tv FOX and Friends FOX News June 7, 2021 3:00am-6:00am PDT
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republicans at 1.1 trillion. so we will certainly continue to follow to see. congressman michael cloud, thank you. we appreciate your time. >> thank you. jillian: and of course thank you to griff jenkins filling in live from the border. it was good to see you my friend. have a good at a. i know you will have a busy day down there. "fox & friends" starts right now. bye-bye. griff: thank you. >> vice president kamala harris is in guatemala to address the root causes of the migrant surge. >> they can fix this tomorrow. all they got to do is reinstate the trump policies. >> dr. fauci spent sunday afternoon with first lady dr. jill biden the pair did not take questions. >> every piece of evidence that we have seen today continues to stack up to suggest this virus came from wuhan. >> a jacksonville florida, police officer pummeled by multiple people as he tried to clear a crowd. >> crime is up. respect for police is down. >> our kids are they half
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oppressive half victim. >> can we agree our educational system is serving minority kids very badly? >> as kyle larson wins at sonoma. >> the guy likes to dirt track it. ♪ ♪ steve: monday, it june 7, 2021. looking at the national harbor in maryland off the wilson bridge not far from washington, d.c. today they are going to go for a high of 91 degrees. ainsley: welcome back. brian: have you ever been on the ferris wheel? ainsley: maybe. get a little breeze. welcome back. how was kathy's birthday party? steve: it was fantastic. we did something we have never done before we were down in the palm beach area and we did
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something called the food yacht. our whole family got on. it was like a upon to an boat. they cook downstairs and bring the food upstairs. they brought course after course and we got seat neighbor's houses and people -- brian: you didn't have to do the dishes. you just threw them into the ocean. ainsley: you don't anyway. you do the cooking? steve: she does the cooking and i do the dishes. at the food yacht the food yacht people do it. ainsley: you paid them for it. brian: that's one of the reasons i don't want to get a yacht is i will have to cook and then have to do the dishes. steve: you told me once in confidence your butler wants a yacht. brian: that's true. i paid him too much. and it's a series of butlers. not just one. i have a whole team. steve: the guy you refer to as mr. french. brian: very successful series. it was a nickname. he resented it. ainsley: kamala went to guatemala and today she'll be in
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mexico. steve: wept down to guatemala. in guatemala city to address the root causes of migration in those areas. brian: i hope she gets some answers. i'm so curious. first foreign tripp as vp 75 days since she was appointed border czar. has yet to get to the border. she flew over it i imagine. ainsley: griff yen constituency joint us with what to expect today. griff: good morning, brian, ainsley and steve. start with the news yesterday with the fact that the vice president's first foreign trip off to a rough start. air force 2 was forced to return to joint base andrews shortly after taking off because of landing gear problems. she boarded another plane and made it safely to guatemala last night. waking up in guatemala city. today she will have bilateral meetings with the president community leaders and women business owners. tonight she will then head to mexico city for more meetings there tomorrow. her meetings in guatemala and
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new mexico as you mentioned, steve, will focus on the root causes of migration from latin america. back in march, vice president harris was tapped by the president to lead the nation's situation at the border. now 75 days later she is yet to visit the u.s. border. any city along it any migrant facility. all that we have seen exploding in the last three months despite multiple invitations to do so from both sides of the aisles. it comes as the situation at this border continues to be an issue for the administration and especially true right here where we are in the dell rio sector. we have learned there have been more than 10,000 encounters with venezuelas so far this year. but even more shocking this number i learned yesterday the number of sex offenders encountered here in this sector is up almost 1400 percent. april's customs and border protection numbers hit a 20-year high. we are still waiting for may's
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numbers. we will see if we get those this week while we are down here in del rio. now, in the rio grande sector, ground zero for biden's bvsi crisis. border agents arrested ms-13 gang member from el salvador. i he spoke to the newly elected mayor about the impact the crisis is having on his community. watch. >> it's a pass through. they come through here and they are gone. it's something that affects every single taxpayer in our country and we have got to address it the president, the congress, the senate, they have to address that. >> the vice president has yet to hold a news conference since being tapped to lead the border situation. the administration is expected to announce new actions to tackle smuggling in guatemala. we will see if vice president harris touches on those steps when she faces the press corps later today in guatemala. and just to give a little context, finally, guys, here in del rio, in the last just seven
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days they have encountered more than 5800 migrants from a total of 29 different countries. so i don't know whether the vice president intends to address root causes in other countries. they are certainly come from other places than just the northern triangle of guatemala, el salvador and honduras. brian, ainsley, and steve? steve: that sex offender number is through the roof. unbelievable. thank for going to texas. ainsley: griff anchored "fox & friends first" on the border with jillian. he interviewed the new mexico rancher. i don't know if you saw the interview this morning. he said all of his families, fourth generation farmer, cattle rancher, he said they all sit around at home around the kitchen table and they talk about how they feel so just -- he said quote, the problem is right here in our country. we feel abandoned by this administration. he said they're seeing trash. they had pictures of backpacks all over the floor, all over the ground. he said the cattle will eat some of the items out of the
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backpacks dangerous for them the cattle because some people are coming through his ranch, the cattle don't graze in that area anymore. we already have a problem feeding those cattle. so he is really worried about how this is going to affect his ranch. brian: if you bring up what the difference is, the vice president -- by the way whose idea was to have the president and vice president out of the country at the same time. she had 70 days to do this. you look at the different approach. it couldn't be more dramatically different. and as much as you want to say there was a problem in 2018 at the border. the thing that's so different is that president trump admitted that he encouraged reporters to do it. he went down and talked about the urgency to build the wall and change policy. he rotated people out. the trip is meant to mark a reset in u.s. attitudes after four years of transactional militarizing migration enforcement under president trump. polar opposite when the department of homeland security often criticize role in diplomacy they don't like the safe third country agreements.
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they don't like the central america nationalism. what they want to do now is instead of saying if you, mexico, if you allow your -- if you don't take care of your border, you are going to get tariffs. you are losing your money in guatemala, honduras and el salvador unless you start policing your border, we have the remain in mexico third party was agreed on. next thing you know this thing was virtually fixed. they said we are going to have a more open policy which resulted in more open border. steve: what's interesting about apparently what is going to happen today is one of the root causes that the administration is talking about down in mexico is corruption. you this think about it she is only dealing. the northern try angle that's three different countries. shoe is he only dealing with guatemala down there and also with mexico. why is that? because of corruption. when you look at honduras and he elsalvador the leaders of both f those countries are embroiled in
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corruption scandals. for instance, in guatemala, very recently, they did and guatemala has got problems, too. they very recently arrested two lawyers who were outspoken critics of the president and the lawyers say it's because the president is trying to shut me up before kamala harris comes down here. and then when it comes to the selection of judges for their supreme court. as it turns out mired in influence peddling and corruption as well. we are stemming the tide of corruption. there is only so much the united states can do. she will talk to your point, brian, about border security and talk about economic investment. in other words, if you are going to shut off the flow to our country we will give you money. ainsley: also talking about climate change. tom homan says you want to deal with the root causes of this surge. then reinstate trump's policies. listen. >> she doesn't have to leave
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washington. all they have to do reinstate the policies that trump had remain in mexico. countries that migranting illegal immigrants here and let ice do their jobs. besides getting rid of all the trump policies making all the promises and enticements to come here. also preventing ice from removing those entering the country illegally. right now ice is no longer able to arrest somebody here for being simply here illegally. all these people being released at the border right now, they are here to stay. ice can't remove them without an aggravated felony conviction on top of the illegal entry. on top of a judge's order. these people cannot be arrested by ice. brian: so there you go. that's a story of what is happening. tom homan couldn't be nor frustrated because we can't get the vice president and president to pay attention. ainsley: you know he has to
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feeled from the because he feel frustrated. president biden comes in no more wall construction. everything they worked so hard to fix. seeing the numbers go down and now seeing them increase. appears they are ignoring it kamala harris hasn't been to the border since 75 days she got that job. you hear griff talk about sexual assaults and sex offenders it's up almost 1400 percent in the del rio sector. unbelievable. steve: they stopped the flow before. if the biden administration wanted to do it they could take the page where is the thing from 2019. oh, yeah. let's do it this way. they want to do it a different way. brian: playing politics. not running the country. at 78 years old you would think it would be more important to do the right thing instead of the political thing. let's talk about thor i didn't know gin of this covid-19 vice. for the longest time to bring it up is to talk politics. to take donald trump's side over anthony fauci's side. now, thanks to people like josh rogan, people like they were
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pushing the lab leak theory for the longest time like tom cotton. ainsley: buzzfeed. brian: real interest around the felony how this thing got started. people have to understand if america is not going to show interest. only one to stand up to china. no one has the ability to do it. they are too tied economically and technically we are. scott gottlieb has great contacts with the trump administration and this administration. i looked at the emails with anthony fauci. i didn't see anything that bad. but he did say he got confirmation on this. what we all thought this came from bats, that were somehow co-mingled with another humans that got into humans. we were told no asymptomatic spread and everything down that line. meanwhile dr. fauci wasn't convinced of that and snuck off to europe to talk about it. listen to this. >> i was told at that time back
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in the spring that dr. fauci had gone over to a meeting of world health leaders in europe around the world health assembly and actually briefed them on the information that they were looking at that this could have been a potential lab leak. that this string looked unusual. those discussions were going on. i was told that by a senior official in trump administration. i have reconfirmed that conversation that happened at the time contemporaneously with that meeting over a year ago. so i think early on when they looked at the strain they had suspicions. and in a closer analysis and it takes time to do that analysis, to dispel some of those suspicions. ainsley: gain of function research take an animal virus and make it a super virus and test how it affects humans. i talked to one doctor and said if you look at the strain, because you heard dr. gottlieb say it looked suspicious. when you look at the strain there is hglv. human t cell limp receptor on the virus.
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the only way that receptor is to get on the virus is if it is placed there. so man place there. steve: sure, going to what scott gottlieb just said. you have got dr. fauci out in europe saying, you know, it could be a lab leak. he said it a year ago. and yet over the last year because donald trump was president and a lot of people in his circle said, you know what, it looks like china might have poisoned the world. mike pompeo, former secretary of state said that kind of attitude was so 2020. it was just not p.c. and that's why what's going on right now is so curious. here's the former secretary of state. watch. >> the more we see, the more we know. every sign, every piece of evidence that we have seen to date continues to stack up to suggest that this did, indeed, come, this wuhan virus came from the virology lab there in wuhan. almost no evidence that supports the zoonotic smother that somehow left from a bat to another species. this wasn't the politically
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correct thing to say back in the spring of last year when i began seeing evidence accumulate in that direction. we had a handful of folks inside our bureaucracy playing the politically correct game. didn't want to rock the boat consensus here in swamp town was that this was something that we shouldn't even take a look at. it wasn't even worth questioning whether it was the "new york times" or "the washington post." they poo pooed any of us who talked about this lab. and there were people at the state department creatures of the south and didn't want to rock the boat. brian: they said it's racist. bring up china virus. how dare you. will attack on asian americans in americans horrific. there is a chance it might have came from the wuhan lab. the dr. richard miller and dr. steven quay. that's true. also i thought it was noteworthy that steve hilton played a 2012 speech last night of anthony fauci talking about the positive of gain of function research how necessary it is. and by the way if you think china is embarrassed by what happened?
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they are building more of these labs as we speak. so, more danger labs. they didn't admit to sars 1 and not admitting to covid-19. they should be totally responsible. i agree with donald trump. they owe us at least $10 trillion. ainsley: every country does it as i'm being told by these doctors. the problem is it was either an accident or was it intentional it was delayed a lab and make sure it's cleaned up so to doesn't happen again. >> if china is building a bunch of new labs, let's hope they are leak proof because it looks like they had one in wuhan. ainsley: three doctors that went to the hospital. brian: people bringing you chernobyl bring you more labs. fantastic. steve: more news about this each and every day. soon we could know. stay tuned. meantime go to jillian slightly behind me on the nez neon level with the news. jillian: let's begin with a fox news alert. two suspects have been arrested in the california road rage
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shooting death of a 6-year-old. highway patrol announcing 24-year-old marcus and 23-year-old gwinn live were arrested at their home in orange county. authorities expect to charge both with murder. 6-year-old aden was shot and killed on may 21st while heading to kindergarten with his mom. chicago police remove a 26-year-old man from an american airlines flight after causing what the company called a, quote, disturbance. the disruptive passenger had to be detained on board until the flight from maine landed no. one was hurt but it comes just days after a delta airlines flight attendant stopped a man trying to reach the cockpit that flight had to be diverted for emergency landing. the would be attacker zip tied handed over to the fbi before landing. prince harry and wife meghan markle welcome a new royal baby in california. baby girl born friday lily beth diana after her
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great-grandmother the queen. lifelong and princess diana. lily beth also called lily is the couple's second child after birth of archy. birth followed months of tension between meghan and royal in-laws after she accused them of racism in an interview with oprah winfrey. uber going the distance against legendary boxer in highly anticipated exhibition site. >> counter shot by -- oh. >> paul may have avoided the knockout but the undefeated may weather was able to evade the amateur's punches all night. still no official winner. unfortunately many fans didn't get to see it show time pay per view stream plagued by widespread outages due to high demand. that's a look at your headlines. back to you.
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steve: brian, why didn't they have any judges? brian: exhibition. all they do is cash. in new thing, mike tyson the same thing fight holyfield doing this keep in mind, may weather doesn't like to get hit but he is 41 now. and number two, this guy was 35 pounds heavier and he looked on some performance enhancing drugs. i don't know what relates stars are getting these days but certainly bigger than most. jillian: wouldn't you be pissed if you paid for it and couldn't watch it. steve: would be steamed. ainsley: coming up, interracial couple speaking up critical race theory saying it should not be taught in the classroom. we will hear from them after the break.
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>> critical race theory stuff now it's going to take it to new heights where we will see bigotry of low expectations. i don't want any teacher thinking that of our kids that because of the way they look they can't meet a deadline? by using critical race theory to explain all this stuff. we areputting a giant emphasis n whiteness. >> if you have high expectations, kids and people will rise to that, our kids, are they half oppressor, half victim? how does that work? steve: how does that work. that is a married couple, an
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interracial couple from oak park, illinois. >> that's why they were showing all the shots from above. it's an integrated neighborhood of the chicago area. integrated in the 1960's and 1970s. these two who are public school teachers in chicago, they say that critical race theory is dumbing down issues and is very, very bad for ultimately the kids who are going to school. because, it's not teaching them the right thing, they say. ainsley: this article in this package that was put together by this reporter, it was beautifully done, because he says he is driving through. you see all the images of the neighborhood. he did that because he felt like he was going back in time. evidence said they have con such a great job of integrating that neighborhood and not focusing on race but focusing on what you can do to reach your goals and to be a better person. and they are saying critical race theory is tearing down everything that they have worked so hard for. the couple says we believe that it hurts our black and brown community that the message is you are going to be a victim.
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you canner make it until we tear down all of these systems and structures. they go on to say black people overcame slavery, reconstruction and jim crow all of a sudden black people can't succeed. brian: look at the commencement address that president biden put out again talking about race and how structurally uneven we are to be kind. in oklahoma, citing what happened in tulsa. who are risk burning down of black wall street. and not what happened after. not the progress we are experiencing. and not comparing it to not only 1860 but 1960 and here we are in 2021. when republican former secretary of state. the national security adviser, crisis went on face the nation yesterday to talk about everything from what is happening to china to what's happening with the republican politics to what's happening on race. she is uniquely qualified to talk about it she grew up in segregated south in alabama. here is what she said about critical race theory and the
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discussion in america right now. >> when i hear the talk about structural racism it really gives me pause. can we finally agree that our k 12 education system is really serving poor kids and minority kids very badly? can we agree that we actually have a system. i want kids to know about tulsa. i also want them to know what that black community did to overcome that horrible massacre. i want them to know about 63 in birmingham. but i want them to know that the mayor of birmingham today is a black man who grew up in a poor community. and i want us as a country to do it together. because i don't want this to be black against white. my weapons of my identity against yours. brian: imagine if president biden said that i don't want this to be back against white or white against minorities? imagine if he brought up look
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how much progress we made and go the last lap and finish it off. she want to say as she ended her comments i have traveled the whole world, no one does better on diversity than america. there is no better place to live. she said i didn't go to a theater until i was 8 years old. i wasn't allowed. to say i couldn't go to -- i didn't have a white person in my classroom until i was 12. i had to move to denver. look at how much progress everyone has made since. and that's what she point out. we weren't perfect but look at how much progress. we used to talk like this. we don't talk like that now. steve: the talk now is about critical race theory where people are either oppressors or they are victims. so that is to her point. got to be a way to address this without doing it the wrong way. ainsley: beautiful how she says we should be teaching our children. teach them the history but how much we have come. how you can as a an individual or child as you grow up through your life you can overcome. she is such a great leaderboard.
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i wish she would run for if the. i know she says she doesn't have an interest in that. steve: look to your point, brian, where she came from in birmingham, alabama and she became the top diplomat in the world. anything is possible in america. >> ainsley: in this beautiful country. anything is possible. steve: there you go, getting paid to drink coffee on a white couch. ainsley: and wake up america. brian: meanwhile, 29 manipulates after the hour. steve: straight ahead on this monday, terrifying video out of florida attacking an officer as he responded to allca. do you know what he did? he ran toward the danger. a live report coming up.
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jillian: good morning, we are back with your headlines now. new york police release surveillance footage of a shooting that killed a 10-year-old boy just days before his 11th birthday. the suspect arriving on the street in a dark suv before arriving up to the home and firing 8 shots. the boy was hit in the torso. his uncle was hit in the shoulder and is expected to survive. they are offering a $3,500
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reward. a daring rescue caught on camera. helicopters responding to a distress call from a kayaker who attempted to row his ray into california to hawaii. a 24 hours mile journey. 70 miles off the coast of santa cruz when the weather turned south and he lost his g.p.s. signal. the kayaker is recovering in good condition. how, unbelievable. the supreme court nowed can to decide whether the men only draft registration law is sex discrimination the aclu and women's groups saying allow the law to stand is harmful but the ruling likely wouldn't have a big impact. the last time there was a draft was during the vietnam war. let's go to the racetrack where kyle larson scored a second straight nascar win at sonoma raceway. >> four races in a row as kyle larson wins at sonoma.
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jillian: chased out in the last lap of the toyota. the win marking his third of the season and hendrix 270th victory adding to the nascar record the team broke last weekend. that's a look at your headlines, steve, send it back to you. steve: they are doing very well. jillian, thank you. take a look at this. a florida police officer responding to a are the row of gunshots gets pummeled by a crowd of people. watch this. [screaming] steve: can you believe that that jacksonville, florida, officer was trying to clear the crowd when he was thrown to the ground as anti-police rhetoric escalates as you know nationwide. joining us now somebody who knows about this jacksonville fraternal order of police. steve, good morning to you. >> good morning, sir, thank you for having me. >> pick up the story, that guy, there were reports of break-in or gunshots fired. that guy runs toward the danger. he has a rifle on his back,
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right, and that happened? >> yeah. yeah. he was actually dispatched nearby to report of a car break-in. and as he was arriving on the scene of that car break-in. they updated the information to say that there was gunshots nearby. answered actually spoke to the guy who called in the car break-in and he said they are shooting down there. and pointed in the direction of that crowd. so that officer, you know, we have all seen it most recently here in florida in miami. that bar shooting. down there in miami and our officer wasn't going to wait. he was going to go down there. didn't know if he had an active shooter situation or what it might be. so he drove down there to a safe distance, retrieved his patrol rifle and was going to go down there and take care of business if he had to to make sure that the very people he was going to help make sure that they were safe and those same very people are the ones a tacked him. steve: not one person in that crowd helped him. >> one person tried to pull that -- it was actually a female off of him. can you see i think it's the guy
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in the red shirt. but he tried to pull her off. but nobody else did. everybody else sat there and watched and everybody else filmed what happened to our officer. we have seen it all the rhetoric from the activists and really truthfully rhetoric from elected officials that we feel like has emboldened situations like this like there will be no repercussions for jumping on police officers and hurting them. steve: steve, this is so different than anything we have seen in the united states throughout my lifetime until present day. where usually, you know, it's people good samaritans in a crowd will jump up and help a police officer. they won't jump up and jump him. >> yeah. you are right. we kind of want to make clear is we don't think this is a reflection on jacksonville because we have some, you know, amazing it citizens, amazing community here in jacksonville. our elected leaders where amazing. what we say this is a reflection
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of those people in the parking lot. and you are right. i do think that, you know, the vast majority of americans, i don't care what your political affiliation is, what your race is, the vast majority of americans would help us in our time of need. but unfortunately, again, all that rhetoric is in the elected leaders remaining silent and sometimes encouraging it have elm polleddenned people to do this and you are right. i never thought i would see something like this. steve: do you, speaking of elected leaders, do you feel that this is a problem that joe biden should address and say, hey, look, people are beating up our cops? you have got to stop that. >> absolutely. i mean, have you seen -- i mean, truthfully, president biden was one of the worst culprits. a all last year when all the attacks on law enforcement was occurring, when cities were burning, when looting was occurring, president biden and some of his party just remained silent, so, yes. they are in my opinion they are partially responsible for this. steve: steve, you know, the white house is watching this show right now. what would you like to say
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directly to president biden? >> i would just say look, president biden, you need to do something this has gone on far too long. and elected leaders have remained silent and truthfully we all feel in law enforcement it's because you are pandering to your base. and y'all need to step up and do something. let's go back to the america where, you know, everybody went to work every day. came home to their families and people respected law enforcement. steve: yeah, that would be fantastic. exit question, steve, how is that officer? >> he is doing well. he has got some bruises and abrasions and actually spoke to him within the last couple days and he is doing good. thank you for asking. steve: back on the job. >> yes. he will be back on the job shortly. steve: all right. very good. steve zona president of the fraternal order of police in that neck of the woods. thank you for your service and thank you for joining us today. >> yes, sir. and thank you for having me. steve: all right. there you go. 6:40 in the east.
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after staying silent on the border surge for months. our vice president plans to speak with leaders from guatemala and mexico today. as alarming number of migrants continue to stream across our southern border, is the administration doing enough? lara logan doesn't think so. she is just back from the border. she is going to join us live coming up next. ♪ advanced non-small cell lung cancer can change everything. but your first treatment could be a chemo-free combination of two immunotherapies that works differently. it could mean a chance to live longer. opdivo plus yervoy is for adults newly diagnosed with non-small cell lung cancer that has spread, tests positive for pd-l1 and does not have an abnormal egfr or alk gene. opdivo plus yervoy is the only fda-approved combination of two immunotherapies
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pilot over radio: right there, right there. [sfx: revving trucks] pilot over radio: g complete. how do you introduce the larger-than-life gmc yukon? with the world's biggest tweet. the next generation gmc yukon. premium that's made to be used. ♪ ainsley: vice president harris touching down in guatemala yesterday kicking off a trip through central america to address what her office is calling the root causes of the crisis down at the southern border. but critics say she is not going far enough. urging her to witness the crisis at the border firsthand. fox nation host lara logan just spent a week covering this crisis and she joins us now. good morning to you, lara. >> good morning. >> good morning. where did you go down on the border and what did you see? >> well, i was down in the rio
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grande valley area, which is in texas. and we went all over because i was with the texas department of public safety and so some of the will air on the ground and we were out day and night. all through the valley out to roma which is one of the biggest migrant corridors that's where the video you are looking at filmed in roma late at night. that was quite extraordinary to see even the smuggler was not concerned about agents from texas department of public safety and border patrol agents being right there on the river bank. it is just so common now. and everybody knows the game. you know, coming over, hand yourself over, if you have a shot of getting in the country and otherwise, you know, hit one of the other areas and just run. run for your life. because no one is going to enforce the law for minor immigration violations. so, the only real problem here is criminal activity. and there are so many places the border is so wide open and all
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the areas where there is no border wall and very little coverage that it was just quite -- it was almost shocking to see that there really is an open border. and this administration is not talking about it or even acknowledging it. ainsley: is that the biggest change you saw the number of people come through or the fact that smugglers are just letting you film them and they are not getting arrested? nothing is happening to them. >> you know, the biggest change that i saw was hearing from agents all along the border. from every different kind of agency. that they have never seen anything in their lifetime like they are seeing now. because the numbers are up on every single part of the border. and perhaps and that's never happened before. there -- you know, there have been a number of crises that have come and gone. but in all of those situations the administration in washington has acknowledged that there is a crisis and has taken action to
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mitigate what is happening. that is not happening here. in fact, the only action that has been taken has been to create the crisis. so, it's not that there is a lack of policy. it's that the policy is to open the border. and it's not that there is a failure of action. the action has been to open the border and owe politic rate immigration law. and to prevent law enforcement from enforcing it so, texas has stepped in the breach here, so has arizona and mexico. there is millions and millions and millions of dollars that are being spent. the biden administration is spending it on immigrants. that has left national security and security up to the states. texas is filling that gap. >> temporarily before but there has always been some kind of acknowledgment from washington that you are in the midst of a crisis what kamala harris has not done as so-called border
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czar, she hasn't spoken to the people who are living on the border in any of these states she hasn't been down and visited any of these communities. she hasn'taged the problem. she hasn't spoken to the ranchers who literally like a highway of illegal immigrants who are trying to avoid the law. we are talking about areas are 3, 400 percent increase in the number of people coming over. so that's a shock and being felt in the community because you have car chases and you have bailouts where people know that they're caught so they bail out in the middle of the street. and people, you know, this is putting people at risk rise in crime. even where i am. i'm far from north of the border, and there has been a massive increase in crime in small towns in the countryside. this is a real issue that is not being addressed by this
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administration. and that has never been the chase in living memory from anyone i have spoken to. ainsley: almost 1400 percent increase in the sexual offenders in del rio sector. he interviewed one rancher who says he feels completely abandoned by this administration. they are down there in the triangle countries but not dealing with americans on that side of the border. lara, thanks for going down there for us and reporting the story. we appreciate it. >> , will ainsley, people coming from 120 countries. clarifies, is she going to address immigration problems and root causes in all of those countries? the whole world is coming to america right now. and coming over the border and disappearing. of we don't even know who they are. this administration has done everything. they have put this place deliberately. ainsley: lara logan, thank you so much. rising crime a worsening homeless crisis and failed pandemic response have all taken a bite out of the big a.m. in tt
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than a decade. he can't believe what he has witnessed. now releasing a brand new book about it revealing exactly what he saw. it's called the last days of new york a reporter's true tale. outlining the history of the big apple including everything from the civil riots to recovery from the 2008 recession and the city's decline under disastrous leadership of mayor de blasio. seth barron joins us now. seth, this is really an american story. some other cities are going through this. how did -- why do you lay this at mayor de blasio's feet? >> well, you know, he is the guy. he has been in charge. and he pushed the narrative of the tale of two cities and class division and racial division. in a sense, yeah. it is his fault. so there has been a lot -- he has had a lot of help, let's put it that way. there is a lot of socialists and progressives who have had his back and been completely behind his terrible policies. brian: also is he lazy, number one, doesn't griewcial usually help. number two you say he has
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totally gutted the city's prosperity but, yet, he is the luckiest mayor in what way? >> well, he has been very lucky because new york city never really suffered under the recession. you know, we were bailed out by the federal government, the financial industry was. and all along he has had plenty of tax revenue. never had to budget. he could just spend every time he wanted to. then he got very lucky because he skirted all of his corruption cases. so, you know, and now with biden, in he has gotten a huge windfall of big federal bailout. so he doesn't even have to fire anyone. brian: his wife had that thrive account a billion dollars just gone. how does he get away with that? >> well, you know, he put her in charge of mental health -- mental health plan even though she is not a psycho therapist. she has no training in that. she a speech writer and not a very good one. 14 it full staff members like a
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videographer. he spent money like it's just something to flush down the toilet. brian: and, you know, seth, you outlined how got here the relationship between cuomo and de blasio hurt everyone. very rare to see two democrats tear each other's eyes out. >> oh, well, they hate each other. and they were just constantly trying to step on each other. it goes back to the administration when de blasio worked for cuomo and there is some very bad blood. and it just became an ego -- brian: we paid the price, especially on the communication with coast. seth, you were there every step of the way before the country was watching. outlined in your book the last days of new york. great job. >> thank you, brian. brian: all right. more "fox & friends" coming your way. in fact, according to reports, two more hours. ♪
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oppressor, half victim? how does that work? >> can we finally agree that our k-12 education system is really serving minority kids very badly? >> as kyle larson wins at sonoma. >> this guy likes the dirt track ♪ i'm picking up good vibrations. she is giving my excitation. ♪ i'm picking up good vibration. brian: all right, you are looking at myrtle beach. a little foggy, but always a great time to play golf. a population of 2,700. i didn't count today. and i do not know anyone who is from south carolina but a lot of people who come from there say that they met other people that are very nice. steve: hello. ainsley: it's such great state a beautiful state. i have some memories at myrtle beach. right there at the tip of the north carolina/south carolina border. on sundays you can't buy alcohol or at least when i was growing up there you couldn't buy
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alcohol. so you go north carolina to buy it for your family if you ran out on sundays. we used to go there and our state dance is the shag and my dad and mom are beautiful dancers. we would go -- i would watch the shag competition. brian: what's a shag. ainsley: like a 1, 2, 3 back step. if you are a shagger you move smoothly. ducks, at fat harolds a place can you go and watch amazing dancers. those are the places where you can go if you are ever in myrtle beach can you play golf and eat really good seafood. brian: and you can shag. ainsley: you can shag. brian: that was supposed to my hello. that was supposed to be my hello, how dare you. steve: anyway, we have another hour of news. anyway, let's talk a little bit about coronavirus. two big headlines yesterday. scott gottlieb fda commissioner
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what he said was about a year ago dr. fauci went to europe and said yeah, you know what? it could be a lab leak. really? it's because now, of course, dr. fauci is trying to poo poo that. brian: because facebook would ban you or freeze your account if you said something like that. ainsley: not anymore. changed their policies. now democrats are on board. steve: also, this is probably what dr. fauci is thinking about in those images. there is a "wall street journal" exclusive, it's an op-ed from these two doctors. brian talked about it earlier. dr. steven k. and dr. richard mueller. they say you know, the circumstances look like, you know, circumstantially, it looks like it was a lab leak. but, they are scientists and they have looked at the genetic fingerprint and coronavirus 19 has a genome mic sequencing combination used by gain of function research. extremely rare, no naturally
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occurring coronavirus that has ever had this sequence. in other words, it's pretty much a trillion to 1 that it is anything other than a lab leak. ainsley: reminds me one of my good friends a doctor said ainsley if you look at the virus its of it it has hglc. it has receptor on covid that receptor wouldn't get there, i guess the same thing these doctors are talking about. steve: put it in a particular way. splice it and unique to what they do with gain of function research. >> take an animal virus soup it up and make it a human virus. many people think something obviously went wrong inside the lab. brian: i cannot ever top the scientific dialogue you two just presented. i can't even pronounce half those words. i'm going to go to the basic, the big picture. if they told us it was a leak. we would have prepared for it we
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wouldn't have had 600,000 dead. maybe a couple of thousand. the cdc would have changed their test. we would have known asymptomatic spread we would have known it went from an animal to a human. the president of china said the exact opposite to president trump. that's why it matters. also, we want to be able to stop the next one. but if you are adam schiff, all you see is people trying to protect trump? listen. >> this is, you know, part of the attack on truth by the trump administration and trump's g.o.p. science is really quintessentialably a search for the truth. all of the mixed messaging on wearing masks, all of the dysfunction around producing the test and rolling out the test. look, fauci is speaking out about that. about the mistakes we made and how costly they were so no wonder they are going after fauci. part of it is trying to resurrect donald trump. trying to happy campaign in 2024 and white wash his record and they wish to try to rewrite this
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portion of history because hundreds of thousands of people died under trump's incompetent watch. brian: and what i think is so important is that adam schiff just backed up every question that we have about the virus when he said the mixed message on masks, how difference on tests. do you really think donald trump is in charge of tests and donald trump knew the history of masks as it relates to covid-19 or sars 2 virus? no and no. he was depending on doctors who they were saying you have got to listen to the science. president's instinct got to listen to the science. shouldn't national security figure into this too? i'm really confused about what you are saying one day why you are not acknowledging you are changing your tune the next day. so the mixed mess sandals is one of criticisms most people have of anthony fauci. steve: one other bit of science. and that is which points a finger once again at china, and it being a lab leak. you know, just days after it was announced that there was this
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coronavirus 19 that was raging through wuhan, there was a doctor there who came up with a vaccine which makes it look like they had been doing gain of function research research and they knew what it was all about this super toxic coronavirus and so they had brood up a vaccine things thing we know. what did fauci know and when did he know it. ainsley: dr. fauci and the vice president's wife -- i mean the president's wife, they were in harlem. brian: right up here. ainsley: at a vaccination site and there were protesters outside they were yelling and saying to fire fauci because he shifted his position some times, flip flopped. joe biden, president biden backed fauci and says he has no plans to fire him. brian: by the way if you want to make sure anthony fauci doesn't look political put him with the president's wife. makes sense. i'm being sar sarcastic. they want to show that they
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support him too. the first on this show and others to say i have got a huge problem with the story they are tell us about a bat biting a pan begin. and that being the story because it's a thousand miles away as the opposed to the wuhan lab leak. ainsley: why the left ignored it. brian: yes. >> i think there is a few reasons. one that so many of american elites are so financial interest in china. ideological interest to keep globalism going forward. but another reason is because it was me saying it and then donald trump started saying the same thing. and sometimes mainstream media, as you know, simply refutes assertions if they don't like the person making the assertion not based on the facts of the matter. i think the american people deserve to know what caused the worst pandemic in a century. look, china should be made to
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pay for their negligence and their deceitfulness at the outset of this pandemic. covering up its origins, not being open about what was happening in a lab in wuhan. steve: sure, and, remember, go back a year ago. there were so many times where dr. fauci was at loggerheads with the president. the president mentioned hydroxychloroquine which he had heard was something that might help. and back then we didn't know exactly how things were going. the president talked a little bit about a lab leak. next thing you know, no, no, no. it obviously jumped from a different species to the people. and that's how we got to where we are today. it was political. '. ainsley: the media can't ignore the message just because they don't like the messenger. steve: they did. brian: they did. if donald trump won four more years you you would have two thirds of the country saying what kamala harris and cuomo said if you have a vaccine from donald trump i won't use it think about that. republicans reluctant. republicans should realize that it was the warp speed, even
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though joe biden will never admit it or rarely admits it, warp speed, under president trump's administration gave -- that's what presented this virus. they were doing a million shots a day, they were doing a million shots a day before he turned over reins to joe biden. this really should be if you don't want to take the vaccine don't make it political. it really has nothing to do with politics and really would have helped, too, if anthony fauci was half as optimistic as the. remember what he said you are not going to see a vaccine for a year and a half that was wrong, too. ainsley: president trump actually spoke over the weekend. i don't know if you all saw it he didn't announce whether or not is he requesting to run for president. lara trump was with him and took the stage and said she is not ready to run for senate for the south carolina yet. she is going to table it for now because she has young kids. something she might consider down the road. steve: donald trump also said at the same event that china owes us at least $10 trillion. let's see if joe biden makes a similar kind of statement.
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meanwhile, speakings of joe biden. president biden is going to meet again with senator shelley moore capito as they try to find compromise between republicans and democrats on infrastructure. ainsley: today's meeting comes after the president rejected the g.o.p.'s nearly trillion-dollar counter offer on friday. brian: following it all is mark meredith he joins us from the white house with the latest. >> steve, ainsley and brian, good morning to you guys. certainly the white house and senate republicans they keep talking. you mention that phone call it's going to happen later today with the west virginia senator. there is still a lot of debate about what can happen with an infrastructure spending bill and whether or not the president is going to get his way. we have seen many different numbers thrown out here during these negotiations including close to $900 billion being thrown around by a bipartisan group of lawmakers still short of what the president wants to spend. but a lot more than what republicans want to doll out. inside the president's plan we are talking about a significant amount of money here to be spent on modernizing transportation infrastructure.
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but it would also go to things like boosting care for both seniors as well as disabled americans. also money for affordable housing. will something that doesn't necessarily go to core infrastructure according to republicans but as i mentioned. president biden is expected to speak with virginia republican senator shelley moore capito once again later today. >> i commend the president and senator capito, my colleague from west virginia for continuing to work hard. they are working hard, trying to find a compromise. they have come a long way. and they are moving in the right directions. >> there is still a debate about what should be included in the bill. but, also, how to pay for it a number of democrats also urging the white house to move a deal forward. even if they can't get the republicans on board. still, one cabinet secretary says now is not the time to give up talking at least not yet. >> we have seen a lot of republicans, certainly around the country but also a lot of republicans in office state their interest in doing something real on
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infrastructure. we just got it see if we can actually get it into enough of an overlapping consensus that we can get a bill done together. the president certainly preserves a bipartisan approach. >> marking up a surface transportation bill that's something that could be tied to a larger infrastructure package but how the congress may want to move forward even if negotiations here at the white house continue to drag on. steve, ainsley and brian, we will let you know if a deal can be reached. back to you guys. steve: all right. mark, thank you very much. they are not really very close at all it all comes down to definition. the democrats have redefined what infrastructures is and they have added a bunch of stuff. do you know who is really steamed at the administration right now? progressives. they want all $2.3 trillion. you know, and joe biden sawed a little off. they are furious because they want all that other stuff that is not traditional infrastructure in this infrastructure bill. ainsley: republicans want 1.1 trillion. they want that over 8 years.
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democrats want five year plan. steve: republicans added another 50 billion or something like that. on friday. ainsley: joe biden did say he is compromising on the corporate taxes. not going to increase corporate tax. brian: is he talking of minimum 15% tax trying to get the whole world to agree with and maybe the g 7 has. in terms of the xs and os. they feel we are going to have a negotiation with republicans. they are going to reject it and we are going to pass it thanks to the vice president. because of we have a 51-50 majority when the vice president goes and votes. the problem is not only joe manchin but kyrsten sinema as well as angus king. they are looking at what is in the infrastructure bill as the voting rights act and they are also looking at blowing up the filibuster and saying i'm not really on board with voting rights act. a lot of this stuff has nothing to do with voting rights. when it comes to infrastructure. i'm not for going from 35 to 28. i'm not even maybe 25. tops. but we're not -- when you talk about corporate tax rate, we're not competing with america. we are competing with other
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countries. so it's not a matter of corporations against the working class. and then when -- in the big picture, joe manchin is holding the line. he is not voting for this. because he represents a conservative state. he also represents senator robert byrd. for everything robert byrd was. he was a compromiser. he was for people negotiating in order to get a piece of legislation. he was not for banning the filibuster and jamming it down people's throats while people will point out that joe manchin voted 100 percent of the time with joe biden and you are right. he says on all these three. and he wrote an op-ed yesterday. that came in sunday. don't even ask me about the voting rights bill. that would nationalize elections. i'm not voting for it and we are not there yet. but i'm optimistic that i can get something on infrastructure. steve, i know the conventional wisdom and i was watching everyone over the weekend agrees with you that no deal is going to get done. i have a sense infrastructure could get done. i have a sense that they can do it.
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keep in mind it took 12 months to get obamacare. i think -- and that was still a single one party. i think that there is enough people on the right that want to get something done that they might be able to get the 10 votes and do something. that's why capito giving the green light for mitch mcconnell to continue to negotiate i think is key. steve: brian, here is why. if republicans cave and include things that are not traditional infrastructure. that will be a loss. if if they can get joe biden closer to them. actually, where the infrastructure bill is about infrastructure. they would do that. it would be a win for both sides. but if they cross that red line and say, do you know what? let's go ahead and include that fill in the blank. brian: don't you agree 2.3 to 1 trillion is significant reduction? ainsley: they need all 50 senators. joe manchin and kyrsten sinema are not for the current plan. i don't know why they can't compromise and just focus on
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what the republicans are agreeing to and that bridges, tunnels, things like that. true infrastructure. '. brian: i sthand understand. i think also would take the pressure off joe manchin and the republicans cannot lose joe manchin. if they lose him they lose everything. if they cut one deal. because it's going to be harder for republicans to get the senate back. next time joe marchen could be marginalized. steve: problem for joe biden every nickel he goes closer to the republicans the super progressive trawl liberal side going joe, you are caving. it's got to be 2.3 or nothing. ainsley: let's get to this story. ainsley: yale school of medicine had a speaker and she is a psychiatrist here in new york city. her name is dr. aruna kill lanny. she to this group. we don't have video of it. but bari weiss, former "new york
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yale says that her explicative filled talk was anesthetic call to what yale stands for. they put out a statement on saturday to emphasize that the ideas expreparationed by the speaker conflict with the core values of yale school of medicine this video contains profanity and imagery of violence. yale school of medicine expects our members of the community to speak respectively to one another and does not condone imagery of violence or racism against any group. apparently they also tried to limit who had access to that particular audio. where only people who were in attendance. and now this doctor has posted a number of videos on tiktok saying that essentially yale is suppressing her talk on race. brian: right. and the "new york times" say they talk about other questionable things that she said in the past. by the way, did anyone do a background check on her and do you think yale didn't know about this until this came forward? meanwhile, she called a white
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therapist telling her in psycho analysis that she was psychotic every time she brought up race. she also said because the bills were so high after her sessions this is the cost of talking to white people. fantastic. dr. carol swain, former professor on the double standards when it comes to hate speech said this yesterday on this show. >> there is a dangerous double standard that allows racial and ethnic minorities to engage in hate speech without any consequences this has been going on for years. what i notice is the universities seem to reward the ones who make the most outrageous, the most hate-filled statements. it's been that case ever since i have been in academia. white people seem to like to be entertained by minorities like this. and i mean not all white people but the ones on university campuses that make the big
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decisions. ainsley: she said she should not be practicing medicine. i wonder what the patients think about this. brian: highest institution with the best reputation in the country. it's unbelievable. steve: it's nuts. anyway, somebody invited her and now she says hey, yale, put out my audio so everybody can hear what i have to say. brian: she is proud of it. steve: she feels strongly of it. absolutely, indeed. 7:21. ainsley: still ahead, fed up parents are going after elise new york city prep schools over their woke curriculums. they reveal their plan of attack later this hour.
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gone over to a meeting of world health leaders in europe around the world health assembly and actually briefed them on the information that they were looking at that this could have been a potential lab leak, that this strain looked unusual. i think early on when they looked at the strain they had suspicions. steve as the fallout grows over dr. fauci's leaked emails the fda chief revealed yesterday dr. fauci had briefed world leaders on the possibility that it was a covid lab leak last year here to react the author of "panic attack: playing politics with science over covid-19." dr. nicole saphier. dr. saphier, it looked like people who were talking about it being a lab leak over the last year until recently, you know, they are out of their minds, absolutely no shot at it because initially, donald trump suggested it, and so it had to be wrong. now, turns out fauci said it might actually have happened a
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year ago. >> well, steve, while i can't attest to what fauci did or did not know. we did see based on the emails that were recently released that christian anderson did put forth an email to him suggesting that there were some irregularities with the virus that could be done from a lab, which is why there was a possibility of that. just like former fda commissioner gottlieb said i spoke to high level administrator in the hhs early in the spring who also said that it was under consideration giving a lot of the coincidences and looks of the virus. but the same christian anderson is the one that got 21 virologists together to put forth that statement saying that the virus could really only be natural origin and that's what dr. fauci continued to time and again point to. again, you know, what was being done behind the scenes if it was being investigated, i don't know, it does seem that more people were aware of the possibility that this lab could have accidently escaped from the labs than they let on from the
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public. unequivocally at this point i think that's pretty obvious. i wish dr. fauci would just come forth and be a little bit more transparent about it. steve: sure, in the beginning, we knew so little about it china apparently knew a lot more about it than we did and they were not forthcoming and brought us to where we are right now. you know, had china simply said okay, this is what is going on. it would have been completely different. obviously dr. fauci back then was saying, you know, i don't know if it's a lab leak. it could be one of those things where it jumps from animals to people. don't know. but, behind the scenes and that's why it's so frustrating because for the last year people have down played it because donald trump said you know, if china is responsible we are going to go after them. >> well, steve, we expect lack of transparency to come out of the chinese communist party. but we don't expect is a lack of transparency from our united states public health officials. steve: exactly. >> especially when we know there were grants going to certain funds that went into the wuhan
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institute of virology. i think if people were a little bit more open and honest and much more transparent. i think you would have much less discord with the american public right now and a lot of the public would not have such distrust for the institution. steve: before you go i saw a headline this morning apparently the number of people who are getting vaccines and plateaued. i think last week it was something like 2 million fewer people got shots than they anticipated. what's hang? >> well, steve, first of all, we had a huge part of the population who have already been vaccinated. and there is a lot of vaccine hesitancy still. unfortunately, i think what's going to take to get more people to go and get vaccinated first you need to make sure that the vaccines are completely convenient. put them at your local cvs or post office where people are going day-to-day. don't make it is people have to go out of their way to get it we need drug companies to get that full fda approval. just because someone is hesitant
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to get vaccinated doesn't make sure they are anti-vaccination. want to make sure it goes through right checks and balances. going through fda approval you will get more people comfortable getting the vaccine. steve: i was at a walgreen's over the weekend and i saw two people getting a shot. it's much more easy to get. dr. nicole saphier has a great new book it's called "panic attack." thanks for making a couch call. >> thanks,s steve. steve: coming up, senator ted cruz slams facebook for censors the covid lab leak theory as the tech titan now allows posts that the virus could be man made. they didn't use to feel that way. ♪ - 15 or more headache days a month, ...each lasting 4 hours or more. botox® prevents headaches in adults with chronic migraine. so, if you haven't tried botox® for your chronic migraine, ...check with your doctor if botox® is right for you,
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chest pain, mouth or tongue swelling, problems urinating, vision changes, or eye pain occur. take a stand and start a new day with trelegy. ask your doctor about once-daily trelegy. and save at trelegy.com. after a shooting near the homestead air base. are it happened early this morning at apartment complex. two other children were hurt. one is in critical condition. it's the latest incident in a disturbing trend of violence in miami-dade county. saturday night a correctional officer was among three killed in a shooting at a graduation party. and police are still looking for the suspects behind a mass
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shooting at a banquet hall last month. this just in. jeff bezos will be flying into space on the first crude rocket flight for his company blue origin. the flight is scheduled for jul. just 15 days after he set to resign as ceo of amazon. bezos' younger brother mark will also join the flight. blue origin is currently auctioning off a seat in the maiden voyage. the current bid is 2.8 million bucks. very cool. new york lawmakers taking a step forward in the impeachment investigation of governor andrew cuomo. top democrats introducing a bill to use state funds for the probe tapping into a fund normally used to pay for lawsuits against the state. cuomo, however, would have to approve the measure. the governor has been accused of sexual harassment, misreporting covid deaths in nurses homes and exploiting state funds to write his memoir. that's a look at your headlines. brian send to it you. brian: the state is paying for his defense but not for the offense. steve: the governor also has to
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approve it i think that's probably. brian: i think democrats are just a wink and a nod for them. they don't want to go through with it thanks, jillian. meanwhile, 25 minutes before the top of the hour. senator ted cruz accused of censoring covid-19 content on behalf of the government as the social media giant reveals it will no longer ban posts suggesting the virus is man made. >> unfortunately, i don't expect the biden administration will do anything to hold them to account. but, these latest breakthroughs have real consequence. because it now is clear that facebook was operating at the direction of and in the direct benefit of the federal government. and operating as the government censor utilizing their monopoly position to censor on behalf of the government. ainsley: here to react is biotech entrepreneur and author of the upcoming book woke inc. his name is vivek ramaswamy.
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do you agree that the biden administration will not hold them accountable. >> i heritage foundation event in texas. the only place where i disagree with him this isn't the event that proved that facebook and big tech titans are acting on behalf of big government. this someone of many examples we have seen over the last year and a half where effectively with the party in power has been able to do, especially since congressional democrats took over the house and then the senate and then the white house. is be able to say we have this pesky thing called the first amendment that prevents us from engaging in censorship. fourth branch of government that doesn't operate according to constitutional restraints that we can use to do our dirty work through the back door to get big tech to do through the back door what they can't directly do through the front door and that is censor content on the internet they agree disagree with, facebook and quitter and r and everybody else is following suit should be treated as state
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actors when they do it. brian: on top of what we know we get this tranche of emails released at which time you see mark zuckerberg interacting directly with anthony fauci backing up fauci's views not tom cotton's views. that is an agenda and that's a concerted effort. don't you think? >> it's absolutely a concerted effort. i'm just sorry to say i'm no longer surprised when we see it because we see this kind of thing happening through the pack door nearly every day now. this is the woke industrial complex at its finest. because what you have happening last year is anthony fauci, it looks like with the emerging facts, funding gain of function research research abroad despite the fact there was u.s. government prohibition and u.s. restraints on doing it ultimately that results potentially in the pandemic of a century. that's the fact we are now seeing emerging and then fauci and big tech and the media all cry racism and don't pay attention to it and even censor the pursuit of that very story. that is the woke industrial complex fleecing every day americans of not just their
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money in this case but their health, their voice, their identity. and that is the way this game is played. is that in the united states, we don't have government goons do it directly. they hire they're henchmen to do it indirectly. steve: sure and we know how think the merge men are now. this should not surprise you vivek because after donald trump was elected in 016, big tech essentially google, facebook, they all got together and they had a postmortem about how did we let this happen and effectively said we will never let this happen again. because they are private businesses. there are different rules, you know, and they are able to skirt the rules that you are talking about, so, going forward, is there anything conservatives can do to turn the ship around? >> absolutely there is and, i will tell you this. i'm a big believer in private businesses operating as private businesses and being free to do what they want when they are acting as private companies. but when they're acting as agents of the state, they should absolutely be treated as state
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actors. two things we can do one is actually started with senator cruz and colleagues. amend section 230,000 to be able to say if you are one of these big tech companies you don't get to have it both ways. either you operate as a private company and tied one liabilities as a private company at the state level or act as a state actor on behalf of the government and get special protections from the federal government. in that case the first amendment attaches as well. if you benefit from section 230, then you are also bound by the same standards as the federal government including the first amendment. they are not going to be able to do that especially with that the being divide as it is and house divided. every day users can take these cases to the supreme court now and clarence thomas has signaled that the supreme court is open for business on this argument. somebody, i think president trump needs to bring that case now. it could be the iconic case of our century. ainsley: nigerian government
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banned access to twitter after dispute with its president. then they released a statement. they tweeted out access to the free and open internet is an essential human right in modern society. they say that; however, don't you remember when they banned donald trump, then they banned mike lindell and michael, steve bannon, roger stone? >> and they ban every day americans who disagree with the orthodoxy all the time as well. it's great to see that twitter thinks that the free and open internet is a human right for nigerians. it's a shame they don't think the same about americans. i don't agree with what the nigerian government did. censorship is wrong no matter who does it. i do think it's fitting that twitter got a nice taste of their own medicine. this is a telling case of the hypocrisy of big tech at its core. they love to preach about the values of free speech abroad. yet, here at home, they are the worst violators of those same principles. i think it's a bit of a wake-up call for what's happening. if you dig beneath the surface here what's happening. they were basically censoring
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conservatives here at home and got criticized to say there are real dictators abroad you aren't even touching. what are is that hypocrisy. now trying willy-nilly sloppy fashion. in that sloppy fashion they realize what happens when they do it in a place like nigeria. steve: vivek, thank you for joining us today. >> thank you. steve: brian, what's coming up in. brian: vice president harris meeting with leaders in guatemala and mexico to talk about immigration. many are asking when will she actually visit the southern border right here at home? and florida congressman byron donalds just returned from the border. he joins us live next. ♪
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she was picked as border czar. ainsley: griff jenkins joins us live from del rio, texas, with what to expect. griff? griff: griff brian, ainsley ande is south of this border. air force 2 it h. to return to joint base andrews shortly after taking off because of problems. she boarded another plane and made it to guatemala. she will have meetings with the guatemala president and meetings with women business owners. tonight she will then head to mexico city. her meetings in guatemala and mexico as you mentioned focusing on the root causes of migration. but, let me tell you, let me show you some numbers here specifically in del rio where i am. it's really quite remarkable. they have had nearly 11,000 encounters with venezuelans alone in just the past seven days, guys, they have had more than 5800 migrants from 29
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different countries and even the most shocking number, the number of sex offenders encountered is up almost 1400 percent. it's not just this sector. in the rio grande sector just last week border agents arresting an ms-13 gang member from el salvador. harris has yet to hold a news conference by the way. we will see what she is expected to say. she is expected to face the press corps later today in guatemala. brian? brian: thanks so much, griff. bring in florida congressman byron donalds he returned from the trip from the border he gave us exclusive video. you will see it in the segment. first, congressman, that laid the groundwork. >> you knew it was problematic at the border. what did you walk away with? >> well, first, the big thing is the answers aren't there in guatemala because the cartel is actively recruiting. they are making about $5 billion this year trafficking people across our southern border. and so you don't have to go down to guatemala to know what's
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actually going on. what's going on is the administration's weak policies allow the cartels to make billions of dollars. it's that simple. if it's hard for the cartel to make money, they are not going to allow the people to be trafficked across our border. if the cartel does not allow for people to be trafficked across our border, border patrol will not be overwhelmed and we can secure our border. so it starts with this president and it starts with the vice president. they need to reverse their policy immediately. because our border patrol agents are not monitoring the border. they are essentially triaging people at the border and then turning them loose in the united states. brian: i'm looking now. you have a monitor there. you can glance up if you want. this is you with some of these kids in these not cages but soft facilities that we're constructing. there are 17,000 kids without parents here. let alone the kids that come with a single parent. when you look in their eyes, what are you thinking? >> i feel bad for these kids because they are being used as tools and pawns by the cartel and this administration. it's either making tons of
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money, billions of dollars, or it's the worst kind of politics so you don't have to say like you are donald trump. that's what was going through my mind. it's sad. a lot of those kids who are without parents are going to end up in an hhs facility for another 30 days. after that be released into the united states. and for what? just to say that they came here? the reality is that right now you have families that are separating south of the border because they know it's easier for the kids to get into a country by themselves. so our government isn't doing it the families are doing it themselves. it's because of terrible policy on our border. brian: what you said is not somebody else's idea, it is yours. real quick, 20 second left. do you believe there is a grand plan for the democrats? or are they just caught with their pants down? >> oh, no. there is grand plan. right now moving kids all across the united states. we are not even seeing where they are going. this this is all designed to overwhelm the system so they can try to push immigration reform. that's what's going to come. but it's not going to work. because they have destroyed the
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border in the process. we can't let these people fix what they destroyed. brian: congressman, determined to make an impact and doing it right away within your first year. thanks so much for joining us. >> good to be with you. brian: straight ahead. live outside in elite new york city prep school where parents are fighting back against the woke curriculum with these billboards. our next guest is credited for spearheading the push against crt after pulling his daughter out of this school. ♪ ♪♪ comfort in the extreme. ♪♪ the lincoln family of luxury suvs. some say this is my greatest challenge ever. ♪♪ but i've seen centuries of this. with a companion that powers a digital world, traded with a touch. the gold standard, so to speak ;)
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♪ ainsley: this is a live look outside of a prep school here in new york where fed up parents are fighting against their school's woke curriculum with mobile billboards calling out the social justice agenda. our next guest who recently pulled his daughter out of her new york city schools for this very reason is applauding these parents. his name is andrew gutmann. you know him. we have had him on the show. good morning, andrew. >> good morning. thanks for having me. ainsley: this is a group. anonymous parents. i'm sure they don't want aretaliation against their children. they're putting mobile billboards out of 6 different schools dropoff and at pickup. defendant and not indoctrination think how to think not what to
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think. woke school question mark? speak out. what's your reaction about this group and what they are doing? >> i think it's inspiring to see other parents speak out on this issue. i'm not affiliated with this group but i'm very proud that there are other parents that are. even if anonymously doing it but taking some public action against these schools. i think the vast, vast majority of parents at these new york city private schools are not happy. very unhappy with what is going on in these schools critical race theory, with what they call anti-racism initiative and the only way we can get this cancer really out of our schools is for parents to start speaking up and fighting. i'm really happy to see other parent groups start to do this. can you see that lady walking in front and she looked and read the message. schools included are dalton brearley, riverdale, columbia grammar and grace church. we reported on most of these schools. you pulled your daughter out of prayerly. tell us why. >> yeah. i mean, we -- i sent that letter. it's now been about seven weeks where we said we are not going to reenroll her for next year. we saw what was happening to the
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school. the pledge they wanted us to sign teach systemic racism initiatives at home, changing of history and classical literature and how this critical race theory has basically infected everything that the school did. and we just sent our daughter to the brother lear seven years ago for the quality of education. we thought it was the best education she could get in new york city. i no longer think that's the case. i think a lot of other parents feel the same way we said, look, if she is not going to get that great education, there is no reason for her to be there. ainsley: for parents at home that aren't familiar with schools in new york. prayerly is considered if you look at matriculation is considered the number one all girls school in the country. i have lots of friends with kids at that school and all of these schools, actually. i'm hearing parents complaining about this even among liberal friends this crosses all political lines, doesn't it? >> it really does. i mean, there is a very small minority of people in their city and country who are pushing this very progressive critical race theory agenda. the vast majority of parents on
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the right and on the left. and i have thousands of emails from people, some identifying themselves as liberal or democrat very unhappy with what's going on. i talked with a lot of parents in new york city over the last few weeks. parents desperate to pull their kids out of these schools. even if they have already paid tuition for next year if there were somewhere else to go. that is the challenge where else do you go? ainsley: what are you going to do next year? i heard you were thinking about starting your own school. >> i started to work on that. it's very early but i really would like to do it won't happen next year, clearly it's going to take a while to start a school in new york city. we're still looking at some type of home schooling podover cooperative. -- or cooperative. there are a lot of families in new york city interested in doing something like that, so we're still figure it out. ainsley: are you hearing from other parents who say, look, i've already paid tuition for next year, but i'm going to consider another alternative
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after that in. >> oh, yeah. there are parents looking to pull their kids now. you have to deal with college admissions, but even for school, you know, i've talked to parents that if there were somewhere else to go or if we could put together some of these pods or home schooling cooperatives, they would pull their kids out. it's that serious, what is going on in these schools. ainsley: it breaks my heart, because these are great schools, and i meet 80-year-old women that went to some of these schools, and they have fond memories of it, but they've the seen it change. >> yeah. and i've heard from some who went decades and decades ago, and they're devastated. i mean, it's sad that we're destroying these, you know, fantastic educational institutions, but what's much, much more sad is what we are going to our kids can and their education because we're really damaging these kids, demonizing them for the color of their skin, making them feel guilty, indoctrinating them,
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brainwashing them, and this is really scary for our kids, for new york city, for our country. ainsley: andrew andrew guttmanns for coming on. >> thanks for having me. ainsley: the final hour of "fox & friends" begins now. griff: dr. anthony fauci dodging lawmakers' questions -- >> i think the american people deserve to know what caused the worst pandemic in a century. >> after staying silent for months, our vice president finally plans to speak with leaders from guatemala and mexico today -- >> and what kamala harris has not done, she hasn't spoken to the people who are living on the border in any of these states. >> for fallout with a psychiatrist who told an audience at yale about her fantasy to shoot white people. >> dangerous double standard that allows minorities to engage in hate speech without any consequences. >> president biden continuing to push for a huge infrastructure plan. >> we need a bipartisan
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infrastructure bill. we're not that far apart. we're moving in the right direction. [cheers and applause] ♪♪ ainsley: okay. the national harbor in maryland, and because i overtook the hello from brian, i'm going to let you take this one. brian: steve, you're good with engines. is that a lawnmower? steve: no. [laughter] brian: is it that nobody's been on it once already? where are the people? steve: it's 8:00 in the morning. we are the only ones up here in new york city. i think that thing probably opens about 9:00. ainsley: i think it's probably busier on the weekend, brian. brian: really?
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ainsley: everyone's got to go to work. brian: we are gutsy is. take that, hemmer and we -- perino. ainsley: 75 days after being appointed border czar, vice president kamala harris is finally going to address the root causes of immigration in guatemala. brian: right. many are wondering when she'll visit our border. it's close to there. steve: if she was at our border, he might run into griff jenkins. no sign of the vice president there, right? >> reporter: she's not stopping here. steve, ainsley and brian, good morning. vice president harris is in guatemala today, and let me tell you what she would see if she came here. she would see a lot more than just guatemalans. in the sector where i am sitting along the fence, they've had nearly 11,000 encounters with
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venezuelans alone. compare that to last year, they only had 135. in just the pasten seven days here in this sector, more than 5800 migrants from 29 countries. even more shocking, this number of sex offenders encountered up almost 1400%. now, to my east in the rio grande ec is to have, ground zero for the border crisis, just last week agents arresting an ms-13 gang member from el salvador. and to my west, the el paso sector, i spoke to a new mexico rancher named russell johnson. he says harris' trip to guatemala really mudses the crisis -- misses the crisis. >> the root problem might be there in the northern triangle, but the problem with the united states is right here on our border. it's very disappointing to see our elected officials going down to another country and basically putting the citizens of this
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country on the back burner. >> reporter: now, harris will have meetings with the guatemalan president and some women's groups and then will go to mexico city later tonight. she has yet to hold a news conference in those 75 days after being tasked on the border crisis. we'll see if she'll face the press corps later in guatemala. steve, ainsley, brian? steve: griff, thank you very much. look for the vice president to talk about corruption down there, because one of the root causes why people are coming to the united states is because of corruption. and when you look at who she's talked to so far, the president of mexico and the president as well of guatemala. she has not spoken to the president of honduras or el salvador because they are currently embroiled in corruption scandals which just with exemplifies how dirty it can be down there. and so it becomes complicated. okay, if there's a corruption problem, how do we stop it? because even's got their hand
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out, everybody wants money. but then again, we have plenty of money to give, perhaps, but we've got to get results. ainsley: she's going to talk about poverty, economic instability and extreme weather, climate change -- brian: yeah, fantastic, no one can farm. ainsley: a rancher down there says he's finding backpacks and all kinds of trash on his property, more and more people walking through his yard, and he feels like this administration has abandoned his family. fourth generation, he's never seen anything like this. brian: i'll go back to the old days where the president said, you're all cut off until you start securing your border. they came up with the third country, the first country you step into, that's where you apply. we'll evaluate. vice president joe biden becomes president, and he says that's against international law, insulting mexico with the remain in mexico policy. the marines come off the border, the people come flooding in, it's your problem. you're the migration president.
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they get t-shirts, they cross again. we turn around and say we're not going to blame those other countries. that's what donald trump would do. we're going to pledge $4 trillion in long-term investment in central america. i guess they still can't control my board, we're going to wait longer for that. it's called extortion. it's the way everyone plays this game. congressman bye-bye ron donalds of -- byron donalds of florida went to the border and saw the problems. >> you don't have to go to guatemala to know what's going on. the administration's weak policies allow the cartels to make withs of dollars -- billions of dollars. if it's hard for them to make money, they're not going to allow people to be trafficked across our border. they need to reverse their policies immediately because our border patrol agents are not monitoring the border, they are essentially triaging people at
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the border and then turning them loose in the united states. brian: they're talking down some of their tacking, their fist -- tracking facilities because they say it's too expensive. too expensive to bring technology to the border? you don't want to build a wall, and now you want to take down the cameras? are you kidding? steve: so much of these states are already choreographed so, essentially, we know what the other parties are going to go ahead and commit to. vice president harris does want commitments from mexico and guatemala with regard to border security to stop the flow or regulate it or somehow manage it in exchange for economic involvement which means in addition, brian, to the $310 million that we're going to send down there in the form of aid, it was just in the last couple of weeks where about a dozen big corporations have announced, you know what? we're thinking about moving our facilities down there so the people would have good jobs. ainsley: we know henry cuellar, democrat down there, has been
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speaking out saying we need to do more, this administration needs to do more. i'm wondering if there are more democrats down there who feel this way. the mayor of mcallen, texas, a republican just won -- steve: democrat area. ainsley: that's right. he was on with us earlier. >> 13 miles away from here you see under the bridge hundreds and hundreds of people accumulating, coming. the border control drops them off at the bus station. it's something that we're not prepared for and we shouldn't be doing. they're going to guatemala, going to mexico. that's take care of the issue up in washington. urge congress, the president to take care of the issue. steve: he is the republican chair of the hi call the go county republicans, javier villalobos. he won this runoff against veronica woodacre, and it is a
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majority hispanic area. as republicans look to try to make some gains in the next election, they did win texas' 15th destruct which goes from mc-- district which goes from mcallen up toward san antonio, giving republicans a reason to celebrate. the democrats won it by 9 points in 2016. then in 2020 they won by only 3. so as the -- is the tide turning down there? don't know, just know this very prominent republican won that very prominent job in mcallen. brian: this shakes democrats to its core because they lose the black vote or hispanic vote or the gap begins to closes, why do you think -- my opinion -- the bust of cesar chavez is behind joe biden's desk in the white house? what he's doing is sending a message i care about the hispanic committee. i think the president won about
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13 districts in those areas because the hispanic group was -- fundamentally, if you look at just the boxes you check, if you look at, i know the hispanic culture is very diverse from cubans to puerto ricansing i get it, from actual -- from people from spain. everyone has different interest. but if you look at the broad look that the hispanic community represents, they check a lot of the boxes conservative republicans check. so if they make a concerted effort to go after that vote, they could reap some bigtime rewards. democrats are destroying the local economies of all those border cities. you dent need to see a bumper -- don't need to see a bumper sticker or a snappy ad. what happened to i my lawn? my school? my security? who's to blame? that's the election. ainsley: it depends if you look at the ones, if you look at i i cuban-americans, we're going to vote for president trump because
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they're so anti-socialist because of what they witnessed generations ago. and if you look at the other hispanics around the country, many of them like this, brian, because it's a chance for their loved ones down in these countries to come in without a visa, you just walk right in, and then you're reunited -- brian: as opposed toll way they do it -- to the way they do it. you go, wait a second, you did the same thing, and you did it for free. you skipped the line. everybody else, that's why romanians are lining up in guatemala. they're tired of doing it the right way. what a terrible message. steve: speaking of the line, brian, i looked it up. the capital wheel, the ferris wheel, it's electric. brian: so it should be running. joe biden would support that. steve: they open at 4:00 this afternoon. it runs from 4-10, and if you're interested, it was bullet in
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wichita, kansas -- built in wichita the, kansas, by the way. and if you're interested, a ticket is $15. ainsley: you should play that song at the wedding, electric slide. how many members are in that band? [laughter] let's talk about covid. brian: 11 minutes after the hour. there's so many deferent facets to it. the origin of the coronavirus. dr. scott gottlieb whos has strong connections to both the previous and current administrations, has done his own research. he said, look, i didn't want see anything that crazy in fauci's e-mails, but i did see one thing that is worth pointing out. when this thing first started and we had 15 days to slow down the spread and we were told this was an animal to animal virus, eventually spread to humans, obviously, there was a visit by dr. anthony fauci to europe. listen to this. >> i was told at that time back
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in the spring that dr. fauci had gone over to a meeting of world health leaders in europe and actually briefed them on the information that they were looking at that this could have been a presidential lab leak, that this strain looked unusual. so those discussions were going on, and i was told that by a very senior official in the trump administration. i reconfirmed that conversation that happened at the time contemporaneously with that meeting over a year ago. so i think early on, they had suspicions. and in a closer analysis, and and it takes time to do this analysis, kiss pelled some -- dispelled some of those positions. steve: unfortunately, rather than say, okay, this is a possibility, it have been, you know, one of those things where it migrated from an animal to people, or it could have been a lab leak. but donald trump made the mistake of saying something that was being discussed by anthony fauci. donald trump said, you know, it could be a lab leak. and suddenly it's like, oh, man,
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the sky falling. absolutely not. until now suddenly it is being revealed that dr. fauci had serious concerns about it. and when you look at, and ainsley and i have been talking about the science. forget about the circumstantial indicators that would seem to point to a lab leak. there are a lot of circumstantial evidence. but a couple of doctors are writing in the "wall street journal" today, and they say that they have looked at the genetic footprint. and the genome you can sequencing -- genomic sequencing is only found when scientists altered the gene in the sequencing pattern. it's only in gain of function research. no naturally occurring coronavirus has ever had this particular combination which says, hey, come on, let's get over it, it's probably a lab leak. ainsley: well, and i've been saying this all morning, one of my good friends who's a doctor,
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i was asking him, and he said they found on the virus htlv receptor on covid, on the virus itself. he said that was likely added as a part of gain of function research in a lab, did not come from bats, did not come from animals. a human had to add that -- steve: they soup it up. brian: you should never have thrown out my -- i should never have thrown out my electron microscope. bottom line, dr. fauci wasn't transparent, and i probably would have helped. meanwhile, if you were able to get outside this weekend, critical race theory. whether it's in your schools or society, your friend is a minority or not a minority, it's affecting everyone. what happened to a dialogue where we were a country constantly improving on race, and now we're condemning each other or we're take each other apart. condoleezza rice, uniquely
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qualified to talk about this, obviously, an accomplished professor, she was national security adviser, secretary of state. a republican who was brought up in the segregated south. she weighed in over the weekend, she is not checking off that box. >> when i hear the talk about structural racism, it really gives me pause. can we finally agree that our k-12 education system is really serving poor kids and minority kids very badly? can we agree that we actually have a choice system? i want kids to know about tulsa. i also want them to know what that black community did to overcome that horrible massacre. i want them to know about 63 in birmingham, but i want them to know that the mayor of birmingham today is a black man who grew up in a poor community. and i want us as a country to do it together because i don't want this to be black against white. my weaponization of my identity
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against yours. steve: but with this critical race theoryies it is what she said she didn't want it to be. it is you are either an oppressor, or you are a victim. and that flies in the face of what we have been taught for generations. but now there is this move with educators in academia to essentially say, you know what? we haven't described it quite right. we're going to start describing it this way much to the dismay of a lot of parents and other people who say, you know what? that is a narrative, but it's not necessarily -- ainsley: i think she's great. we need to learn from our past, we need to learn about our history and move forward as a country, love every individual. and in america anything is possible no matter who you are, no matter what your example. steve: she's a perfect example of it. brian: also says you can't be blaming people and expect people to work together. jillian, if you would work with us, i would hope you would read the news. as usual, we're an operation of
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free will. jillian: i always choose to work with you, brian -- brian: okay, good. jillian: two suspects have been arrested in the california road rage shooting death of a 6-year-old. highway patrol announcing 24 you'd marcus and 23-year-old -- were arrested at their home in orange county. authorities expect to charge both with murder. 6-year-old aidan was shot and kill on may 21st while heading to kindergarten with his mom. chicago police remove a 26-year-old man from an american airlines flight after causing what the company calls a, quote, disturbance. the disruptive pang had to be de-- passenger had to be detained until the flight lands. no one was hurt, but it comes days after a man was stopped trying to breach a cockpit. that flight had to be diverted for an emergency landing. the would-be hijacker was zip tied before being handed over to the fbi.
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the big apple's bravest and finest, members of the new york city police department, fire department and port authority played in the annual fun city bowl in new jersey. the fdny escaped with the win 20-14. all proceeds go to the first responders foundation. and oreo has an out of this world offer for any extraterrestrials out there. the cookie company offering up free double stufs in this package as a welcome gift. oreo says it wants to bring all life forms together over cookies. this comes just days after the long-awaited release of a report about ufos. the report didn't rule out either. if there are little green men or women watching, we've got this for you. steve: ufo, unidentified flying
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oreos? they've got a commercial where a couple of guys are out in a field in kansas, and next thing you know -- brian: great idea. your move, chips ahoy. [laughter] ainsley: just gives us an excuse, jillian -- jillian: also i wouldn't be opposed to meeting an alien. ainsley: you and brian are into it -- jillian: i know! brian: we're able to get videos from our doorbell, but when it comes to shooting a flying saucer, they're very blurry. why can't we have a crisp video? iowans they disappear. i watched that the special on the experts, and she's a pilot, and she was up in the air, and her co-pilot, they both saw it. she said normally i'd think i was crazy, but we both saw it, and it looked like a flying to object, and it disappeared. that could be part of their super powers. steve: show up, folks, and
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you'll -- [inaudible conversations] brian: and if it's russia and china, please tell us. meanwhile, still ahead, senator joe man country breaks from -- manchin breaks from democrats, steve scalise will join us to talk about the backlash from the republican perspective. finish different how? don't you just ride the wave? (judith) no - we actively manage client portfolios based on our forward-looking views of the market. (other money manager) but you still sell investments that generate high commissions, right? (judith) no, we don't sell commission products. we're a fiduciary, obligated to act in our client's best interest. (other money manager) so when do you make more money? only when your clients make more money? (judith) yep, we do better when our clients do better. at fisher investments we're clearly different.
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♪♪ >> it's the wrong piece of legislation to bring our country together, and i'm not supporting that because i think it would divide us further. i don't want to be in a country that's divided any further than what i'm in right now. there's an awful lot of things that basically don't pertain directly to voting. brian: no kidding. and a democrat pointing it out,
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that made news. senator joe manchin facing massive backlash after breaking from his own party in an editorial and in television appearances yesterday. house minority whip steve scalise joins us now to react. congressman, he's taking a lot of abuse from his own party, especially on the left. even took a shot last week from the president. can he withstand this type of pressure in your estimation? you know joe manchin. >> yeah, sure. joe's tough. and, first of all -- [laughter] remember, good to be with you, brian. remember what joe biden promised, that he was going to unite and work with everybody. he's out there undermining people on his own side because joe manchin says he wants to help president biden fulfill his promise of working with people. and, by the way, in not passing more bad legislation because democrat-only infrastructure bill would be much more green new deal, things that have nothing to do with roads and bridges would not be good for the country. at least joe manchin putting his
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marker down on that and on h.r. 1 which is a bad piece of legislation said it's time president biden has to start working with republicans like he promised. brian: i mean, the president did hire his wife, and then they are in conversation but did call him out last weekend. there's more and more pressure from joe biden to pressure joe manchin. we'll see if that'll work. the so-called for the people act is scary crazy. they're going to nationalize elections, restore voting rights for convicted felons, encourage statehood of d.c., and it's 900 pages. 900 pages to take over elections from the states. it seems to me joe manchin's also taking bulletses for other democrats like maybe jon tester, angus king, senator sinema. >> yeah. and think about this, you know, you've got a lot of states that have their own voter integrity protections in place. west virginia didn't have issues
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in their election. if you look at florida back in 2000, you had the disaster with you ward county where -- broward county where they're counting ballots that don't even have marks on them, and florida fixed those laws. h.r. 1 overrides that and takes california's election law and turns it into america's law and gets rudd of voter fraud protections which is something you don't want to do. again, joe's tough. i think it's a mistake to threaten him. what he's saying is, joe biden, you said you were going to unify the country and work with everybody, it's time you start doing that. >> so, congressman, here's the thing. one of the worst who things that mitch mcconnell said about barack obama, i'm going to do everything i can to make him a one-term president. it hung around his neck, and he said the same thing about bind. do you feel as though people should look at senator capito e and mitch mcconnell as
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somebody who's really dealing with infrastructure and show a sincerity there, at the very least to give joe manchin some breathing room? >> look, i mean, regardless of the elections in 2022 or 2024, we've got to do what's right for the country. the policies right now are destroying the fabric of america. look at our economy. you've got a lot of problems there. inflation through the roof. our adversaries -- russia, china, iran -- they're all testing president biden right now and, frankly, president biden is failing those tests. just look at the recent hacks, look at what china's doing trying to give away the intellectual property of the vaccine to china right now. i think in the end what any president is judged on is their performance, and right now the performance has been dismal. keystone's gone, president biden approved the russian pipeline, nord stream, to germany. is he's killing american jobs and giving jobs to foreign countries. those aren't good fundamentals. brian: right. let's see if you guys can start
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negotiating, get stuff done. joe manchin, if you blow it up and don't try to do anything, the he's going to have no cover. thanks, congressman. appreciate it. >> always great to be with you. brian: the white house says cyber attacks are here to stay as the fbi confirms it's investigating 1 is 00 different types of -- 100 different types of ransomware. stuart varney will join us. advanced non-small cell lung cancer can change everything. but your first treatment could be a chemo-free combination of two immunotherapies that works differently. it could mean a chance to live longer. opdivo plus yervoy is for adults newly diagnosed with non-small cell lung cancer that has spread, tests positive for pd-l1, and does not have an abnormal egfr or alk gene. it is the only fda-approved
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♪ jillian: good morning. an alabama deputy dies while saving three swimmers in the gulf overnightful bill smith was patrolling the fort morgan area when they spotted swummers in trouble. the -- swimmers. the other deputy is in the hospital and is expected to survive. the swimmers are expected to be okay. deputy smith was a 7-year veteran of the department. he leaves behind a wife and two children. travel is up across the u.s. as more americans get vaccinated against covid-19. the tsa reported more than 1.6 million passengers saturday compared to just 350,000 on the same day last year. the number, though, is still down from 2019 when the summer average was more than 2 million
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passengers a day. but, steve the, we're getting there. back to you. steve: all right. thank you, jillian. meanwhile, as the united states reels from massive ransomware attacks targeting our gas and meat industries, the white house and fbi experts warn there's more to come. >> the first thing the we have to recognize is, this is the reality, and we should assume and businesses should assume that these attacks are here to stay and, if anything, will intensify. >> we're one end step away from cities being plunged into darkness, and that is not fear and uncertainty, that's based on facts. steve: so we're supposed to get used to it. here to react, stuart varney, host of "varney & co." on fox business. stuart, that's a bad answer. i don't want to get used to it. i want our federal government, the gigantic assets of the united states of america, to come down on these guys and just stop it. >> absolutely.
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agree 100%. the commerce secretary says, as we just heard, these attacks are here to stay and, quote: companies should act accordingly. well, so far no company that i know of has been able to repel these ransomware attacks. it is major national security threat. i agree with you, steve, what we need is direct government action. go after deliberately the hackers and their state sponsors at a government level. it's only the government that can actually do that. companies can't, governments can. you remember last week, steve, when we had that large iranian ship, the navy ship caughtfire and sank? i just -- caught fire and sank? i just wonder if that was an indirect response to the hacking attacks from russia on the united states. there's one more thing we might need to do. all these ransomware demands are paid, the ransom is paid in bitcoin. perhaps we should think about regulating cryptos expect9
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bitcoin market to disrupt the ransomware attacks. that's the way you could do it, i think. but bottom lewin, we need a direct -- bottom line, we need a direct attack on these people who are doing the hacking and their state sponsors. you're going to make them pay a higher price for doing what they're doing. steve: well, stuart, when you say state sponsors, we know that it's happening in russia. so when our president sees putin in a couple of days, he's got to sit down and just demand you've got to turn it off, or we're going to turn the off the internet to russia, if that's possible -- stuart, it's not only just meat and it's not oil and gas, you know, i've been reading they're hacking into the systems at hospitals, they're screwing up people's chemotherapy treatments and their health care. this is a matter -- it's not just money, it's a matter of life and death. >> just about any industry, any company can be and some have been attacked in this fashion.
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the hackers can get at anything in america. that's why you need direct action against them. i just hope that president biden has something up his sleeve when he meets with putin later this week. steve: well, you know, how are we going to deal with hackers that our federal government can't even stop the robocallers from calling me every night at supper time? i'm just saying. hey, coming up in 22 minutes, mr. varney, you've got a big interview with donald trump, don't ya? >> we do, indeed. former president trump will join us at 9:00 sharp. i want to ask him about the $10 trillion worth of reparations that he's talking about from china, the role in covid. i want to ask him about vice president harris' trip to central america and whether he, mr. trump, will go to the border. and i want to ask hum, are you, sir, the leader of your party as we speak? i'll ask hum all of the above,
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account sharp this morning -- 9:00 sharp. steve: and ask him about the hackers, the extortion, bitcoin and everything else. you've got to figure when he was president there's a lot of stuff that came across his desk that the he perhaps could be talk about now. of. >> i promise, i'll get the answers. promise. steve: stuart, we'll be watching exactly 21 minutes from now over on fox business. meanwhile, here in knight our former top -- here in new york city our former top cop is issuing a warning against the anti-law enforcement push in america today. watch. >> i would argue being a cop today in america is tougher than probably any other time. they're feeling not appreciated. steve: dan bonn vino, former cop -- bongino, former cop, knows exactly what he's talking about, and dan is next. for car insurance,
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♪♪ >> i would argue being a cop today in america is tougher than probably any other time going back to the early '70s. they're feeling not appreciated. it's a frustrating time for them. so many are leaving. we have a mantra, cops count, police matter. the individual action of a cop, the collective action of the police matter. so derek chauvin's actions as an individual cop, look at the significance of that action. he did so much damage to the american police profession. brian: is there anybody arguing that? let's bring in dan dan bongino,t of the dan bongino show on fox nation. >> hold on, i don't think he's quite -- ainsley: you didn't know what happened while you were reading, they -- [inaudible conversations]
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brian: we all three can play that game. ainsley: hold on, hold on. brian: we'll just wait for dan to come back. iowans he did this, brian. steve: now you're in front of my camera. ainsley: it looked like he was sliding into the shot. brian: what would dan bongino say? steve: you know what? let's go ahead and do the weather. if you're curious about your forecast for today, just look out the window. [laughter] brian: that was fantastic. i think that was sponsored. ainsley: i think bill bratton was right on the money. brian: he might be the most respected police chief in the country. he was with rudy giuliani in new york when we straightened everything out and, of course, went to los angeles and did the psalm exact -- same exact thing,
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and the lapd was riddled with scandal. he straightened that out. now he says derek chauvin, they showed him walking up to cops on the street saying you're appreciated -- steve: he also hopes for a federal bill to increase the national quality of police work without reducing its quantity, which is critical. and he noted, quote: what i am hoping is that it will effectively force government to spend resources on the essential medicine to fix it. and that the, ultimately, is what we need to do. because without those, that thin blue line, where would we be in this country? ainsley: i have a friend, her dad has a business down in florida, and they can't find workers because there aren't enough people to help them drive their trucks. he told me, please, ainsley, these cops that don't feel like they're in safe cities if they want to retire and come work for me, i would love to have them.
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we need more employees. steve: i was down in florida last week, and i saw help wanted signs everywhere. dan bongino if finally joining us. you went like this -- brian: yeah. really hurt our feelings. for us -- >> you know, the finger i gave you is important though, you have -- steve: we're number one! >> right as i was about to go on the air, the whole wireless system in my studio crapped out, so i had to call you on my cell phone old school. steve: right after we did the bit on ransomware and russia. ainsley: dan, you've got to watch that back, it was really funny. [inaudible conversations] >> i just didn't want you to start talking to me and i didn't hear you. that would have been even worse. so i had to give you the finger. steve: so, dan, what'd you think of bratton's comments in. >> i worked under chief bratton, and he was one of the guys who
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started the whole broken window style of policing. and i'm not being sarcastic, back then it was a bold idea where he said, hey, maybe we should start enforcing low-level crimes. you know, using the guys who go on to commit bigger crimes. in other words, turnstile jumpers who go on the trains and commit muggings. if we arrest them for that, that will probably lower the crime rate. and he's right. i'm going to talk about this today the on my podcast and radio show which you can watch on fox nation. great plug there. i had to throw that in there. there are three big, huge threats to america right now, critical race theory, china and the war on cops. once you get americans to hate each other for all kinds of superficial characteristics, the best way the allow the chaos to continue to brew is to engage in a war on cops and stop them from enforcing the law. it's really a disgrace.
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liberalism is a forest fire right now destroying america piece by piece, and we can't let it continue. brian: right. so, dan, by the way, i did give you a brilliant introduction, you just didn't hear it where i did, in fact, plug your show. let's look back at the dan bonn gee kno shover the weekend. -- dan bongino show over the weekend. you had a chance to talk to jocco, and that's -- ainsley: we were going to play a sound bite, but because of the mishap, we're out of time -- brian: oh, wait a second. ainsley, can you put it on now? ainsley: we got it. he's so wonderful, former navy seal, he is so strong and he talks about what makes america great. listen to this. >> we can call it whatever you want to call it, you can paint it, put lipstick on it, but the nature of war is death. the nature of war is killing
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people. it ends up in close combat. it's hard. you carry a lot of weight. you carry your friends. and we're talking about this idea around critical race theory, tell you what i learned in the military that's critical about race, that is we don't care. we want to look out for each other. we know that we focus on what our job is. that's the most important thing, and that's what you need to stay focused on in that job. ainsley: that's what's critical about race. that's interesting. dan? >> well, thank you, everyone who watched. saturday night, 10 p.m. please watch it again. i deeply appreciate all your feedback. jocko was amazing, i had another guest, roger fisk, and i asked him about critical race theory which indicates if you're white, you should be judged as being white and says you're an oppressor. i wasn't being a jerk, i asked him are you an oppressor? and he seemed taken aback by the
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question. if you believe in critical race theory, you believe you're an oppressor. i appreciate everyone to watch. and ron desantis strikes again. he just went after it as well, he's going to be taking on critical race theory in florida which we really, really love. steve: all right. dan, thank you very much. we'll see you next time. [laughter] we believe at newday usa we have a noble purpose. we want to be known as america's mortgage company for veterans and active-duty service people. some of them are giving their lives right now, today, for the freedoms that we have here in this country. so for us, at newday to help those people at this point in time. it's a labor of love, it's a noble service, and that's what we're all about. ♪ making a fire ♪ by: foo fighters
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♪♪ ainsley: do you have an amazon alexa at home? listen to this. amazon's upcoming launch is raising serious privacy concerns. kurt the cyber guy is live in l.a. as jeff bezos mix another big now. >> good morning to you. we're learning from an instagram post what jeff bezos will be doing with his time the after he resigns the ceo title next month. he is flying into space aboard one of his blue origin rocket ships. the world's richest man, bezos also bringing along his younger brother mark saying ever since i was 5 years old, i've dreamed of traveling into space. and amazon never asked you one more invasion of your privacy from big tech is about to strange. if you own -- to strike.
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if you own an echo or ring video doorbell, listen to a potential security threat coming to your home tomorrow. amazon sidewalk is the name of this very slippery privacy slope. it now allows existing amazon devices like an echo and ring video doorbell to share your internet connection with the people in your neighborhood without you knowing it. i've got tips on how to stop it, find it at cyberguy.com. ainsley: all right. thank you so much, kurt. more "fox & friends" moments away. ♪ (man) i'm phoning it in and just saved twenty percent. (burke) get your policy perks by calling 1-800-farmers. go ahead, phone it in. ♪ we are farmers. bum-pa-dum, bum-bum-bum-bum ♪ this isn't just freight. these aren't just shipments. they're promises. big promises. small promises. cuddly shaped promises. each with a time and a place they've been promised to be.
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>> i know you've probably had enough of tv. run to the radio. we'll have a show on our program. among our guest marie o'grady, expert on the central and south american immigration problem with the "wall street journal." >> thanks for joining us. >> bill: thanks. good morning. finally the vice president kamala harris on the ground in central america in guatemala. a two-day trip to address what the white house calls the root causes of the border crisis as we say good morning. hope the weekend was great and look who is back today. >> dana: i'm dana perino. i missed our crew and producer and all the people that make this great. >> bill: she has the fear of missing out. did you have fomo last week or okay being on the beach? >> i was on the beach. i had to wear a jacket today because i got a
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