tv Outnumbered FOX News July 20, 2021 9:00am-10:00am PDT
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>> on that note, wally, katie i'm sorry. can. >> thank you, warren just reminded me i have one more thing which is and christina, i might need your help on this but mom can you come up for a second? where is my mom. you don't have to come up, i can come to you. i wore this necklace, and it is a there and i wore it up into space, and now it is for you. >> i would put it on her myself, but.
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>> while they come at last but not least, amelia airport, what it now and space icon. what was it like? >> i can't tell you. i had such a good instructor, he so when i went up this morning, the noise wasn't quite quite as bad as we went up and i saw darkness, i thought i was going to see the world, but we weren't quite heart high enough. i felt great. i felt like i was laying down, i was just laying down, i want to thank you, sweetheart because you made it possible for me. i have been waiting a long time to finally get up there, and i've done a lot of astronaut training through the world,
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russia, america, and i could always beat the guys on what they were doing because i was always stronger and i've always done everything on my own, and i didn't do it all. i did outside stuff, and i flew airplanes. over 19,000 some odd hours. i loved it, and i loved being here with all of you and your family. we had a great time, it was wonderful. i want to go again fast. and then, when i got off the shift, they gave me the tail end of one of the balloons, and i'm going to cherish that forever. >> by the way, we can confirm that wally once again in training outperformed the men on this one, 100 percent. >> i was going to say she beat the three boys up to the top,
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everybody saw that video footage. one of the oldest estimates to ever go to space and perhaps are first member of the blue urchin frequent flyer program. >> i'm ready for it. >> when i do lectures wherever i am around the world and i say i'm only 45. >> you are being generous. i every, but time somebody says she's 82, i think it's a typo. thank you so much for giving us your impressions, but let's see with our own eyes, i'd like to see what it was like. >> oh wow, that's incredible. space.
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>> that was a good catch. >> wally, was it everything you expected as and more? >> i loved every minute of it. i wish it was longer because i have been in that area, and could do a lot more roles in twists and stuff, but there wasn't quite enough room for all four of us to do all of those things. i loved it, i can hardly wait to go again. >> next step for you is the moon, molly.
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>> any other impressions now seeing the video of it? is it one of those things where you just took it in and it's hard to compare the video, what are the sensations that having come from seeing that right now. >> way cooler than it looked. >> so, after of course there are four minutes of weightlessness, the fun you have, of course we got you buckled back in and you descended under those beautiful three parachutes i think we have another video here of your dissent back to our beautiful west texas valley. why don't we roll that here. >> that moment felt pretty good i'm not going to live. when you see the sheets out, that was relaxing. >> that was incredible.
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>> well. >> i didn't feel that. >> that's picked up by a cushion of air. it feels like if you were to stand up your chair, plops. >> our family was happy to see us. to everybody being here, what was that like. >> it was a bit more emotional than i would have thought. everybody was way more emotional
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than we were. we were just having fun. >> so true. >> i think that our family has been extremely supportive through all of this. and i think that i know that my wife was an absolute rock leading up to this, which made the adventure much easier for me. i know when we came down, it was sort of time to let those emotions out a little bit. it was great to see everybody and it was a little more emotional than i had anticipated as well. >> you know, i wasn't that nervous, but my family was somewhat anxious about this. and, it was so sweet actually to get hugged by them, especially my kids, and lauren, and my mom and dad, and really all of you guys. we had a bunch of close friends here too, and it just makes me realize how much i love you and how much i'm loved.
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>> wally come at your friend mary is here. >> i am so happy she is here, she knows what i'm going through. she was one of my flight students and i've had over 3,000 flight students, i'm not sure if they will see this or not, but i felt so charged, i was just normal, normal person going up into space and that's what i wanted to feel. >> i can confirm that molly was never nervous. she was wondering what was taking so long. it's true, we had a six minute hold on the pat pad and mall is like are we going to go or not. we're burning daylight, let's go. >> but then, once we got you going, we got you going fast going over mach three, it's this
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beautiful rocket behind you, at the new shepard rocket they got the team up to space, and by the way, it also of course made its landing back on the landing pad, why don't we take a look at that landing that we have here. [cheers and applause] >> that was a bull's-eye. >> absolutely. bull's-eye. a beautiful piece of engineering our team here at the urchin has developed. would you like to talk a bit about why we chose vertical takeoff, vertical landing, being powered by this be e3 engine?
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because today is not the end. we're going further with the technology. >> that is a helpful question because the fact of the matter is that the architecture and the technology we have chosen is complete overkill for several someone on a tourism mission. we have chosen the vertical landing architecture, why did we do that? because of scales, it's an architecture that can grow two large size. we want to have experience with architecture that can grow big two new glen and one day two new armstrong, so to have the idea that you want to build big from the beginning let you change an architecture, the whole point and doing this is to get practice and other kinds of architectures don't skill in the same way it's a very large size. vertical landing does. you can think about it easily because if you try, when you are landing the rocket vertically, you are solving what's called the inverted pendulum problem and you're balancing a
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broomstick on the tip of your finger. you can balance a broomstick on the tip of your finger, but you cannot balance a pencil. basically the smaller the object, the harder it is to balance. as the object gets bigger and bigger and bigger, it's easier to balance. it's similar, this has more momentum so it's easier to get under it. that architecture is why we chose it. the second thing that's puzzling architecture choice for most people who know a lot about rockets, he would never choose liquid hydrogen, it's completely unnecessary, it's the most powerful, highest performing rocket fuel in the world. there are two reasons we chose it, the first is again, practice. we chose that because what you see behind me is basically the second stage of new glen, so every time we've fly this tourism mission we are
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practicing flying the second stage of new glen. and that's when you want it is on the second of the vehicle that's too go to bodies outside earth's orbit. the reason we chose it is because it's the most environmentally benign that you can choose. that's what we chose the architecture you see behind me. the engineering team did an incredible job. they also built two vehicles. what you see is not really a vehicle it was at least as complicated, hard to design, and to test and demonstrate as the main booster itself. so, it's almost like building a whole separate vehicle.
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i'm also extremely happy we didn't test it today. >> thank you so much. congratulations to you all. with that i will turned it over to linda mills to start the press conference. thank you very much. >> let's give it another round of applause for amazing newly minted astronaut. alright, i would like to give a thank you to our journalist who showed up at to 30:00 a.m. this morning to get set up. >> i can't believe you guys are still smiling, thank you. we will be able to take a few questions and press for a few photos. you've said in the that work as the most important of your career. he recently stepped down can you
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expect to be more. >> i am going to my time between blue origin and the basis of earth fund. the basis or fund is about climate change and sustainability and that is those to things, there's going to be a third thing, and may be a fourth thing, but i don't know what those are yet. i'm not very good at doing one thing. it's like how fast can you refuel that thing, let's go. >> next question? let's go, reuters. [inaudible reporter question] >> eric asked about the cadence in the capabilities. >> we are going to fly the human
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missions twice more this year and, what we do in the following year, i'm not sure yet. we will figure that out. with the cadence will eventually become what we want the cadence to be very high. one thing we found out through the auction process and what we've been doing in his private sales, we are approaching $100 million in private sales already, and the demand is very high. we are going to keep after that because we really do want to practice with this vehicle. we're going to have to build more boosters, to fly more frequently, and we're going to be working on all the operational things we need to do. what practice does is let you get better and we want to be able come out right now, we have ignition life somewhere between 25 and 100 flights for one of these vehicles, we like to make that closer to 100 then 25 and then once it's close to a hundred, will push it past 100.
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that's how you get operational. you have to remember, big things start small. i told this group when we got in today, we were sitting there on the pad waiting to lift off, we had time to ourselves, and guys, if you're willing, let me invite you, when we get up there, and there will be all kinds of adrenaline, all kinds of excitement, the novelty, but take a minute, take a few seconds, to look out and calmly think about what we are doing, it's not only adventure, it is adventure it, and it is fun, but it's important because what we are doing is the first step of something big. i know what that feels like. i did it three decades ago, almost three decades ago with amazon, and we are big things start small, and you can tell, you can tell when you're on to something.
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we are going to build a road to space, so that are kids and their kids can build the future. this is not about escaping earth. the whole point is this is the only good planet in the solar system. we have sent robotic probes to all of them. this is the only i promise you that we have to take care of it. if you go into space and see how fragile it is, you want to take care of it even more and that's what it's about. we have to take, and this is going to take decades. the big things start small, and this is how it starts. we are going to build an infrastructure, just like when i started amazon, i didn't have to build the postal service or royal mail or georgia poised, there are people who are
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gigantic worldwide infrastructure to deliver packages. that infrastructure today is for way too expensive and that doesn't work. if we can continue to build bigger and bigger vehicles timelines on neil armstrong and i can't really give you because we don't really know. what i can tell you we keep working on those things step-by-step ferociously. i want to emphasize the ferociously. >> we have time for one last question. >> tom castillo with nbc news, congratulations to all of you. a follow up on that question in your discussion there. how do you make this more for every day people who would like to fly, it's pretty steep right now, how do you bring the cost down so that this can be more accessible for everyone? >> it's a great question. how do we bring the cost down
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over time. you've got to do it the same way we did it with commercial airline travel. where not even come out we're almost in the barnstormers phase , so with the these are biplanes and their flying into a farmers field and charging a price to fly people around for a few minutes in the air. that's what we're doing right now. you know where that dark barnstorming phase leads? to 787's and that's what we have to do. >> let's give i'm afraid that's all the time we have for questions today, these astronauts have had a long day, so let's give it another round of applause for our astronauts. >> i had one more thing. >> guys, i have one more thing, i have a little surprise for you. i am announcing today a new philanthropic initiative.
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if you could put the slide up so people could see it. it is called the courage incivility award. it recognizes leaders who aim high in to improve solutions with courage and always do so with civility. well, let me tell you how i feel about this. i feel strongly enough i wrote something down. we live in a world where sometimes, instead of just a disagreeing with someone's ideas, we question their character, or their motives. guess what? after you do that, it's pretty hard to work with that person. really, what we should always be doing is questioning ideas, not the person, they have been around a long time, and they've been they been amplified by social media.
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we need unit fires, and not villa fires. we need to work hard and act hard for what they truly believe, if they do that always with civility, and never at a tax. we live in a world where this is too often not the case. but we do have role models, and this award commit do you have another site here to go ahead? i didn't tell you what the award was yet, here is what the award is, to see who the first recipient is, but let me tell you what the award is, the courage incivility award as a $100 million award to the awardee, the recipient can give $100 million to the charities come at the nonprofits their choice.
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these are people who have demonstrated courage, by the way, it's easy to be courageous and also mean, try being courageous and civil, tried to be courageous and a unifier, that's harder and way better to make the world that better. we have two awardees that will each be getting $100 million to direct to the charities of their choice as they see fit. no bureaucracy, no committees, they just do what they want. they can give it all to their own charity or to their own wealth, it's up to them. the first courage incivility award goes to vivian jones. van, come on up. >> thank you, brother.
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sometimes dreams come true. sometimes dreams come true. and the headlines around the world should be anything is possible if you believe. lauren and jeff don't do nothing small. they don't do anything small. they dream big, they love big, and they bet big, and you bet on me, and i appreciate it. i'm going to tell you, the only thing i worry about when you say courage, i have not always been courageous, but i know the people who are, they get up every day on the front lines, grassroots community, they don't have much, but they're good people and they fight hard, they don't have enough support. can you imagine grassroots folks from appalachia, native american reservations, having enough
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money to be able to connect with the geniuses that have disrupted this space industry, have disrupted taxis and hotels and bookstores, to start disrupting poverty. to start disrupting pollution. to start disrupting the prison industry together. if you take people on the front lines in their wisdom, their genius and their creativity, and you give them a shot, they're not going to turn around the neighborhood, they're going to turn around this nation. i appreciate you for lifting the sealing off of people's dreams. you have lifted the ceilings off of the dreams of humanity today, and that is an important thing. don't be mad about it when you see somebody reaching for the heavens, be glad, there is a lot more have been up there to reach for and we can do that together. the last thing i'll say as this, if this small group of people can make miracles happen in
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outer space, a bigger group of people can make miracles happen down here, and we're going to do it. thank you very much. >> guys, can you roll the little video we put together about vivian jones? can you roll that short video? >> van has been a part of much change. he has birthed a number of different grassroots community organizations. he also helped us bring together climate justice and racial justice, and what that meant in particular for low income communities. >> you can't live in a country where you just have sacrifice zones, whether it south-central or appalachia, and no political party stands up effectively. >> he was always so ahead of the curve, but a lot of people didn't understand him so that was always hard to watch because i know his love for people and
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for justice, it doesn't matter to what people say, he continues to do the work. >> i think about what he's done within crisp criminal justice system, what he's done with making partisanship real, not just what think tanks are doing, how bipartisanship works, he has been rolling up his sleeves, he's been doing the work in real life. [applause] >> i know that van jones is going to do something amazing with that $100 million. i don't know what yet, i bet he doesn't know what it, but it's in your hands, however you're going to do it, it's going to work. we had lunch together a couple of weeks ago, and he told me that he was telling me some of his life story and he mentioned that when he was a young activist, he was angry, he said
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there's a big transformation that happened over the years, he said the acronym that he used was rap reward and punishment. if the mayor or whoever it was, that they were going up against if they did something they didn't like, they he said it rewarded him. and if he did set me didn't like he focused on the punishment. he said i focused on the punishment part. the transformation when you hear his story is unbelievable. and profound and inspiring. you can always, and i think about this for myself, you wake up. >> we have been watching jeff bezos and his group of three. use of the oldest person in space there, 80 two-year-old, and then you saw the youngest person in space there, 18 years old, what a fabulous day. we watch the news conference,
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and a lot of what he wanted to tell the world, because he has left the top of the food chain at amazon to do other things and this is one of them. we've been showing it to you all because today was a historic day as he actually reached space in his rocket. richard branson tried this he got 53 miles into the air recently, but they went to the ring, they went two outer space, 60 to miles. as astronaut alan b shepard once said on may 5th of 1961, light this candle. come on, let's do this. my cohosts fox news contributor and executive vice president and professor at king's college in new york city. happy highflying, everybody. this has been quite a day. you are the people i know who most love space in my life right now. preach, this is your subject. >> i had tears in my eyes when
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this touchdown. i was overwhelmed and just to focus, i grew up reading about the mercury seven. i had them on a poster on my wall, the fact that at the age of 21 she underwent the same rigorous testing is the mercury seven astronauts, but was denied that career because of her gender, she went on to be it trailblazer in her field regardless. the first u.s. flight instructor at a military base. at air safety investigator for the national transportation safety board, she said i just had to do it myself, but when she talked about this mission, she said i never thought i would get to go up. watching her enthusiasm all throughout the mission, today watching her play in the zero gravity up there in that footage we had, it brought tears to my eyes and i recalled one of my favorite quotes, it's never too late to be what you might have been.
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indeed. >> reminds me something my mom used to say, she wanted a seat at the table, and, she would tell me growing up if you want a seat at the table and there's not one, bring a chair. >> i hope i have that kind of youth and ingenuity at the age of 82. what a doll, but when i was with president trump last year and we went to cape canaveral, we looked up, the first time in a decade that we've had american astronauts going into space, it was triumphant. it was american ingenuity at its best. it comes after a time where our space exploration program kind of fell apart in 2011, it was left out of the obama budget, but america's back, this is ingenuity and this is what the american spirit is all about. it's amazing that the private sector achieve this. vivian jones, we are as opposite as we can get politically, but
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he is a worthy recipient of that $100 million, the first words he ever said to me is i love your you've got a christian heart, congratulations, van jones. you get when i met you, i met him. and i know you're good friends. >> you know, that money came into the full discussion, and where in a capitalistic society and some would argue the reason you see this is because you get the freedom to chase your dreams, have them come true, and do what you want with your money does it certainly at 57 years old as someone bounced born in albuquerque, new mexico who can say those big dreams since he looked out in that vast blue sky and back in texas today for the event, history making event, you can say he's looking at that same sky and making those dreams come true. $28 million for the 18 -year-old from the netherlands to get on there. his dad is the ceo of a very large private equity firm in the
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netherlands and he paid the bill, and there is all over damon joining the crowd too. all of this american money brought forth. >> i'm not one to hate on innovation and i think those that have that money should be able to do with it what they please and it shows the innovation of the private sector and that is something we should jeer on. i will say on that note, there is crickets from the environmental warriors on this particular issue. i expected them to be very angry about the fuel this would've taken and the environmental impact of something like this, but they've been they been rather quiet. i clearly have no problem with it i think it was a wonderful day for america and a wonderful day for innovation. i think this inspire so many people. it just goes to show if you work hard enough and you strive for something you can do big things. that's what we saw today. to get the last question there from the journalist was, when are you going to mainstream this pocketbook wise, and i didn't
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really understand the answer. i think we are a ways from that based on what he said. brian? >> we are a ways from it, but you have to start somewhere. i love exploration. exploration is human, it's very human, it's very american. it opens up most in free societies, so we need more of what happened today, we're in a moment right now where it's becoming unsafe to challenge the status quo, if you want to speak up, you might get canceled. exploration is the antithesis of that. it's doing the thing that nobody else thinks is possible. we need more of it with ideas, we need more with new frontiers in space, we just need more of it, but to get more of it, we have to have more freedom. >> we will move on. a fox news alert now. the white house official and a senior staff member for house speaker nancy pelosi have both tested positive for covid 19 after attending a reception with
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those runaway texas democrats. the ones who fled their state to try to block republican election law. now the lawmakers now, six of them coming in just the last couple of days testing positive since flying massless to dc last week. the outbreak, it now overshadowing their so-called voting rights message. peter ducey asked white white house press secretary about it just moments ago. >> now that covid 19 after contact with those democrats has reached the white house, what is your message to these texas democrats? >> our message continues to be thanks for standing up for voting rights, and the rights of americans to have their voices heard at the voting booth, and we appreciate their efforts in that regard. >> so, i think it's interesting that jim saki, it was prepared with that answer, but not with
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something more nuanced like well, x amount of them were vaccinated, this may or may not prove that they should have been wearing masks. she didn't attack the very thing that touches every day americans as they look at that picture and then find out about the covid cases and the president of the united states is fighting mightily to talk about covid and for people to get shots in there arm. >> the message should have been very simple. we are we could debate that, we have hypocrisy here. these are democrats, there is fat federal mask mandate in place. you didn't hear her see that. interesting she is not willing to call out her own party. let me say this, i know some if you folks are saying they were vaccinated, i was in the
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administration wherein the vaccine was created, i sat across from doctor hahn, the head of the seat why i might not think highly of fauci, i think highly of those men. if you get the vaccine, it is so important, 95 percent reduction in hospitalizations for those who are over 65 or. it is the trump vaccine, he got his vaccine with operation work speed. wrong answer, but everybody remember, trump was at the helm of the vaccination. >> i'm old enough to remember when president biden tried to take credit for that vaccine a couple of months ago, and of course we all had it on video from december the 12th of 2020 when he got the first shot in his arm so we know he didn't created, and that's a great reminder. senator ted cruz told me last hour that he, his wife, he had a whole litany of people in his family who had gotten vaccinated because it's a weapon commit
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95 percent. but listen, we live in america and when you hear somebody like the trump administration say we have come up with a vaccine, get out there and take it and then you are the biden administration say it's free choice, but we will come to your house to make sure you do. it's really confusing and i get that right now. >> and that confusion, and those lines especially about were going to come to your house, that is the kind of thing that gets people who might actually want to take the vaccine, it hardens their resistance because it turns it from a medical thing, for my health thing into a political thing. this trip has sent a comedy of errors, jen said in the press conference, our message to them is thank you, the message should have been go home. you are doing so much more damage to the cause of democrats want to go home, and the problem
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is if they don't come of this could be a tragedy of errors, it's a super spreader type thing that we are may be starting to see. let's not make it that, go home, the air is out of the balloon on the election law changes at the state level and into the democrats traveled to dc are taking it out of the balloon, and that is frankly good for america, but bad for them. >> i wanted that is the finer point on we need to know the percentage of those vaccinated because if it really helps you fight this off, we need to know that because it looks like they have a spread situation on board that flight, and now you've got aids both in the white house and the speakers staff become of the pelosi staff, that have been exposed to that individual commit meeting with those texas democrats. this is the problem now. i can't believe they are not even acknowledging this. the federal law for mask wearing on planes that could be i don't
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think any of us are really shocked that she didn't acknowledge it, that is what she does best as dodge questions although she never really gets to the circle back, but i find it interesting that it's the democrats who have been lecturing us about covid health and safety, lecturing a lot of conservatives especially about covid health and safety, having to monitor our facebook posts, and then they have nothing to say about this. they want to infringe on the rights of americans, but then they are fleeing their jobs, the texas democrats who have much bigger problems in texas to deal with like the open border for example in they go on this little getaway costing so much money and meeting with people, it's a farce and come at the best jen can say as it's they are fighting for voting rights, no they're fighting for voter fraud, it's an absolute disgrace and an embarrassment, and they
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will pay for this, come midterm time. can get you hit me at neil on the head and that was money. we know the congressional caucus in the state of texas is said to have picked up the flight and some of the hotel cost and all of that, but to hundred $21 per diem while their instant session. they say they're still in session even though the not doing their jobs in their state. nothing is moving in the texas house, so i don't know what that means. add that up, little more than tt that they get to pocket. that actually is taxpayer money. >> it's estimated the cost of this entire group enjoying their stay three dc will lead to a total of 1.$5 million that's just to keep them there for a while, the level of irresponsibility here is through the roof. it is through the roof, yet they want us to think it's about standing up for quoting rights and equating them with soma and
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just said, the irresponsibility again now that many of them have tested positive, they met with the vice president, the same vice president who just a short time ago said that she wouldn't take the vaccine she wouldn't take anything from president trump, cut to coming to our house and for example sending letters from the department of veterans administration to veterans encouraging them to take that vaccine exploiting their efficacy and to report whether they have taken the vaccines of the administration can keep accurate records. it's amazing the change of position that this is ministration has taken. >> the vice president in particular, right? if you're coming from southern countries in your trying to get in here illegally, don't come, and then a few days later, a
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>> a fox news alerts, republicans morning the scene you saw unloading the at the texas border with mexico where hundreds of illegal immigrants converged on our border, but will be repeated again and again. that is now the democrats pushing ahead with their plan to get amnesty for the millions of illegal immigrants already here and new ones to bury it and move senator lindsey graham says will lead to a quote invasion. this all comes as the number of encounters on the southwest
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border have skyrocketed since president biden took place more than doubling from january to june. in bringing the total to more than a million so far this fiscal year. with all of it, democrats are pushing to include mass amnesty in the multitrillion dollar infrastructure package here is senator graham warning what all this could mean. >> that will lead to an invasion of illegal immigration, it would put jet fuel on a system that's already broken, if you give one person legal status, there will be a run on our border like you've never seen before the dumbest idea in the history of the senate, the history of the white house, it will lead to a breakdown of law and order beyond what you see today. kick it you have spent so much time down at the border and giving your topline thoughts, i think critical to the conversation, but also, i'm curious to know if this is where you thought we'd be.
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>> unfortunately, it's exactly where i thought we would be given this administration and it makes me sick. i spent a lot of time at that border, i was there during the trump administrations when his policies we're working. i was spent time with border patrol saying things were working. mexico was finally working with the united states, we had a partnership and things were going well. how quickly this administration was able to unravel that. senator lindsey graham saying we're going to have an invasion, we're not going to have an invasion, we're experiencing an invasion. i hate to be right, but on this issue, this is exactly what is happening. amnesty for illegals, and then voting rights, what is happening now is a choice, a choice made by democrats, that's why they acknowledge the crisis because this is their opportunity and the only thing we can do to fight back as state leaders that are standing up and fighting for election integrity and those that our stepping up to secure their own borders. that's the only chance we have
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in this fight. >> i want to talk policy with you because it's important for people, we got into this a little yesterday talking with particularly people coming from haiti where the president was just fascinated and things are devolving, public safety is basically nonexistent in some areas of that country, so that might be true asylum reason you would be let into this country if they can even get through to them, when you have what senator graham and what tommy were both explaining come out when you have so many more people at your border, it's hard to even get to the ones that might be here that you can help legitimately. >> that's right, that's why it president trump had that remain in mexico policy, you remain in the third party country while awaiting your asylum claims to be adjudicated. what we see come out of the white house as a policy standpoint in sheer stupidity. they came in, they were warned, they don't rollback remain in mexico, title 42. they did it, they stood at the
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white house podium. what then happens, that is what we call of full children came over the border en masse, flooding the community intake facilities where there are egregious, the suicide watch list for these kids that have come over that's how bad it is, so what is their answer? you've had now seven or eight months, six months i guess it is, sit back and take we need to take a hard right turn, but instead of doing that they're going to put amnesty in a budget reconciliation bill which will only make the problem worse and roll rollback the title 42 from the trump era, it leads me to ask, president biden, are you that ignorant, or for some reason unbeknownst to me do you want this to happen because those are the only two options? >> brian? to get you know, the senator talked about this being a dumb idea, the bad thing is, there are a lot of bad ideas in this infrastructure package, we have a debt problem, and inflation
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problem, we have a problem at the border, it basically creates an invitation if it passes for people to rush the border. one thing that an infrastructure bill might do is actually help with border infrastructure. it might help with things like barriers and walls and facilities to make sure that we are processing people. that would actually count as infrastructure. i don't think that's in this bill, instead it's what it's been accused of time and again and that is a catchall for everything cool single progressive priority. we're not governing on the basis of reality, we're governing ide. emily, we will be back after this commercial break. prince harry reportedly blind sided buckingham palance when he said he will be writing a book about his time as a royal. will this kill all hope of reconciliation? ♪
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♪ ♪ >> emily: prince harry will reportedly be getting $20 million for a tell-all memoir that is scheduled for release in the same year as the queens 70th jubilee, and to make matters worse, the news came out of the blue, which could make the split even more complicated. check out the cover of "the new york post," which i found exceptionally brilliant. this just keeps getting more and more dramatic. >> brian: every time we see a story like this, it reminds me of what a great idea of the of independence was.
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i feel bad for harry on the decision he's making because he's not thinking about the long term. what do you want? do you want the money, or do you want to have the relationships that matter? it just seems like they are throwing those under the bus, time and again. >> emily: that is like wearing a white dress to someone else's wedding. you just don't steal someone else's thunder, especially when your grandmother is the queen. >> tomi: you know, i really wish i could get fired up about this, but everything that is going on in our country at our border, i have to say i watch bravo reality for a reason. i think we should focus on our country. >> emily: i have enough excitement for all of us. >> harris: keep it coming. the cash money. i think that's the new modern now in britain, and harry is carrying it. it's all about the money. >> emily: kayleigh, what do you think? >> kayleigh: how sad when your
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brand is attacking your family. you are an award-winning journalist. we are conservatives, but his brand is attacked my family. i look forward to the chapter, though, that says bunkers: why america should get rid of the first amendment. >> harris: has we just saw, the recipient of $100 million to give to charity, to keep changing the world for the better, and now we are covering the story where someone is, to your point, kayleigh, ratting out his family to the tune of $20 million. it's all about money. it sort of blood money, right, brian? >> brian: well, yeah. you are right. the juxtaposition is so clear. you can make the world a better place, or you can throw daggers at somebody else. let's not talk about the daggers. let's talk about the people changing the world for the better. >> harris: or they could do better. both. but what we do now, they came here to make this money. >> emily: if i was in
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prince harry's shoes, i would write a historical novel about the family. i would educate everyone to the amazing aspects of that family. i would pump them up, rather than squash them down, but thank you, guys. this historical day that we are all a part of. thanks for watching. and now here is "america reports." >> sandra: thank you, emily. fox news alert. top of a brand-new hour. nancy pelosi and a white house official, both fully vaccinated, have confirmed testing positive for covid-19. brand-new reaction from the white house and capitol hill moments ago. hello and welcome here and i am sandra smith. >> john: and i am john roberts in washington. our number one for me. our number three for sandra. the infected white house official did not come in close contact with any senior staff or the president, but speaker pelosi's office as her aide came into contact with
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