelegy. no once-daily copd medicine has the power to treat copd in as many ways as trelegy. with three medicines in one inhaler,
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here with tips to save money on gas danry cot two incredible.com. >> thanks, steve. how are you. steve: i'm okay. and america is ready to get in the car after a year of covid and go some place. fortunately gas is about a buck higher than it was last memorial day. so the experts are saying there are things can you do to save money. pause really this is kind of a tax that people need to do. >> stealth tax every time we fill up. first going to cost about 321 bucks for the average driver to pill up this weekend more than it was about a year ago. that's a lot of money. that's lunch at dairy queen forking out loud. steve: two lunches. >> two lunches at dairy queen. demand is up. we are emerging from our homes. we are taking off the footy pajamas and we are hitting the road. oil prices are up. we have 50% less oil rigs taking
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out decomposted dinosaurs now than we dba year ago. so there is less supply. so, prices are up. there is other things we have seen like the colonial pipeline, ransomware attack and others. we haven't recovered yet. that's why, steve, we are seeing pain at the pump. steve: can you skip premium and put regular in your car. credit card with a reward program, use that credit card, get the reward points, check your tires and make sure they are properly inflated. here is probably the best idea. check gas buddy.com or aaa.com because they tell you where the best deals are for gas. dan, you are normally on the west coast. how much was it to fill up -- how much was a gallon of regular in california when you left town? >> i paid 4.49 last week to fill up my wife's car. and when i landed in filly the other night and saw "wah-wah" at 3.09 boy i was a happy man,
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steve. steve: yeah, no kidding. going forward, dan, given the fact that the biden administration is not big on fossil fuels, and you were talking about how there are fewer rigs and fewer refiners and things like that, this is only going to get worse in the future. >> yeah. so, look, we are making this so-called transition from fossil fuels to the new energy future which i'm all for it sounds great. but the reality is, somebody has to pay the tax. we shouldn't fool ourselves into thinking it's going to be free. that's really the discussion we have to have as a country and community is where -- what is the tab? how are we going to afford this? what's the transition look like for you and i? steve: to your point, it would be one thing but for people who, you know, if gas is going up. people are going maybe it's time to buy an electric car. the electricity that powers your car is general rated by coal. >> you mean that electricity comes from somewhere? i mean, you don't just prug it
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into the wall you? are absolutely right there. is coal, there is natural gas. but we are at this inflexion point and it is exciting as we transition to some of these new fuels. it's going to take a while and take some expense. the tips you had upfront are pretty smart, right? just use the best credit card you can. get a couple cents back on each gallon. do that at credible.com, for example. keep those tires inflated. all those tips you mentioned steve are good tips as we go through this transition and through memorial day an extra 21 bucks in your tank. steve: no kidding. incredible tips are with credible.com. >> happy memorial day. steve: we are all happy at fox because janice dean has returned to 1211 avenue of the americas today. janice: it's great to be here, steve. not too bad outside. it's going to get warm 89 in new york city and the risk for severe storms. take a look at it i will show
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you the temperatures across the nation. actually, these are highs from yesterday. so look that at a lot of 90's over the ohio river valley even up towards the great lakes. cold front is going to move through. bring cooler drier conditions. but the potential for strong storms including large hail, damaging winds, even isolated tornadoes. a couple areas here across the plain states. be very concerned here for parts of nebraska and kansas where we could see the potential for tornadoes. up towards the northeast as well, certainly large hail, damaging winds and isolated tornadoes around this neck of the woods. so that's kind of, you know, we don't see that a lot. so people need to be on alert for the potential of stronger storms and rainfall along with that and we will keep you up to date. it's so nice to be outside. all right, steve, back to you, my friend. steve: thank you very much, janice dean the weather machine back at work. meanwhile, still ahead, florida senator marco rubio is going to join us. first, "new york times" under fire after plusing an op-ed that claimed that attacks on jews are
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a gift. joe concha sounds off on that because they changed it after it hit the fan. ♪ so then i said to him, you oughta customize your car insurance with liberty mutual, so you only pay for what you need. hot dog or... chicken? only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ if you have risk factors like heart disease, diabetes and raised triglycerides,... ...vascepa can give you something to celebrate. ♪ vascepa, when added to your statin,... ...is clinically proven to provide 25% lower risk from heart attack and stroke. vascepa is clearly different. first and only fda approved. celebrate less risk. even for those with family history. ♪ don't take vascepa if you are... ...or become allergic to icosapent ethyl or any inactive ingredient in vascepa. serious side effects may occur
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over the last week how anti-semitic violence has surged across the country now under fire for quietly changing an inflammatory op-ed headline calling these attacks a gift to the political right. brian: it was changed to the crisis of anti-semitic violence. in the age of screen shot, is that enough to make up for the blunder? ainsley: fox news contributor and the hill media opinion columnist joe concha is here to react. joe, what's your reaction? >> well, look, if you are going to make a slight change to a story, context. that's fine, not a problem. if there is updated information not a problem if you change the headline. you also probably should include an editor's note because that doesn't take very long. look, readers neath need to get an explanation why the change is being made. in this case when you shape shift an entire headline from one thing to another, that's a whole bowl of wrong and the context here is very important because headlines are very, very important these days, guys, because what do we all do? i would love to hear your thoughts on this.
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we scroll through our phones half the time. we look at facebook and twitter and social media. we read the headline the caption and the phone, we movea td stor, yeah, when you do something like this, it's going to get caught. steve: the headline was attacks on jews over israel are a gift to the right which is what it was and then it becomes the crisis of anti-semitic violence. so the click bait would be i want to see how it is a gift to the right, right? >> exactly right, steve. the "times" used to have this position called the public editor, that's basically somebody who implements proper journalism ethics at the paper and write about it in the paper if he or she sees a breach that regard last one liz spayd she wrote a story in 2016 that called out the "times" for continually engaging in self-editing. guess what happened a couple months later in the "times" eliminated the public editor position because i guess they don't like being held
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accountable. here is the good news, there is a lot of paul reveres out there on social media. public editors on social media who are screen shooting these things and then getting it out there. so the "times" can eliminate that position all they want. they have to deal with people keeping a very close eye on headlines when they go from one thing to the other. brian: whole premise was it's about politics. anti-semitic attacks instead of worry about anti-semitic attacks oh, republicans are going to benefit from this because it's the democrats who are making incendiary comments. >> yeah. brian. why does it always have to be who wins or loses politically in these situations? who gains? why don't we just talk about the fact that american jews are being beaten in cities from new york to los angeles, to chicago, innocent people, one man was beaten in new york that was actually on crutches. he was -- there was mace thrown in his face and the person that did it, according to the prosecutor, said in his jail cell i will do it again. so that should be the focus. not saying boy, i really lament these attacks happening to
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american jews because it really helps the pro-israeli argument, no. that's wrong. i'm sorry. ainsley: it's insulting. thanks so much, joe. we did reach out to the "new york times." >> great to see you, ainsley. ainsley: great to see you too. we did reach out to the "new york times" and we did not get a response from them. steve: are we waiting for a call from the public editor could be a while. brian: writing us longhand. ainsley: john cena is being taken to the mat, you know he is a wrestler, used to be. over his comments to china. we will tell you what that's all about and get reaction from dean cain, superman ♪ go, go ♪ go big or go home ♪ ♪let's make lots of money♪ ♪you've got the brawn♪ ♪i've got the brains♪ ...
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don't stop steroids unless told by your doctor. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection. may cause headache, injection-site reactions, back pain, and fatigue. ask your doctor about nucala. find your nunormal with nucala. brian: overnight a riot is declared in portland. griff: and in minneapolis gun shots rang out during a reporter 's coverage. >> [gun shots] >> the biden administration stopping a state department in curry into the wuhan institute of virology. >> it's insulting to the career people who work on these probes that we should never believe the first thing that the chinese communist party tells us. >> john cena apologizing to the people of china for referring to taiwan as a country. will: the big thing is how much chinese dollars control every single person. that's terrifying. steve: president biden saying he's prioritizing electric vehicles reportedly planning to
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rely on other countries. >> you have to put america first and now it's like well, that's what he was doing so i have to do the complete opposite >> the space officials officer is defending his stance. >> the kinds of things in revolution are a mirror reflection of what we saw over the past few in this country. >> ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ainsley: do the happy dance, brian. brian: um, okay, remember, i never met a dance floor that did me any good. steve: you lived in clearwater beach, florida you'd be doing a happy dance every day because it's beautiful. ainsley: okay so the high today is going to be 83 degrees in clearwater. it's 74 there right now. brian: so weird to have nice weather in florida. steve: brian, it's going to be hotter today in new york city than in florida. brian: don't be surprised if everybody in new york takes their shirts off. ainsley: i'm not. brian: oh, okay. ainsley: they have a marine
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aquarium there where they rehab the dolphins and the sea turtles when they are injured. steve: beautiful, very good. welcome aboard, folks, hour three of fox & friends. brian: okay, injured dolphins you know where to go. ainsley: [laughter] 8:01 here on the east coast. overnight a riot is declared in portland as crowds marked one year since george floyd's death. brian: interesting way to remember it. this as major cities across the country are reporting high spikes in violent crime over the last year. steve: griff jenkins joins us live from washington with more on the overnight unrest. griff? griff: good morning, steve, ainsley and brian the anniversary of floyd's death did indeed turn violent in portland. the crowd smashed windows and set a dumpster on fire at the justice center as they attempted to burn it down. in new york, where you are, marchers left a trail of garbage in their wake and in minneapolis gun shots ringing out during a reporter's coverage of the street festival honoring floyd. watch this. >> this is going to be some gun
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shots. >> [gun shots fired] griff: this comes as major cities like minneapolis see a spike in homicides of 113% there , and in portland look at that. jaw dropping 800%, which the white house blames not on cutting police funding, but rather, on guns. >> just terrified. the white house's position on this is that it's mostly because of guns. >> well first, i'm not sure what data you're looking at but i think what we can most data that is out there shows that there's actually been a rise in crime over the course of the last year, since the start of the pandemic, which actually pre-dates president biden taking office to be totally clear. >> but as of right now. >> you're right, peter and that's why we are focused, well we're focused on solutions here. griff: meanwhile check out this video, posted to twitter by the u.s. embassy in athens unveiling the blm flag yesterday. now according to a memo first leaked to the human events the
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state department encouraged a u.s. diplomat to support and use the term black lives matter and obviously, authorizing the flying of the blm flag at u.s. embassies. the state department had no comment on that memo when asked about fox news, but clearer from that official twitter account by the athens embassy, that they are indeed, displaying the blm flag now. steve, ainsley, brian? steve: griff thank you very much that memo that allowed them to fly the flag also adds to the state department employees are generally permitted to engage in blm-related activity while on duty or in the workplace. brian: right, so they come out against, yeah, they come out against the nuclear family, so that must be nice and ku go into subsets of what blm is and you can do a forensic study and where the money that is given to that organization and what they are actually doing with it. meanwhile, because the results of the criminal justice reform
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have not surfaced yet in washington, but some of the things that are coming out of these discussions don't look as though they are going to enhance any policing anytime soon. ainsley: candace owens weighed in on this. listen. >> the u.s. embassies are celebrating black death and the consequence of the black lives matter movement and i cringe when people call it that because it is black lives matter riot, the cities burned for six weeks straight following the death of george floyd. black neighborhoods were rioted and looted and it led to more black deaths, way more black americans died during the black lives matter riots than the one black american that was killed by a police officer, that allegedly started this entire spree and it really makes you ask questions. why is america promoting this so much? why is america promoting black lives matter which is a corporation, right? so think of it as a corporation. black lives matter raises money and it's dark money, tucker, because nobody knows where the money goes. steve: and the state department said, you know, it was okay to
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fly those banners, et cetera on the anniversary of the death of george floyd. this is the cover of the new york post. hell of a tribute, it says, and it's what it includes the fact that griff was talking about how there were actually near george floyd square, essentially, by the grocery store yesterday in the 10:00 hour, i think it was a local reporter, you heard dozens of shots being fired. one person was actually shot and do you know what the shooting was over? a parking spot. ainsley: oh, my gosh. people are so angry right now, and in portland there was that riot, fireworks, a dumpster fire , graffiti written, broken windows, throwing bottles at police. brian: 200 minneapolis police officers have left the force and it looks like there's 5,422 violent incidents already this year over the average, there's been an average of about 4,000 over the previous five
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years, so one year later, not much has improved. in fact you can arguably say everything has gotten worse. meanwhile, six minutes after the hour let's talk about something else in the news and that is the origin of the china virus. we know in that science article came out and the 18 scientists were in it we talked to nicholas wad yesterday the author of that article and there were 18 scientists in it who from around the globe who said i've got a huge problem and huge questions with this whole pandemic, how it started, and i have some big problems with that w. h. o. report and that wuhan lab playing no role in it. it doesn't seem to make sense. then it turns out, confirmed by fox news, that there was an investigation prompted by former secretary of state mike pompeo to look into was the wuhan lab the source of the pandemic that's killed millions of people around the globe. it was stopped by the biden administration because they say the quality wasn't good. here is morgan ortegus.
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>> we know about this theory for a long time. i think it's still a theory, right? there's nothing proven, but what we do know is that we should never believe the first thing that the chinese communist party tells us. we should approach it with a ton of skepticism and why so many really smart journalists and scientists and others just wanted to rush including the w. h. o., wanted to rush to believe whatever the chinese communist party was telling them was just silly on its face. ainsley: state department did confirm that they did stop the inquiry and mike pompeo, whose now a fox news contributor , he said that he believes the virus originated in the lab, and that china's government is covering it up. he says i'm confident that we will find the evidence that gives us all hope, because we want to find the origins of this , that we have seen to date is consistent with the lab leak and i'm convinced that is exactly what we'll see. he says if i'm wrong i hope the chinese communist party will come forward and make a fool of me. steve: as we were talking yesterday, the reason we are where we are a year, more than a
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year into this pandemic where, you know, a year ago, because donald trump and the administration were saying it looks like it came from that lab. the lab, right there in wuhan, that's studying bat coronavirus es, that's where we think it started, but then you had the fauci pushback on that and although now this week he's saying he's not convinced that it occurred naturally, skipping from bats to people, and you got the three people in wuhan who got really really sick in november of 2019 and wound up going to the hospital. then you've got all of the republicans who have said we got this circumstantial evidence that it looks like it started in the lab. ainsley: we have so many smart people that are investigating this. why don't we know this yet. i had a doctor tell me there's a receptor on the virus, and that has to be added. that be added during the research. steve: well one of the research ers, remember scott gotleib, a former fda administrator he said a couple days ago there's growing circumstantial evidence that it
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started in the lab, but it was p oo poo'd over the last year , because trump had mentioned it, and so many things he mentioned a year ago were, but now, here we are. it looks like it was the lab. brian: or are we following the science and is the science culpable to a degree because anthony fauci and the nih director said yesterday to congress in requesting more money for the budget that the n ih earmarked $600,000 for the wuhan lab over a five- year period to study bat coronaviruses and how they can be transmitted to humans but that is not, they say, gain of function research. you're studying the same thing that happened. you sat there and denied it, and then you're sitting there and parsing words. maybe the fact that science might have played a role in financing the wuhan lab which most americans can't get their head around, why we would ever do such a thing, that don't get up everyday with a lab coat on with our name on the left happened side and with a pocket
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protector , and they wonder why would we ever do that and maybe that's part of the reason why the science community goes not really important how it started. steve: remember there's one place on the planet where they study bat coronaviruses. it's wuhan, china. brian: right. steve: coincidence? i don't think so. ainsley: we just don't want this to happen again that's why it's so important to find out the origin. steve: the people that lost loved ones they need to have closure and need to know what killed their loved ones. brian: if the virus jumped from a bat to a penguin, we need to know that, because we have not been able to replicate that. ainsley: this doctor that wrote me and told me about the receptor said it did not start in a bat, or a unicorn, brian. brian: okay i'm just telling you i didn't even know what this was until this virus hit, okay? unicorn that's gutfeld. steve: something completely different. meanwhile let's talk a little bit about this. here is the president of the united states, we're going back a week or so, where he was
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talking about how the united states of america is going to be the number one producer of electric vehicles. watch this. >> it's going to be made here in america. the future of the auto industry is electric. there's no turning back and the real question is whether we'll lead or we'll fall behind in the race to the future, or whether we'll build these vehicles and the batteries that go in them, here in the united states and rely on other countries. steve: that sounds great and, you know, as he's pulled the plug on various things like the keystone and things like that that cost a lot of americans their jobs, it makes it sound like we're going to be building these vehicles here in the united states, the batteries here in the united states, and now there's a story that apparently, in an homage to the green lobby, it looks as if we're going to go to other countries to get the metals and minerals to produce the batteries for the cars. so for the people who thought oh
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, mining jobs, to mine those things to make the batteries, you know what? there will be jobs, but they will be in other countries. ainsley: why wouldn't we get it from america? steve: because they doesn't like fossil fuels and mining. ainsley: so he took away the jobs, keystone pipeline, gone, all those jobs gone, and now these jobs are going to benefit another country. steve: that's right. ainsley: and then we're going to be forced to buy electric cars. brian: also he wants us to give up oil & gas and become the number one car manufacturer, number one oil exporter and natural gas, what we've done over there has been a flat out miracle what they'vevery been able to do through fracking, but now, we have to go out and get rare earth. china has most rare earth, afghanistan has got a lot of rare earth, we're leaving afghanistan and i don't believe we really want to do more business with china. how is that in america's interests? steve: we had with us a little over an hour ago, beau copley, who was a coal miner, remember
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famously when hillary clinton was running for president. ainsley: with the picture? steve: yeah, wants to put a bunch of coal miners out of work he slid a picture of his family in front of her and said mrs. clinton, that's my family. those people are going to be hungry. we had him on the program earlier and he said that the current president not putting america first. >> the metal coal that we mine is, that's what it's for is to be used to make steel, and other metals, and you know, it's just sad that, you know, it's like you have it's like instead of playing to win, you're playing not to lose in sports and that's kind of the way biden, i think, this administration has handled things. it's just trying to do everything you can to undermine what trump did. trump put america first and trump put american workers first and now it's like well, that's what he was doing so i have to do the complete opposite. steve: so those people who thought that maybe we can get a
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job mining those rare minerals and metals, they're out of luck. ainsley: interesting, because didn't he say alternatives? i will provide jobs, alternative s, even on taking away the pipeline, we're going to have alternatives and i'll provide those jobs. not right now but later. steve: he's said we will provide good paying union jobs. brian: look how they looking to defund oil & gas. keep your eye on this. this pressure even though they are great investments, there's pressure to defund oil & gas companies. it's absolutely sinister. steve: and at the same time, with gas now $1 a gallon higher than it was a year ago, people are going do you know what? are they trying to force me to buy an electric car? ainsley: stuary varney believes that. yesterday he said that's why in california i think it's $1 more than the rest of the country. and he said they don't care, because they want gas to go up because they want to prove we need to buy electric cars. brian: a woman that knows stuary varney, jillian mele is prepared to do the news how about that for a transition. jillian: i have met him so that's very accurate.
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brian: thank you, right up here jillian: let's get to your headlines and begin with this story. a neighbor who made the horrifying discovery of four -year-old cash gernon is speaking out, listen. >> i was going out for a walk and i was walking up my street, turning on to another street. i remember seeing hair, and i said momma, this is a baby. this is a baby, he has no shirt on, no shoes, no socks, he had blood. jillian: and she made the first call to 911 earlier this month when the four-year-old was taken from his bed in the middle of the night. she tells me that paramedics had to help calm her down because she was so shaken up by what she saw. darien brown is charged with kidnapping and theft. investigators are waiting on further forensics before pressing additional charges. >> now to this. caught on camera rescuers save a texas woman from rushing the floodwaters. watch, as crews bring her life jacket as she clings to a tree
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branch. the woman reportedly had to ditch her minivan as it was swept away by the rising water thankfully first responders were able to bring her to safety with only minor injuries. >> and then take a look at this. a driver smashes into two cars while trying to parallel park outside a kfc in the uk. the car can be seen pulling up to the spot inching forward and crashing into the back of the car and swinging backward hitting the car behind them, before then speeding off. police are searching for the driver. i guess they were very hungry. i wish we could show it again. brian: right. >> they hit the back of the first car. steve: any chance that was a student driver? >> i don't think so. brian: i don't know how you do that. he turned the wrong way. i don't know how you try to hit that black car. steve: they did everything wrong ainsley: i know. let's see it one more time. >> hunger does weird things to people. brian: they now have cars where
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you can push a button. steve: we have one of those cars it's awesome. >> [laughter] steve: all i have to say is somebody really wanted some chicken. brian: right. ainsley: that be me i can not parallel park. >> oh, i'm very good at it. brian: but you also like chicken. ainsley: i do like chicken. brian: thanks so much, everybody that made that possible. still ahead on our show. steve: senator marco rubio is going to join us live, but first , ainsley? ainsley: john cena apologizing to china for calling taiwan a country and dean cain says hollywood is bowing down to china's wallet. he's going to join us, next. >> ♪ sweet emotion ♪
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i booked our hotel on kayak. it's flexible if we need to cancel. cancel. i haven't left the house in a year. nothing will stop me from vacation. no canceling. flexible cancellation. kayak. search one and done. from prom dresses to workouts flexible cancellation. and new adventures you hope the more you give the less they'll miss. but even if your teen was vaccinated against meningitis in the past they may be missing vaccination for meningitis b.
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although uncommon, up to 1 in 5 survivors of meningitis will have long term consequences. now as you're thinking about all the vaccines your teen might need make sure you ask your doctor if your teen is missing meningitis b vaccination. wanna help kids get their homework done? well, an internet connection's a good start. but kids also need computers.
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and sometimes the hardest thing about homework is finding a place to do it. so why not hook community centers up with wifi? for kids like us, and all the amazing things we're gonna learn. over the next 10 years, comcast is committing $1 billion to reach 50 million low-income americans with the tools and resources they need to be ready for anything. i hope you're ready. 'cause we are. brian: yet another case of celebrities pandering to china listen to this. actor and professional wrestler john cena apologizes for calling taiwan a country, which is by the way, while promoting his new movie. >> [speaking in a foreign language]
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brian: sorry a bunch of times in any language that came through, and i don't know if his apology is accepted but its raised a lot of eyebrows here, including dean cain, outstanding actor in his own right. dean, were you surprised this got out? did you think that, do you think john cena thought he would do it , no big deal? >> it might but you know it's a pretty big market out there and anything you do out there is going to, it can show up and he has like 600,000 followers on the chinese version of twitter, so he speaks mandarin, he has a lot of business out there. maybe he thought it would sneak by but for a guy, i like john ce na a lot and by all accounts he's a great guy, but you know that looked like a hostage video, and he was probably under tremendous pressure from his representative s, from universal who was distributing fast and furious 9, and from his own wallet, which is, you know, he speaks mandarin, he has all of
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his followers and i think that's where that was coming from. it's unfortunate but it certainly is a case of hollywood , you know, listening to china and the chinese purse strings controlling what comes out of someone's mouth. brian: codeine educate me on this. when you become as power powerful at john centrist centrist and he's an extremely successful actor and wrestler, i would think it would empower you to stand up for what's right. why doesn't it work when it comes to china? why do they end up all apologiz ing and losing their dignity? >> money. period. end of story. you think they don't need it any more, but the question is at what point is it enough. certainly they feel like in america it's enough so a lot of these folks and not john in particular but certainly steve k err or lebron james attacking america, at every turn , but staying absolutely deathly silent when they're in china, and they're being asked about the wegers. they stay dead quiet, they won't say a word but maybe they don't
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know a lot about it but it's a bad look. brian: but see , attacking america, doesn't cost them in their wallet. is that the reason? >> i think 100%. no question about it. brian: lastly, mark ruffalo, also a very respected actor and left wing activist showed it again, tweeting this out with the hamas israeli conflict, 1,500 palestinians face expulsion in jerusalem, sanctions in south africa helped free black people it's time for sanctions on israel to free palestinians join the call. this caused so much unrest, he later apologized. does it surprise you that he would attack an allie like israel and sigh it only one- sided? >> i month mark too and mark is a really really nice guy and fantastic person, i don't agree with him politically but that doesn't surprise me. i think what got him in trouble is a tweet where he likened it to genocide and i'm a guy who produced a documentary on again so side, and that's a word you're not supposed to say, but
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i produced a documentary talked about that. this is not a genocide, and he started to see real life implications and reverberations from his words, i think jews getting chased down in new york city and throwing fireworks at them and trying to blow people up and others sort of crazy attacks going on and i think he saw that and that's what forced him to sort of pullback and i'm glad he did. brian: dean cain thanks for popping on the skype machine and joining us this morning appreciate it. thanks, brian. brian: still ahead the space force commander whose fired for calling out critical race theory in the military is sound ing the alarm on what he calls marxist trends in america. douglas murray thought about it and we'll talk aboute
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you can do it without fingersticks, too. ask your doctor for a prescription for the freestyle libre 14 day system. and visit freestyle libre.us to try it for free. steve: reagan library has reopened after being shutdown due to the pandemic. this as president biden is dubbed the reverse reagan. connell mcshane from our sister network fox business joins us live from simi valley in california. connell? okay, he's not moving much. all right must be cold out there
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, he's frozen. we'll try to get him back later on. meanwhile, that space force commander we've been telling you about over the last two weeks fired for calling out critical race theory in the military, now warning against what he calls ma rxist trends in america. watch this. >> he's got people standing in the streets with racists, demanding that others bow down and apologize for their privilege, apologize for what race or group they belong to. they shutdown schools, all the while, allowing people to gather in so-called peaceful protests. everything that you see taking place in this country is play book marxist. steve: author douglas murray joins us right now. the secretary of defense had said, i believe it was in february, if anybody in the military sees something out of place that does not belong in the military, speak up. he spoke up. he wrote a book. he was on a podcast. it hit the fan, and now he's out of that job. >> yeah, well, we all know the
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game, don't we? you should speak up as long as you speak up saying exactly the right things of today's ideology. what the captain said was completely true, absolutely completely true and at the very least is fair comment. what's amazing, of course, is that what he said is true obvious to most americans and not politically by so many people in charge of our major institutions today. it's a disgrace what's happened to him. either you have the right call- out these insane behaviors, or you don't, and he should have had the right, and its been taken away from him. steve: it has been, and you know , for the boss to say hey, you see something, let us know, and he let people know. in his defense, he said look, i wasn't trying to point out any political point of view. i'm not trying to point out any politician whose pushing critical race theory, or anything like that. i'm just talking about what is happening with the rank-and-file
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members of the military are exhibiting in many cases, and it's marxist, it's critical race theory people should know about it so now they know about it but it's like okay you see something like that don't speak up or you're going to get canned. >> yeah, here is the thing. what keeps happening at the moment, highly political people make institutions highly politicized. look at the cia in its recent recruitment ads. they make these institutions highly political in one direction, always now in the direction of critical race theory, and always the sub- marxist junk that comes along with it and so they politicize it and then somebody comes along like this air force captain and says i'm not really cool with this , this doesn't really seem to suit us, and they say how dare you be political. steve: right. >> either you have a level playing field in which you can do your marxist clap trap if you want but you can also have to accept you're going to get criticism for it, or there's this weird uneven
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playing field where it's all downhill and all phases the marxist, junk-marxist crt version of everything but i'm for not allowing these people to have a free ride. the air force captain is just been fired. he's also not for allowing these people to have a free ride but the whole game at the moment is rigged. it's all rigged against anyone who calls this stuff out, but people should call it out. the air force captain may have been fired, but he should be honored by ordinary americans. steve: but because he works in the biden administration if you criticize critical race theory, people know about your feelings about what is going on, but then again, during the biden administration, there's a real good chance you're going to lose your job, your government job. >> yeah, that's right. well as i said, these people are rewriting everything. the whole critical race theory is about rewriting everything, rewriting everything in american history pretending that all
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institutions have to follow this totally revolutionary way of looking at things. they do all of that, and they then, in addition, the cherry on the cake is they expect nobody to point it out. well people should point it out. we've got to point it out. we just can't be silenced and i think we should honor everyone whose not silent in the face of this revolutionary further. steve: well, the air force inspector general is doing an investigation to see if it was partisan or political. as soon as that result is known, we will share it with the audience. douglas, thank you very much for joining us today. >> it's a great pleasure. steve: our pleasure as well. all right straight ahead, marco rubio is going to join us. meanwhile, from our friends at fox bet, download today the fox bet super 6 app and play for a chance to win $10,000, all you got to do is predict the outcome s in the fox bet quiz show, a variety of topics. it's all free to play, so download the fox bet super 6 app today.
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>> we should continue with the investigation and go to the next phase of the investigation that the w. h. o. has done. >> phase ii of the covid origin study must be launched with terms of reference that are transparent, science-based and give international experts the independence to fully assess the source of the virus, and the early days of the outbreak. >> we need to get to the bottom of this and we need a completely transparent process from china. we need the w. h. o. to assist in that matter. brian: is that indeed possible? let's bring in florida gop senator marco rubio member of the senate foreign relations committee. senator you see how this is going. now suddenly this is becoming appropriate to talk about it, but the biden administration says we're going to leave it to the world bodies and other investigators to do it. what could be your role? >> well, a couple things. first of all, it has always been true that it has been just as likely that this was the result of someone who was
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infected during an experiment at the wuhan lab than it was that it came from an animal to a human at some food market. both have always been equally likely and i would argue that there's actually some evidence that it was likelier that it was a lab accident, given everything we know about the wuhan lab and knew for over a year and a half. the second thing that we need to know about this is there are people who have had facebook posts removed and tweets deleted and criticized and smeared by the press for making that argument, going back a year ago. the third thing i would say is that the world health organization is not capable of undertaking this investigation because frankly, the chinese won't allow it. i think it's quite possible, let me tell you, that the chinese government, the communist party itself doesn't exactly know what happened because they don't have a system where if you won the wuhan lab and you somehow had an accident and this caused a problem, you're going to self- report it. people like that get fired. they disappear, but they certainly think or at least believe it was likely that it was the case, and if they do, then they don't want anyone to know about it. they will try to cover it up. there's no way that the chinese
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communist party is going to turnover any of the information that be needed in order to have a serious investigation, and the more that they do that, the more i think you've got to start concluding that in fact, they had some role to play in how this happened. we already know they covered it up and now, i think there's increasing evidence that, whose patient zero? no one has ever been able to say this is the person that got infected by an animal and move forward from that. that alone i think is pretty indicative that they themselves consider the lab theory to be the likeliest one at this point and there's no way they are ever going to turn over information that proves that. it be too humiliating for them it's not the culture they have politically and frankly not the reputation they want to have have around the world. ainsley: mike pompeo said when he was secretary of state they were investigating this trying to find out what the origins were and joe biden is elected and shuts down the investigation why the bait and switch now. why is he now interested in finding the origin? >> well because i think now, the evidence is beginning to mount that this is likely the case. i encourage people to go back about a month and a half at an
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open ins hearing and i asked the director of the national intelligence is it not true that both are equally probable and we really don't know which one of the two it is and she answered yes, they are both equally likely and we don't know which one it is that was a month ago but the truth is here is the problem. some of the people involved in public health in this country spoke with such a level of certainty about this a year and a half ago and not just spoke with certainty but basically called anyone who disagreed a conspiracy theory, a crazy person and what that does along with other things that happened from public health officials in the last year is it undermines the public's confidence in our public health officials, and in our public health system and so what this does in the future, we're going to have other pandemics and other serious public health crisis. people are going to be less likely to listen to them because they are going to remember how many times they were either lied to or it was kept from them because they think the american people are little children who cannot be told the truth. steve: well, and there is 600,000 dead americans, and
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there are a lot of people, and their families, who would like to feel the administration is trying to get to the bottom of it, but we haven't really seen the president pushing the chinese president, but that's just frustrating. meanwhile, let's talk a little bit about your home state of florida. university of central florida students can now receive a graduate certificate from the college of community innovation and education in social justice, in public service. what do you think about that? >> well first you have to understand what we're saying we call it wokeness, social justice whatever it maybe. look it's a theory that says the following. the world is divided up between oppressor s and the oppressed and that's the story of america in their mind. oppressor s and the oppressed okay? the system, our system of economics, our government, our laws, our educational system, everything is traditional marriage, religion, is all designed to benefit the oppress or at the expense of the oppressed. all the oppressor s are bad, even doesn't matter what you are individually, all of them are bad, and all of the oppressed
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are good. it doesn't matter what they do individually, and so the answer is that whole system has to be torn down, including capitalism and replaced with something else that's what they call social justice. that's the brand and that's the name they created for it but what it really is is it's neo ma rxish, it is another way to tear apart capitalism and the american way. steve: so are you okay with that school in your state doing that? >> no, i don't think we should be teaching that. here is what i think we should be teaching people at universities. i think we should be teaching them engineering, we should be teaching them biology, we should be teaching them science, engineering, math, other technological fields and teaching people the skills they need to find a good paying job and contribute to their community, their families and their country in the 21st century. that's why we have universities, that's why we have college degrees. not to train a generation of cultural marxist activists but to train people so they can go out and find jobs that are good for them, good for their families and good for the country. that's why we do this , and why
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we should be subsidizing. why the american taxpayer, why the florida taxpayers should be subsidizing teaching our young students how to hate america, how to hate everything about our history, how to divide and hate one another, and how our identity is not american, but the color of our skin, why we should be spending taxpayer money to teach these things that are destructive, not to mention untrue, is beyond me. i don't understand why that's happening and i hope it's corrected. look, and i think you'll see this emerge in more places because the faculty and a lot of these universities, frankly, are filled with just crazy people who now you can't even fire them unless they murder three people. brian: right. instead of teaching kids how to build roads and bridges we'll teach them how to block them with protests and signs. fantastic. senator rubio, you're fired up today thanks so much. >> thank you. brian: 13 minutes before the top of the hour. ainsley: janice dean has our forecast. hey. >> janice: i'm very excited because i got to see brian and hug him earlier. brian: i saw her in the locker
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room. steve: we have a locker room? >> janice: i told him in advance i was going to hug him. brian: it was enjoyable. >> excellent i'm so glad, so nice to be on fox square, let's take a look at the maps because we have some thunderstorms that are coming our way, 69 right now in new york, 74 in raleigh, you can see where we've got that front, that's moving across the ohio valley, the great lakes back into the mississippi river valley, and that's where we potentially could see some severe weather for the northeast , the mid-atlantic and back through the plain states where we could potentially see those tornadoes. we could have a severe weather outbreak tonight into tomorrow and then that front is going to move across the midwest and ohio valley in towards the mid-south and that's where we could see those showers and thunderstorms fire up for thursday. so, a couple day event here for the severe threat, know what to do if there's a watch or warning in your area. so nice to be with you live outside of fox square! back to you. ainsley: welcome back, we're so glad you're back at work, janice
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hugs to you. brian: fox & friends, the musical. between you opening up the show singing and janice singing again finally, we'll take the show to the stage. ainsley: well now it's your turn why don't you sing the next tease? brian: um, nope, it says ainsley. ainsley: a georgia school district standing up against critical race theory and now a former teacher is fighting to remove that curriculum from all american classrooms. she's going to join us live, next but first let's check in with bill hemmer and dana perino for what's coming up. bill: good morning to you, we got a good two hours. caitlyn jenner wants to be the governor of california. she will be our guest coming up momentarily, a lot of questions about policy, et cetera about how you change the decline in a state where you have just about every category, dana, that's going in the wrong direction. dana: but it's an up hill climb bushes here to tell us all about it in person in the studio like janice dean is here today also we have senator tom cotton and senator rand paul amongst many others so we'll see you at the top of the hour. before discovering nexium 24hr
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committee. he was famously married to actress elizabeth taylor from 1976-1982. warner died of heart failure at his home in alexandria, virginia he was 94 years old. ainsley? ainsley: a georgia school district becomes one of the latest to stand up against critical race theory and our next guest is a former georgia school teacher, and she says the controversial curriculum and the 1619 project have no place in our classrooms. courtney stokes joins us now. good morning, courtney. >> good morning. thank you for having me ainsley: thanks for coming on. why don't you want critical race theory and 1619 in our classrooms? >> well, i think that it's wonderful that i can follow senator rubio, because he was exactly on the mark. when you're looking at critical race theory and what i'm talking about does not come from my feelings. it comes from a lot of research on critical race theory, and critical theory, and you follow it all the way back and you find
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its marxist roots and critical race theory is an ideology intended to segregate our children, it's intended to divide them into affinity groups they are oppressor s or they are the oppressed, and it focuses on collective guilt, if you're white, we're going to white shame you, we're going to make you a tone for your white privilege and your internalized racial white privilege, and also , it's very much neo segregation. we have worked so hard in this country to move beyond our racial differences, and now, we are pushing curriculum, much of which is being mandated or wants to be mandated by the government, to enforce racial segregation on our children again, looking at life through the lens of race, and i think it's incredibly wrong. ainsley: yeah the cherokee school board district which is in the state of georgia voted to prohibit these teachings in the classroom. we're seeing more areas around the country do this , as well. courtney, thank you for coming
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on with us. >> thank you. ainsley: you're welcome. more "fox fox & friends" moments away. trelegy for copd. ♪ birds flyin' high, you know how i feel. ♪ ♪ breeze drifting on by you know how i feel. ♪ ♪ it's a new dawn... ♪ if you've been taking copd sitting down, it's time to make a stand. start a new day with trelegy. no once-daily copd medicine has the power to treat copd in as many ways as trelegy. with three medicines in one inhaler, trelegy helps people breathe easier and improves lung function. it also helps prevent future flare-ups. trelegy won't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking it. 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.
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>> so he is going to be leaving on 1211 and going up to the radio level, right, brian? >> tom cotton will be on and others. >> i'm reading his book. josh rogan. everyone have a great day. see you tomorrow. >> bill: good morning. has a search for answers brick wall? the biden administration shut down a state department investigation into the origins of the coronavirus and whether or not that virus leaked from a lab in wuhan, china. intriguing issue here. what happens now? i'm bill hemmer, welcome to the program today. >> dana: i'm dana perino, this is "america's newsroom." that's a big issue and every week that goes by the trail gets colder. >> bill: the administration is saying the investigation still underway, just operating out of a different part of th
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