tv FOX and Friends FOX News February 16, 2022 3:00am-6:00am PST
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>> the politics is changing. >> todd: transcends party is your point. the key take away. >> you may have new single issue voter who say i want safe streets and schools that work. >> carley: james you are hosting the "wall street journal" at large on sunday. so, more to come from you later this week. thank you so much for joining us. >> todd: "fox & friends" starts right now. bye-bye. >> bret: vladimir putin says he is ready for talks with the u.s. and nato. >> i think clear that russia targets america and ukraine we will respond with forces. >> john durham's special counsel investigation picking up steam. >> former president trump telling fox news he believes this is the crime of the century. >> democrats blaming the spike in violence in big cities on everything but their soft on crime policies. >> mayor eric adams lashing out at the media. >> my role as mayor is being interpreted through the prism of your realities and not mine. >> in ottawa, protesters demanding to know why trudeau is
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invoking emergency powers. >> what i hear the prime minister saying to the truckers sit down and shut up. i think he needs to recalibrate. >> really big headline, th prodr price index is out. >> the prices you pay are likely to go up. ♪ i got that sunshine in my pocket ♪ got that good sole in my feet ♪ feel that in my pocket ♪ drop ♪ oh ♪ i can't take my eyes off of it >> steve: well, if you are driving by city hall. i believe it's city hall in murphy's burrow, tennessee, it's 5:01 central time. and i going to be 56 degrees
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there. >> carley: this takes me back to when hayden loved it i realized she is growing up. >> steve: she still dance, dance, dances. >> ainsley: she loves to dance but not into trolls anymore. >> brian: something even more exciting to talk about my take away was the recess lights in the soffits. it's really exciting. people at home thinking about something that could add a certain accent on city hall to their home. these lights sit there and hit the house all night long it brings your attention to it. it's a great idea. >> ainsley: and then you get the electric bill. >> brian: i think we all should invest in that. >> steve: sconces? >> brian: no, stuff recessed in that highlights your facade. >> ainsley: don't try to do it can yourself though you might get electrocuted. >> brian: although there is so much stuff on youtube. >> ainsley: not a good idea call
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electrician. >> brian: light hearted stuff now the serious stuff like a world war. troops will not fight should vladimir putin invade ukraine. >> steve: what are we going to do? however, that's not stopping the president from sending service members overseas for, what? we don't know. >> steve harrigan is live from kyiv with the latest for us. good morning, steve. >> steve: good morning, ainsley. a few more hundred u.s. troops will be coming to nato bases in eastern europe in the event of a potential russian invasion. the tone here is definitely shifting, whether or not that's a deception, that's not clear. russian controlled state television is showing russian forces pulling back. military vehicles put on trains, being taken away from ukraine's border and president putin himself says he wants to pursue diplomacy. >> do we want war? or not of course not. that is why we have offered our proposals to start the
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negotiation process when which should lead to an agreement of providing equal security for everybody, including our country. >> president biden said there has been no verification of any pullback by russian forces. that the threat of an attack in ukraine remains high and that the threat also remains to the u.s. economy, which could pay a lot higher fuel prices if there is a war here. and biden tried to speak directly to the russian people. >> the citizens of russia, you are not our enemy. and i do not believe you want a bloody, destructive war against ukraine. this was the day a lot of intelligence services predicted would be the day the invasion started instead unity day for ukrainians, thousands of people coming out on the streets with flags, showing their solidarity. showing they are not afraid and showing they are keeping calm. back to you. >> brian: what i find astounding is i also heard there was a
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cyberattack on the defense ministry which a lot of people thought was a precursor for it. i also see here, and you can tell me if i'm wrong, didn't vladimir putin say genocide is happening in the donbas region aren't those the type of things we expect before invasion. >> you are really getting to the mixed signals. that cyberattack is how invasions start with russia. imagine you are ukrainian getting ready to go out of here. try to go to the bank and your card doesn't work. it is tremendous stress on these people now for weeks here. they are worried about impending invasion. they are still trying to carry on this. economy, this society has not collapsed. people are not fleeing. but it certainly is scary. >> steve: it is indeed. thank you very much. if you think it's scary there where yesterday hackers hit a couple of banks and last week they did the foreign ministry and other government sites. wait until the united states cracks down and puts sanctions
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on russia. remember the colonial pipeline thing where they flicked the lights and suddenly gas within a 7 bucks in the carolinas has every pipeline hardened their defenses against cyber. and russia knows exactly which ones. as soon as we unleash the sanctions because we are doing it after they invade, lights are going to go out in different places. >> ainsley: reports that the invasion was going to happen today, wednesday. is that still a prediction? >> steve: good question. ask vlad vladimir. >> brian: jake sullivan saying getting nato to agree on the types of sanctions especially germany. they are worried that hungary especially that leader kind of likes vladimir putin. the way the european works unless all 27 members vote for something, it is nixed. so, listen, i don't care who the president is, whether it's eisenhower, trump or biden.
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it's not easy to get nato to sing the same song along with european union and knowing that china is there to back them up. these devastating sanctions might not look that intimidating to vladimir putin. >> steve: i love eisenhower he is from my hometown. just saying. >> ainsley: that is a big story we will continue to talk about. the other big story is this durham probe. so much information is being released. the president actually talked to fox news about this. the former president, i should say, president trump. and he says this is the crime of the century. he says it looks like this is just the beginning. because if you read the filing, and have any understanding of what took place, and i called this a long time ago, you are going to see a lot of other things happening having to do with what really just is a continuation of the crime of the century. he went on to say treason at its highest level. he talked about national security. if our own country can do this, if people in our own country can do this. >> steve: right. >> ainsley: can other countries do the same?
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>> steve: what's crazy about it, it was during a political campaign, according to the durham filing on friday, hillary clinton's campaign paid an internet company to get nonpublic information on donald trump when he was a candidate, and then later, when he was president. so they could invent and reinforce the connection between trump and russia. obviously this is gigantic to think that, you know, a political campaign would essentially surveil through these internet memes a sitting president of the united states. that is why everybody has been hot to talk to hillary clinton. she was actually out and about yesterday. she was -- she left chelsea's apartment. went to lunch at filipino restaurant in queens for about three hours. >> ainsley: they were filming something. >> steve: there was a film crew there. they don't know what that was about. on the way back to chelsea's apartment. daily mail.com caught up with her and asked her questions
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about this story. let's see what she says. >> did you pay to trump campaign. when are you going to come out on the spying allegations, hillary? >> steve: i guess that's a no. >> brian: the question is if she sat counsel on cnn or msnbc or nbc or abc right now. would she even get a question on this? now if the other networks, the other outlets, either they choose to ignore it or they choose to mock it the outrage that they have that they claim that this is a nonstory and i think they say -- are the people that cover it just stupid or are they willfully stupid. that was a question that came out of a rival morning show of ours. somebody who has been all over this, he came forward when nobody else would. when we really couldn't auto figure out exactly what he hads is devin nunes. went to work with trump media. about to announce their own social media con glom member co.
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what brought forward than devin nunes. >> clearly anyone able to get in the white house, no matter hot president is, is something that is unprecedented. those should be the most guarded communications in country. so, this is going to take -- hopefully durham gets more and more information out. hopefully he can bring more indictments. and then, look, sean, it's going to take my old buddies in the congress are going to have to spend years looking into this and how did this happen? how can contractors have communications of americans all over the country? it's frightening. >> ainsley: jake sullivan nsa now. he was working for her campaign. top adviser to hillary clinton. because he is mentioned in the indictment of sussmann, that he should step down because of a conflict of interest. >> steve: sure, kevin mccarthy yesterday said if the republicans take back congress, while john durham is doing the
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investigation. should it be ongoing or be incomplete in some way in the republicans will take over that mantel. gregg jarrett said this in an op-ed yesterday. he said make no -- the whole question what durham is looking at right now is who con cocketted this story? >> ainsley: did hillary clinton know anything about this? >> steve: who paid for it who in her campaign was the mastermind behind this. if true, it's terrible. gregg jarrett wrote make no mistake it was clinton who invented the elaborate hoax. directed the process by which it was circulated the media and fbi. false claims assimilated by cadre of cronies and dirty tricksters working secretly in the shadows. do you know what? john durham is turning the lights on and more people are seeing exactly who was involved. >> brian: keep your spotlight or mark allies, too. put that name in your word search. he was all over 2020. he is a lawyer and something that his name keeps popping up
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on. we will see what john durham does going forward. i don't know if disurem being successful when they start attacking his character. the problem is they loved him. eric holder and others said john durham is a nonpartisan actor. good person to do this investigation. if they start moving forward, look for them to go after him. it. >> ainsley: donald trump said this is happening all along. lesley stahl. says it's not happening. we don't have any proof of this. it hasn't been verified. he is now saying that not only the crime of the century. this is just the beginning. if this is all true, he was right. >> steve: if it's all true, how many of those people who said it was not true ultimately are going to apologize? >> ainsley: zero. >> steve: let's start a list. >> brian: 12 minutes now after the hour. still ahead on this very show in the next two hours and 50 minutes. a black black lives matter advocate now accused of an assassination attempt. what we now know about the
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suspect's shocking past and investigation so far. >> ainsley: plus, the happiest place on earth just got better. the major covid mandate that disney is dropping. >> brian: take off the mask. ♪ ♪ entresto is the number one heart failure brand prescribed by cardiologists and has helped over one million people. it was proven superior at helping people stay alive and out of the hospital. don't take entresto if pregnant; it can cause harm or death to an unborn baby. don't take entresto with an ace inhibitor or aliskiren, or if you've had angioedema with an ace or arb. the most serious side effects are angioedema, low blood pressure, kidney problems, or high blood potassium. ask your doctor about entresto. we gotta tell people that liberty mutual customizes car insurance so you only pay for what you need, and we gotta do it fast.
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manhunt is underway for a suspect who reportedly tried to ram into nypd officers with a car. the post reporting officers opened fire on the vehicle, police believe the car was connected to a series of robberies. the driver took off, no officers were hurt. listen to this: a 6-year-old girl last seen in 201 is found safe. police say the parents of paisley abducted her after losing custody in 2019. paisley was found in a hidden space under the stairs in her grandfather's upstate new york home after a tip led police there. police arresting her parents and charging them with endangering the welfare of a child. nancy grace will weigh in on the investigation later this morning. new overnight. san francisco overwhelmingly voting to recall three school board officials. that's because frustrated parents are fed up with woke politics. the school board has been prioritizing instead of educating children. now san francisco mayor london
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breed will appoint three replacements in the coming days. they will likely take office in mid march. and the happiest place on earth updating its mask policy, disney world and disney land ditching masks starting tomorrow much. the park's website saying in part face coverings will be optional for fully vaccinated guests in indoor and outdoor locations but unvaccinated guests will still have to mask up. so a mixed bag there, guys. those are your headlines, over to you. >> ainsley: so the kids haven't been vaccinated they still have to wear masks. >> steve: man. >> brian: thanks, carley. >> ainsley: turning to america's crime crisis a louisville blm activist is charged with attempted mur. >> steve: accused of trying to kill a jewish democrat who was run fog mayor at the time. >> brian: todd piro tells us nor what we know about this activist. >> he opened fire inside
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democrat craig greenburg's campaign headquarters this shooting happening on monday in a neighborhood in downtown louisville. fortunately nobody nobody was hurt. greenberg's shirt was grazed by a bullet. my team and i have funerally ar. linking his arrest with activism and blasphemy. his lawyer is denying any of that speculation. quote this is not a hate crime it's a mental health case. he made headlines after he went missing two weeks. his family was critical of louisville police during the investigation claiming they were, quote, i will equipped to help locate brown. at the time his parents said he could have been going through a mental health crisis. weighs later found safe in new york. before he went missing, brown was a prominent activist during black lives matter and defund the police unrest in the summer of 2020. he supported efforts to remove police officers have schools and take money away from police. brown also launching a campaign to run for city council posting
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this video back in december. brown has pleaded not guilty to several charges in the past, including attempted murder. his bond was set at $100,000. back to you. >> steve: all right, todd, thank you very much. talk about something that we have been talking about here on the couch for months now. that is the crime wave throughout major metropolitan cities right outside our windows as well. eric adams who has been mayor now for six weeks went up to albany on monday tried to convince the legislature to do something about the bail reforms they did. it's resulted in a lot of crime. when he came back yesterday, he was really angry at the new york daily news headline where eric beat up in crime fight and eric adams said there was no arguing. there was no yelling. there was no screaming. he -- instead of blaming the legislature for not fixing
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things what is he doing now is blaming the press. he is saying he is getting unfair coverage because the racial bias and threatening to deny access. >> ainsley: listen. >> i'm a black man that's the mayor. but my story has been interpreted by people that don't look like me. we got to be honest about that. how many black editorial boards? how many blacks determine how these stories are being written? how many asians? how many east indians, how many south asians? everybody talks about my government being diversified? what's the diversification in the newsroom. writing stories about police officers. writing stories dealing with high crime. diversify your newsroom so i can look out and see people that look like me. >> ainsley: well, there is a
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veteran democratic political consultant that weighed in actually several of them did. here is one says eric adams mayoral at this will arrest entirely on is he angry and taking it out on the press and talk -- and talk of race will not help him. >> brian: put it this way. i appreciate that everyone has a diverse background and when people live a certain way they have expertise in that area. grow up lower middle class, grow up working class. grow up in crime ridden areas. i get that having said that he is everybody's mayor. white people, black people, east asian. and what you do is you have different experts write your he had torlsz. to me the major story is can we
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stop crime? nobody reads the daily news. it's barely a flier. nobody works there full time. they don't get dental. nobody reads the daily news. i wouldn't get worked up about the newspapers. the people that put him in office just want him to crack down on crime. i want him to talk about his frustration of looking lawmakers in the eye, showing them as a former law enforcement officer exactly what this no bail has done. how hard his job is maybe bring up some pictures of people who have been thrown in trains what their bodies look like after death with what their faces look like, like the model we had on yesterday after being beat up by homeless person arrested 40 times. that's the story. maybe if you look down and notice the daily news has got it wrong. next time you see a reporter. just come over here a second. you got that all wrong. the i would say "new york times" editorial section might be these horrible white people who wrote this came out and said the left has to finally admit lenient stance on crime is hurting the people they claim to help most.
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these policies are supposed to help black people. they are back firing. this is jim quinn and hanna meyers write this new york citing is experiencing alarming rise in crime over the last two years from 2019, 21. shootings up 104%. burglaries up 16%. 91% in car theft. they go on to say in great detail, these are two experts how black people are being hurt most of all that's the argument that eric adams should be making. >> steve: yesterday he was complaining about the makeup of the press following him, right? at his press conference, every reporter there was selected by his office because of covid protocols okay you are on the list you get to come in. you get to come in. everybody else had to do it. >> ainsley: chose the reporters. >> steve: he did choose them. i do not remember eric adams when he was running for mayor complaining about the press coverage or when he won complaining about the press
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coverage. when he ran he said i'm a former cop. i know how to fix this. he didn't say i'm a former cop, can i fix this if i get a certain kind of press conference. when you -- in the "new york post" today, there's a picture of one of the reporters was standing outside of duane reed because there was -- somebody was assaulted at another one. and while the reporter is standing right there, somebody shoplifts and the guard tackles him and they put that picture in the paper. the crime here is crazy. and if this new mayor doesn't think we're going to cover it, he has got another lesson coming to him because it's news. people are terrified. >> ainsley: you have said this and you have said this. it's crime. we have got to get crime down n city. it's the biggest talker. everyone is talking about. >> brian: absolutely. >> ainsley: it trumps inflation in new york city the talking points. when i'm at lunch with other moms, this is our talking point. everyone has the citizen app. in new york city and it dings,
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dings, dings to tell you where crime is in your neighborhood. last night call make you're your door is look. five blocks away a guy shooting outside and ran away. is he still on the run. this is the biggest story. if he can get crime down, he will have so much positive coverage because everyone is concerned about losing our wonderful city and it going back to the way it used to be. >> brian: if he read that if he hit those stats and had a press conference we would all cover it. >> ainsley: get up there and saying lawmakers in albany are not letting me do my job. that's the story. >> brian: let me read the names. >> steve: rather than get mad at albany and the democrats up there. he got mad at the press. >> brian: 27 minutes now after the hour. president biden warns the u.s. will respond forcefully if russia invades ukraine. will this attempt at tough talk keep putin from taking action? pete hegseth will respond. >> steve: plus, ainsley, you mentioned inflation a moment ago. a major indicator of that shows a big spike in the cost of
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ukraine we will respond forcefully. if russia attacks the united states or our allies through a met trick means like disruptive cyberattacks against our companies or infrastructure we are prepared to respond. >> steve: there you have got president biden in the east room stopping short of describing how the u.s. will respond to aggression from russia if they invade ukraine. is the president all talk and no action? here with reaction is "fox & friends weekend" co-host pete hegseth. pete, good morning to you. >> hey, steve, good morning. >> steve: pete, the problem is he is talking about okay, after they invade then i'm going to do this. what you are supposed to do say s. speak softly and carry a big stick. they were supposed to already have had the riot act read to them before not allow to you one the nord stream 2 or whatever before. once there are a bunch of russian guys over there, that's
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a problem. >> pete: that's true. whatever caucus vladimir putin is making right now about whether or not he wants to invade eastern ukraine or more has very little to do with joe biden and the united states of america. that's not something we, as americans, want to believe. or would -- or the world would like to believe because of our responsibility as global power and guarantor of the free world. but we have already ceded our hand. it's what we did in crimea with obama-biden based on the approval of nord stream 2. based on unwillingness to provide the ukrainians what they would need and empty words like this. not to mention the straw man that we built up that we learned about recently around the level of vladimir putin's influence in our own domestic affairs. so whatever vladimir putin wants to do, he knows it's going to harm his economy. he knows it's going to harm his so-called view from the international world. he knows it's going to create even more tense relationships with nato. whatever he does is based on whether or not he wants to
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attempt to reestablish the soviet union. whether he wants the world to see russia as a global super power. and that's the decision he is making. it's nothing we're doing now. it's a wait and see moment. and speeches like this aren't going to change the calculus of a strong man who wants more land. >> steve: putin wants to be the one who brought russia back and redrew the lines and got everything back. you know, pete, if there is answer curetion regardless of the size. >> the united states is going to have what the president calls crippling economic sanctions and that's when the ransomware attacks are going to start hitting the united states businesses across the board. and then what are we going to do, other than have to pay the money? >> what have we done in the past? >> steve: nothing. >> pete: what is the true deterrent that this administration has created from vladimir putin? it does not exist, which leaves us begging and pleading vladimir putin to not do something based on interest that don't align
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with ours. see, that's where we are having conversations past each other. calculations putin are making are not the threats that we are leveling. and in the past cyberattacks effectively unanswered because we are not willing to bring down the heat and the smackdown on his economy and on frankly him that would need to deter him. >> steve: all right. we're not going to be able to deter you from heading to daytona this weekend. >> pete: steve, i'm psyched. i'm getting on a plane in an hour. fly down there taping what's called nascar experience. i think they are going to let me in a nascar. i think i get 45 minutes of training. that's all that's required and i'm hoping they are going to let me on that track. we will see. but it's a bucket list to do. and then this weekend we are hosting from the great american race at the daytona 500, 500. hope folks join us kick quicking off the nascar season.
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>> steve: thank you very much. travel safely. >> pete: thank you. >> steve: brian is going to head down to new orleans with master p. make that city a better place to live. >> i went here and at first i didn't take school seriously. when i start understanding the importance of education and taking it serious, it changed my life. my asthma felt anything but normal. ♪♪ it was time for a nunormal with nucala. nucala is a once monthly add-on treatment for severe eosinophilic asthma that can mean less oral steroids. not for sudden breathing problems. allergic reactions can occur. get help right away for swelling of face, mouth, tongue, or trouble breathing. infections that can cause shingles have occurred. don't stop steroids unless told by your doctor. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection.
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>> brian: i recently had the opportunity and it was a great one to spend the day with master p. hip hop star added business tight titan on resume. how his upbringing led him to be this great person. this great business person and establish his love of country. >> housing projects once sprawling now there is just a few buildings left. we are talking about the third
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ward in new orleans a tough place to survive let alone thrive. it was once the murder capital of the country. survive and thrive is what percy miller did. first as a basketball player, then as a rapper and now as all around business mogul. before we talk about how he did it i want to talk about how it all started >> this is a public housing project right here. and you imagine i lived in here with like 16 people. >> brian: 16 people in three rooms? >> three rooms. look at the size of this. >> brian: wow. >> it was a lot of love in this house. my grandmother did a great job. my grandfather used his social security check to send me to catholic school it built a lot of character in me. and it made me fight for a lot of things. fight for education, fight for being a better person and fight for doing the right thing. ♪ bad times we never gave up. >> welcome to booker t. washington high school here in new orleans. >> y'all know i went here and at
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first i didn't take school seriously. when i start understanding the importance of education and taking it serious, it changed my life. it made me make better decisions and choices that's what i want you guys to do. >> what's it meant to have percy miller here. >> you have no idea how many people are pushing and praying and hoping for you. >> some of the kids might not get at that time first. sit back and sink into their heads. you know what? this guy came from here. if he made it, i can make it. ♪ na na na that. >> brian: pretty clear you are excellent athlete and your goal is. >> my goal is to go to college. >> brian: and? >> and make it. >> to the nba? >> to the nba. >> you pick houston, and your goal is to start as a freshman but you blow out your knee and you end up back at home. >> back in the --
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>> brian: do you remember that mindset? >> i caught the greyhound bus back home. and i feel like i let everybody down. coming back home on that bus, i felt like it was over. but my grandfather, say son, you have got to figure out something else. don't just sit here. >> brian: you start hanging out with the wrong crowd. and you start dealing drugs reluctantly. and you came back and you got warned by your grandmother. >> yeah. >> and one time she hung up a black dress. >> my grandmother really scared me. when she put that dress on her nightstand and said she was going to wear that to my funeral if i didn't get my act together. i sat and cried. to be honest with you i cried to myself and i realized this ain't the life i wanted. and that's when i started changing my life. and it's a blessing to have people that care about youless give you tough love. i needed that i ended up leaving new orleans and going to california. there was an older white guy that owned the building that i
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rented. and i didn't know him. he didn't know me. and he heard of me. he heard my accent. he said where are you from, son? i said i'm from new orleans. he said i'm from new orleans, too. and we smiled and laughed. he said what are you trying to do. >> i said i'm trying to open up a record store he said you got any money? he said i got $4,500. if you can fix it up i will give it to you rent free for a year i said yes, sir. i fixed the place up. we slept in the back of the place. we built it up. and the rest was history. steve. >> brian: you are married with a kid. >> yeah. >> brian: romeo. >> yeah. >> brian: sleeping in the back. hoping to sell some centers for disease control and records you are not a musician. >> no i'm base man. >> you become a rapper. you convince recording studio. >> i was able to make forbes fortune under 40. >> brian: you want to get other act and expand no limits. >> i went looking for talent.
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i went to signing mr. cool to snoop dogg. >> you said you want to break a stereotype that maybe people have of rappers they want their only money they are not good family men. you broke that mold clearly. >> yeah. >> brian: they didn't know what you know. are you worried that they are not going to know how hard it was to get what you have. >> even though my kids got a better life and even though we have nice things you still got to work for what you want. i'm here for you but you have got to work for what you want. if whatever you love to do what you are passionate about i'm going to support you with it. but you need to get up in the morning and need to educate yourself and need to go to church. you need to do those things that are going to make you a good person and have integrity and right now. >> brian: where are you at right now? where do you think this country is at race relations? we see what happened with george floyd riots. >> yeah. >> brian: we see a big anti-police sentiment. black lives matter, how do you
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see it, percy? >> i see that we are hurting as a country. but we are also growing. we are growing stronger together. >> brian: do you think there is two americas? do you love this country? are you patriotic. >> i'm patriotic and love this country. i don't feel there is no place better than this. >> steve: what a story. has he thought about politics? >> brian: no. i think he wants to coach new orleans in the nba. i think he also has a bunch of business ventures. what you are going to see after this is what he has done. what he became a rapper and going to have a concert coming up in about a month. but he also has other acts. but then he had shoes. he has apparel. >> he has got food. he owns stuff. and what he does is he brings people. in for example, he has rap. the rapper on the cover owns 50%. and they put it together. not only sell it but they also -- they also give it to charity. he has his own water. you work in a supermarket you see master p. stuff.
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>> ainsley: what i got from that is if you are down on your luck tomorrow is another day. keep working hard and you can make it, too. you can give a great life to your kids. and a better life to your children. >> steve: you are going to have to sleep on the floor in the back to get there. >> ainsley: what a hard worker he is he was rewarded with that the and the importance of family and what his grandmother told him with the black dress. >> brian: he who to walk on with a tie on regular basis that's how i learned how to fight. they didn't like a kid walking across the projects with a tie on but he did this. he picks up a cd. he has no music call background. why can't i do this? he said some of my stuff was raw but i went out and i not only got it i pressed the cdc and i would walk around and sell them in rough neighborhoods and nice neighborhoods and then he would market himself tupac shakur let him open to him goes and
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performs and makes his way through. while is he doing that he grab its his brother and family. you are going to come with me to richmond and los angeles. his brothers become rappers. one brother is in prison right now. kim kardashian working to get him out. unjustly in there. one brother shot and killed. he saw reality at 5 years old he saw a man killed. and how many other kids would experience that and be able to experience what he has experienced. >> ainsley: where does he live now and how many children does he have. >> brian: wherever he wants los angeles, new orleans, five kids, two in college. one is playing xavier. one nba with lebron james' son. already has $2 million. freshman in college $2 million. ains apes that's great. thank you, brian. that was wonderful. that was part 1. going to see part 2 coming up. >> steve: in about 90 minutes. check in with janice dean for fox weather forecast. yesterday, two cold. they said go out it's going to
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be warmer later today. right now it's freezing. >> ainsley: not too bad. take a look at the temperatures across the northeast. we're going to get a nice warm up. i can take is here in new york. watch this as we go through today and tomorrow. 61 here in new york. 68 in d.c. 60 in new york on friday as well. and then we have a storm system we are going to have to watch but we're going to break some records we think in upstate new york, massachusetts and vermont. so we will enjoy that. thank you very much. this is a storm though that we are talking with across the central u.s. that's going to come up here towards the northeast. mainly be a rain event. but we will see the snow potential and severe weather, my friends as well as ice. so we will be talking about that fox weather.com by the way to get your latest details snow and ice i would say warmer temperatures here in new york. >> steve: absolutely. we will too.
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>> steve: now she just walked down the street she could walk into a restaurant. here's the thing the rising price of wholesale products is hitting america's eateries. the impact rising inflation could have on your favorite restaurant coming up next. (vo) what makes my heart beat? having everything i want in the place i love. jamaica. heartbeat of the world. let's go! kim is now demonstrating her congestion. heartbeat of the world. save it slimeball. i've upgraded to mucinex. we still have 12 hours to australia. mucinex lasts 12 hours, so i'm good. now move! kim, no! mucinex lasts 3x longer for 12 hours. it's time for the ultimate sleep number event on the sleep number 360 smart bed. what if i sleep hot? ...or cold?
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♪ >> ainsley: as inflation rages on, prices at the wholesale level jumped 1% last month totally a nearly 10% in goods over the last year. that means your favorite restaurant, retailers are paying way more and our next -- and our next guest warns this this could shut down business. hey, britney. >> hi, how are you? >> ainsley: doing well. i'm so sorry to hear this news because it evenings all of us. how does it effect the restaurant industry? >> yeah, thank you for having me on shedding light on this crisis has been -- it's been traumatic for our industry. and coming off the heals of 2020 when we opened our doors this is a conglomerate of issues. including the supply chain
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crisis and also the labor crisis. it's not been good and restaurants really should be thriving right now. and they are just trying to survive. >> ainsley: i know you all are a large company. how does this effect the mom and pops that might have one restaurant? >> yeah. you know, it's interesting. we are not a large company. but we are definitely larger than a mom and pop. so, when we -- we raised prices last year. we made the cognizant decision we are not going to raise prices this year. that's a huge risk on our part. our costs have gone up significantly. seafood alone 50%. meat 20%. for us 100 percent increase and not doing a menu increase that comes to the bottom line. the mom and pops feel they do not have a choice in this matter. they absolutely have to raise prices. and if not, they won't survive. what went into that decision? why did you decide not to pass the cost on to your customers.
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>> we look at every single review coming. in comments from our customers. it's interesting. farmers and suppliers and this cycle of raising prices, raising prices but the buck stops with the guest. they don't have to. they can make a decision 20% of all consumers surveyed by the national restaurant association and ohio restaurant association have said in the last couple of weeks. they have decided not to dine out because of the variant. prices rising. they do not have -- they have say in that. the buck stops with them. >> ainsley: next time n nashville i'm going to check out your restaurant. it looks so pretty. thanks for coming on with us. it beret pays it tribute to her tv dad bob saget. sticke around. and has helped over one million people. it was proven superior at helping people stay alive
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>> canadian truckers holding the line for 20 days and counting. >> despite the prime minister invoking extraordinary powers we haven't seen much of a change. >> the prime minister is totally overreacting he is hitting a gnat with a sledge hammer i don't think he has met with the truckers. >> warns. >> if russia moves we will impose long-term consequences. >> aren't going to change the calculus of a strong man who wants more land. >> frustrated parents overwhelmingly voting to recall three san francisco school board officials. >> we are very excited about this.
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>> former levi's executive is speaking out about her force out. >> this whole thing has sort of culminated and being about the silencing of dissent. >> happiest place on earth just got better. disney world and disney land ditching masks saying in part face coverings will be optional for fully vaccinated guests. ♪ ♪ >> brian: lines are huge of people waiting to get on the ferris wheel in 5-degree weather. wait a second, it's closed. that's wildwood, new jersey, a great place to be in the summer/spring/fall then you take a short drive to cape may which is beautiful, too, but it is also freezing. >> steve: i think janice said it's close to freezing. it's about 32 degrees. >> brian: freezing to me. not to have a shirt on.
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>> steve: keep your shirt on this entire hour. looking at piers. wildwood, new jersey, after super storm sandy that was where the roller coaster was actually in the atlantic ocean. they have rebuilt and as you can see it is beautiful. they have not only have all those rides they have a beach park there water park. >> ainsley: how far away is that from you from your house. >> steve: about 50 miles not far as all. we can be there by 10:00. closed for the season. >> brian: that's what new jersey is like right now. at two minutes after the hour. find out what's happening up to the north. we begin in canada. ottawa police establishing no go zones in the city in an attempt to control the freedom convoy demonstrators who by the way lost their police chief. >> ainsley: police chief resigned over criticism of his protest response. >> steve: somebody had to go because they look bad.
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grady trimble on the ground live from ottawa with the latest. grady, i don't think the government of canada understands those people in the trucks are not leaving until the mandates are lifted, period. they can take the trucks. but those people would just sit on the curb. >> it sure seems that way at this point. steve, despite the prime minister invoking extraordinary powers we have not noticed much change as well as the posturing of the police and the trucks themselves and the a attitude and mood of the truckers. they are staying put. now though the government has the ability to compel private tow truck drivers to come in and remove those trucks. we will see if anything changes. we got an update from ottawa, police. they say this now 20 day protest has cost about $14 million. they say they have issued around 3,000 citations they have 127
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active open criminal investigations. you mentioned the ottawa police chief resigning. that's because a lot of people here in ottawa are critical of the police department's handling of these protests. they think it should have ended a lot longer ago at the beginning days of the protests. the truckers themselves are taking issue with how police and elected officials are characterizing this protest as lawless or illegal or they say they are taking the city under siege. here's how thehood of ontario the province characterized this blockade as well as the other blockades at the borders of u.s. and canada. >> freedoms we are given freedoms but they are hurting more people than the pandemic could ever hurt. ever hurt. hundreds of thousands of jobs. millions of families. >> the emergency's act that the prime minister has invoked also gives the authority to freeze
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bank accounts trishs and anybody trying to help the truckers. it also allows them to essentially shut down crowd funding sites like give, send, go that are trying to get money to the truckers through donation. that site was hacked earlier in the week it came off line for at least a full day. it is now back online. we checked this morning. and can you donate to the truckers once again. but that's not after the names of people who donated to the first fundraising round were leaked to several media outlets now reaching tout those people asking them to explain why they donated. police here, they say they have a handle on the situation and that they are in a position to end it in the next few days. that's according to the new interim police chief. again, i feel like a broken record in saying this how exactly this ends, we still don't know. despite these emergency powers being invoked. >> brian: definitely going to be a tense day. grady, you know, this crackdown did work to open up the bridges.
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the threat of toeing -- getting insurance, taking their licenses did open up the bridges. i got a sense that it will eventually open up ottawa. >> you know, brian, one difference from what we saw there, compared to what's happening here is, we saw the police there engaging with the protesters by handing out fliers and warning them that in the next couple of days they could be arrested if they stay put. we haven't seen that here. those measures put in by the prime minister are much more sweeping. they could freeze your bank account. you could essentially be out of work. when i talk to the truckers here they say it doesn't change anything. i already can't do my job because i'm not vaccinated and can't cross the border so this doesn't change anything for me. >> steve: real quick, grady, the people of canada, i'm sure they have done polls, whose side are they on? the truckers or the government's? >> i have even talked to people, steve, who say they don't agree
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with how the truckers are conveying their message but they agree with the message. they think prime minister justin trudeau too powerful in putting covid restrictions in place. they say these truckers' voices have been heard now it's time to go home. they do agree with the trucker was though. >> ainsley: it's going to be interesting to see if the tow truck drivers actually tow them away because they are truckers, too. they drive a form of a truck. >> brian: they are going to get arrested if they don't, right? >> i don't know if they would be arrested but that is certainly a sticky situation if you are one of those tow truck drivers because, remember, these are the guys that they know and help on a regular basis. >> steve: grady trimble live from ottawa, canada where it is very, very cold. thank you very much for the update. meanwhile last night tucker carlson had this observation. grady just mentioned the prime minister justin trudeau, tucker had this observation about people who are doing things that
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maybe the greater country don't necessarily agree with. >> this new class of dictators seizes power incrementally through the bureaucracy. they never raise their voices. they don't wave their arms. they smile and tell you they are protecting democracy and public health. they praise diversity. even as they demand conformity. they are entirely passive aggressive. but they are no less dangerous. one morning you wake up and they have canceled your job and seized your bank account on the crime of disagreeing with them. this is the architecture of tyranny. not just happening in canada it's happening here in the united states and it will be used against against us. bet on it. >> brian: that was put very well. i would add this. is that i saw some of the interviews. shannon last night trying to see as much as i did about this. a lot of the truckers going i really have no cushion. i really have to go back to work. i can't afford lose my insurance and lose my license. >> ainsley: they are going to
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get vaccinated? >> brian: when blue collar people protest for the most part a lot of them live paycheck to paycheck. you don't do it to be rich. you do it for other reasons which they can describe. they don't have a lot of cushion. so i see some of them, look, i'm not going to back off but i have got to be practical. i have got kids. i can't afford to go to jail. >> ainsley: they have to get vaccinated because they can't work. >> brian: they are going to freeze their bank accounts which is worse. it's just nuts. i actually said police chief crack down on criminals. looks at truck drivers and doesn't see criminals. that's the problem. you want to sit here and be unvaccinated. sit here. you are not causing any trouble? oh, you wants me fired because i let the truck drivers be here? all right. take your job. >> steve: somebody had to fall on their sword. >> ainsley: when they start arresting going to look bad truck drivers in those zones they get arrested and fails jail
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time and face fines. >> brian: five provinces have come out and said they told justin trudeau you should not be doing these emergency powers for the first time ever. it's an overreaction and six separate ones. they have already dropped a lot of the mandates and a lot of the demands. steve: meanwhile, vladimir putin has some demands, ukraine can never be a member of nato. he has other stuff. it looks as if today could actually be the day. yesterday we told you that perhaps he was pulling some forces back. but, there are other reports this morning that apparently things are moving in to firing range. joe biden addressed the nation late yesterday afternoon trying to calm people down, i don't know if he did. listen to this. >> we have not yet verified the russian military units are returning to their home bases. indeed, our analysts indicate that they remain very much in a threatening position. united states and allies and partners around the world are
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ready to impose powerful sanctions. these measures are ready to go. >> as soon as and if russia moves. will impose long-term consequences. we will undermine russia's ability to compete economically and strategically. when it comes to nord stream 2, the pipeline that would bring natural gas from russia to germany. if russia further invades ukraine, it will not happen. i will not pretend this will be painless. there could be impact on our energy prices. so we are taking active steps to alleviate the pressure on our observe energy markets and offset raising prices. >> steve: they are already -- the prices are already through the roof. >> ainsley: is he not going to send american troops into ukraine to fight. he said it's still possible that russia could invade. he said we need proof that confirm that russia actually did pull back their troops because they are saying they did but we need to see it. >> brian: his staff scrambled to get him in front of -- his response to something. we for this. we got up to this news. ukraine is hit by a huge
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cyberattack talking to the ministry of defense. also, we see that they are moving into attack positions in some places. in others they are pulling back. jennifer griffin reported yesterday said we know they are pulling back. so why the president says we have no proof of it, maybe that's a tactic, too. a lot of people are thinking that the president won already. for example the "new york times" headline is sleepy joe biden making vladimir putin blink? "the washington post," biden has putin trapped in the corner. now comes the hard part. i want both of those things to be right. i'm just amazed that they wrote them now. >> steve: because they have got to. because joe biden, a lot of analysts say look, if you are going to talk about sanctions do it before they actually invade. instead oh, yeah, once they invade, then we are going to do something bad. and if you think the cyberattacks on ukraine were something. wait until the united states levies sanctions against russia and all those ransomware people who never got in trouble reportedly for the colonial
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pipeline, when they start flipping the switch in your town, just remember, could have done this before but he did not. pete hegseth had this observation about the biden administration. >> what is the true deterrent that this administration has created from vladimir putin? it does not exist. which leaves us begging and pleading vladimir putin to not do something. based on interest interests that don't align ours. that's where we are -- not the threats that we are leveling. cyberattacks effectively unanswered because we are not willing to bring down the heat and the smackdown on his economy and on frankly him that would need to deter him. >> brian: i worry about a situation where we try for two months with our allies to use diplomacy and it doesn't work. because, if it does work for vladimir putin, and he takes ukraine, can you imagine all those baltic states are going to
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be in trouble and china is going to say wait a second i will take taiwan and sanctions the word is for those people think there is going to be swift and unified sanctions on russia not exactly. behind the scenes u.s. european officials hammer out of the details how hard to hit moscow. they go on to say through a government official, shocker, germany, the toughest, hungry also. because hungry is like -- i kind of like vladimir putin and germany goes i kind of want to get nord stream 2 going. and keep talking like nord stream 2. it's not our pipeline. we left it. i don't know why we had a nord stream 1 was green lighted. he has no problem with it now got to go up to germany and don't do nord stream 2. if germany -- i'm going to do it. what are we going to do, attack germany? >> ainsley: he invades ukraine we have to hit him hard and impose sanctions. >> brian: reps of the world might not be on the same page. >> steve: another failure of the biden administration. they should have lined up all the allies before the shooting
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starts. and it could start later. >> ainsley: let's talk about san francisco. yesterday we had several guests on talking about the recall there you have the school board. you have some very progressive school board members. these three right here, including the president and the board members. they were recalled overwhelmingly yesterday. in san francisco, even san francisco said you three are too woke for our community. >> steve: you know, how many times have we told you if you don't like something, vote something out. in san francisco, san francisco has become an embarrassment when it comes to schools because they have been in the national spotlight. they even admit that out there. so, of the school board members, only -- there are only seven, but only three were up for re-election. all three swept out. because they say -- they said that they prioritized racial equity when they were members because that's why they were voted in. >> ainsley: without opening the schools, they wanted to change the names of 44 schools out
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there. >> steve: right. >> ainsley: they wanted to change the admission process for this very competitive school. >> steve: way too woke even for san francisco, that tells you where we are as a country right now. >> brian: so london breed is the mayor. believe it or not, london breed was for this recall, is happy. elections can be difficult. but these patience were fighting for what matters most to their kids. our kids have suffered tremendously during the pandemic dealing with learning loss and significant mental health challenges. focus on the basics of providing quality education. did she get kevin mccarthy's talking points? like a republican when she said that. >> steve: she has glenn youngkin's talking points. >> ainsley: she is going to pick the three to replace. >> brian: that's going to be interesting. san francisco gave us wild rice and smash and grab. we saw the birth of all this craziness in san francisco and they gave new meaning to the term under class because they have actually invited and provided amenities to homeless
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people. so homelessness has taken over. woke has taken over their schools. and the criminals taking over high end stores. good luck with san francisco. >> steve: when it comes to who is looking out for the kids. ultimately it's the parents. here is one earlier on the channel. >> it's a dumpster fire, honestly. i mean, the school board is focused on everything except reopening schools or on quality education or focused on renaming schools on -- you know, using kids as subjects for their social experiment. we are replace [inaudible] at the start. the mayor and the entire city administration see a lot of angry parents. parents are simply not going to put up with this type of administration. we all know it's one of the richest cities in the country. you know, we are 7% reading level state of california [inaudible] country. it's not for lack of money or resources that our kids are
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falling behind because of school administrators like this one. >> steve: so the question is, is san francisco and that election a precursor for what we are going to see across the country in november? again, if you don't like something, you vote it out. how much of america can you vote out when it comes to your leaders? we're going to find out soon enough? >> ainsley: or pull your kids out of that school. >> steve: if you can afford to. >> ainsley: that's true. all right. coming up. 6-year-old little girl last seen in 2019 is found safe in a secret room under a staircase. >> steve: unbelievable. >> ainsley: nancy grace joins us as the girl's parents are charged in her disappearance. >> steve: what a case. she turned down a million bucks to stop voicing her opinion on school closures, why a former levi's president says she won't be silenced. she is not quiet now. ♪ ♪
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>> steve: a little girl who is believed to be abducted by her parents after they lost custody was found safe and sound more than two years after her disappearance. 6-year-old paisley schulteen was discovered -- look at that. a cold wet makeshift space under a couple of stairs in her grandfather's upstate new york home. her mother and father have been charged in the case along with paisley's grandfather. it was his house. fox nation host nancy grace joins us with more. they didn't know where this little girl was for a couple of years. they suspected the parents. and then when the cops knocked
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on grandpa's door, he said come on in. take a look around. because they had tried to hide her so effectively, they thought, you know what? cops will never find her. they found her. >> they found her. the way that grandpa acted irritates me no end. they found her all right. she was under kind of a false staircase. it was a staircase, too. but there was a secret layer under there. full of wet, heavy, soggy, blankets. that's where the little girl was. she had a full on room upstairs with her name on the wall. that's where she was sleeping, the evidence shows. but what is so irritating. the a lot of people siding with the bioparents. let me tell you something, how many times i have begged, begged the courts to take a child away from the parent and this child ends up dead because they are back in the home? in this case paisley was taken away from her bioparents for a
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reason. the court did it. and gave her someone else to take care of her. a guardian. so there is something very, very wrong in this scenario. it's not like not without my daughter sally field risked her life to get her daughter back. this child was taken away from the parents for good reason. let me point something out the biodad and grandpa have gotten out of jail on bond. the mom is still behind bars. why? because she has an outstanding warrant on her from family court. i wonder what that is? >> steve: there are certain things we don't know, nancy. we don't know why the mother and father -- biological mother and father lost custody of the child we don't know that at this point. we don't know why the cops, if they suspected the grandfather could be hiding the kid with the name on the wall upstairs. why they didn't get a warrant sooner. it's been two years. people have been worried sick about her. >> this is what i have been told. they have looked in the home
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before. i was furious to start with. the yard, a jungle gym, hint, hint. there is a kid in there but apparently they had gone out and searched the area before. they had tried to get in the house before. they had looked in the house once before and everybody played dumb. i wonder that, too. it's been almost three years while the family that had taken her in was dividdle ling their thumbs. that family also had older sister. when paisley was released. she immediately was taken to older sister who she recognize and got a happy meal from mcdonald's this child hasn't been in school or to a doctor in nearly three years. thanks, mom. >> steve: no kidding. she is going to be with the people who have been taking care of the sister. you touched on one of my favorite parts of this story. that is when the police officers drove this little girl to reunite her with her sister and the family she would be living with she got kind of emotional
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when she saw the mcdonald's. and the officer said what's going on? she said i haven't been to a mcdonald's in a couple of years. he turned the cruiser around, went back and bought her a happy meal. that's great cop with a heart. >> can i tell you something typically when i cover these cases when i investigate these cases? they do not have a fairy tale ending. usually the child ends up dead. and when i heard this, i was so overjoyed because this practically never happens. this is really a miracle. the parents are so worked up and so estranged that really kidnap their child they will do anything. >> steve: we will see what happens next. at least she is safe for now. nancy grace. >> amen. >> steve: amen indeed. we will watch crime stories with nancy grace on fox nation. we do that all the time. nancy, thank you very much for weighing in on this. >> thank you. >> steve: you bet. 7:27 now here in new york city. still ahead. more than 100 new york city workers just lost their jobs
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because they would not get a jab. we're going to talk to a union leader on why even one worker getting fired too many. >> steve: plus, who is going to sing the national anthem at this weekend's daytona 500 on fox? we will reveal the super star performer who just got the job straight ahead. you are watching "fox & friends" live from daytona and the big apple ♪ ♪ psoriasis really messes with you. try. hope. fail. no one should suffer like that. i started cosentyx®. five years clear. real people with psoriasis look and feel better with cosentyx. don't use if you're allergic to cosentyx. before starting get checked for tuberculosis. an increased risk of infection, some serious and a lowered ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor about an infection or symptoms or if you had a vaccine or plan to. tell your doctor if your crohn's disease symptoms develop or worsen. serious allergic reaction may occur.
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>> carley: back with headlines, starting with a fox news alert. a massive fire is sparked on long island, new york, after a tanker crashes into a business police say the driver lost control of the tanker. it overturned and crashed into a vacant store front. it was carrying about 13,000 gallons of gasoline. some of that burning gas spread into a local sewer system causing flames to shoot out of several manhole covers. the driver was able to escape. three firefighters are being evaluated for injuries. former u.s. ambassador to the u.n. nikki haley slamming 18-year-old elaine geu, the american born skier who has decided to represent china in
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the olympics. haley telling real clear politics, quote: you have to pick a side i you are either american or chinese. you are standing for freedom or human rights abuses. geu has one won a paver medals for the beijing olympics repeatedly dodged questions on her citizenship. country star trace adkins will sing the national anthem at the soldout daytona 500 this weekend. ♪ o say can you see ♪ by the dawn's early light ♪ >> about 100,000 fans are expected to attend the 64th running of the great american race on sunday. pete, will, rachel and rick will broadcast "fox & friends weekend" live from daytona beach all weekend long. going to be a great time down there, ainsley. >> ainsley: it will be. thank you so much, carley. >> you are welcome.
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>> ainsley: eric adams firing more than 1400 municipal workers for refusing to get vaccinated. this includes 36 nypd personnel. 25 fdny employees and sanitation workers. the president of uniform sanitation association and head of the municipal labor committee and he joins us now. good morning to you. >> good morning. >> ainsley: what's your reaction to this to lose 40 of your guys? >> it never should have happened. it never should have happened. this is the totally ridiculous. we had a program with the last administration that either you got tested weekly or you got the vaccination. and it was working well. at the end of the last administration. they turn around and they -- he wants to mandate all city workers. you know, two years ago, this city was closed. and the only people that could
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get into the city were ordered into the city to go to work. and it was terrible. the workers -- the city workers of new york city came into work. they got sick. they went home, they passed the virus onto the family. they got better, if they got better. we lost many city workers to death then they came back to work. now all of the sudden' be we are not good enough to be city workers. you have people that are 18 years on the job. you have people that have 15 years on the job. look, there is a group of people out there in this world that just doesn't want to put this virus into their body or whatever it may be. the system was working. testing weekly. and then also turning around and getting the vaccination. >> ainsley: the mayor says the city workers served on the front lines during the pandemic and by getting. will you roll up the prompter
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please? thank you. by getting vaccinated they are once again showing how they are willing to do the right thing to protect themselves and all new yorkers. our goal was always to vaccinate. not terminate. city workers stepped up and met the goals placed before them. there were 4,000 on the chopping block last week. then on friday many of them decided to submit that they had one shot. not as many people were fired but still 1400 people lost their jobs. what's your reaction to the mayor's comments? >> well, first of all, this was mandated by the last administration. this mayor that's in there now, is just following through with it. as far as -- as far as the virus is concerned, we had control of it. we had control of it the best we possibly could. we had testing weekly. city workers were tested weekly. or they got the vaccination. right now. the people that went out there
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and got the shot, well maybe they like to eat every day and they like to pay their bills. and what about the children? the medical coverage stops. you have children that are sick out there. wives that are sick. but, yet, it's more important to stop testing and trying to stop it? >> ainsley: it makes no sense. they should have provided alternatives like they did in the last administration. either you test or you show proof of your antibodies but don't fire people who are just trying to work really hard and put food on the table and give their kids medical care. you are right. thank you so much, harry, for coming on with us. >> no problem. thank you so much. >> ainsley: you are welcome. president biden is urging for diplomacy with russia. but won't answer questions from reporters on the ukraine crisis. >> thank you. i will keep you informed. [many shouting questions] >> ukraine as a precursor to
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russian invasion? >> ainsley: and he walks away. jeremy hunt trained ukrainian armed forces when he was in the army. you will hear why he says our enemies can smell weakness. who's on it with jardiance? we're 25 million prescriptions strong. we're managing type 2 diabetes... ...and heart risk. we're working up a sweat before coffee. and saying, “no thanks...” ...to a boston cream. jardiance is a once-daily pill that can reduce the risk of cardiovascular death for adults who also have known heart disease. so, it could help save your life from a heart attack or stroke. and jardiance lowers a1c. jardiance can cause serious side effects including... ...dehydration, genital yeast or urinary tract infections, and sudden kidney problems. ketoacidosis is a serious side effect that may be fatal. a rare, but life-threatening bacterial infection in the skin of the perineum could occur. stop taking jardiance and call your doctor right away... ...if you have symptoms of this bacterial infection, ...ketoacidosis, or an allergic reaction, ...and don't take it if you're on dialysis.
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if you switch to cabenuva, attend all treatment appointments. with once-a-month cabenuva, i'm good to go. ask your doctor about once-monthly cabenuva. are. >> still open, the ache of historic responsibility. russia and united states share for global stability for the sake of our common future to choose diplomacy. but let there be no doubt, if russia commits this breach ukraine. no, sir hesitate to respond. >> brian: let's hope as the world waits for russia to make its next move. president biden is making a plea with vladimir putin to take the root of diplomacy on the ukraine while sending more troops to the
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region. training armed forces for the threat they face right now jeremy hunt. i know you don't know exactly what the ukraine's have. are you convinced that they have everything they need to put up a defense? >> yeah. we know that over the last several months we have been supplying them with anti-tank, anti-aircraft weaponry to defend themselves against putin's attack we have to look at how we got here. you look at joe biden has now put the rest of the world in such an unstable position because he has weakened our military back here at home. it's amazing all of this talk with president trump being a stooge of putin. and republicans are colluding with the russians, but it's interesting that putin only feels comfortable invading places when democrats are in charge. look at the obama administration and now in crime i can't understand now in the biden
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administration here putin is again. it's interesting to me that this only seems to happen when democrats are in charge. >> brian: i did notice they did take georgia when condoleezza rice was secretary of state and george w. bush was president but they went into that incursion. starkly rebuked and that was the beginning of this type of behavior. a couple other things. they say we are going to have swift and unified sanctions on russia slammed right at them very hard. however, when pressed, political rights today that we might not be on the same page, especially germany and hungary. they are not really into the strict sanctions. the german chancellor was there yesterday. does that worry you? >> yeah. well, the problem is that germany has become so dependent on russia now for energy. i mean, they have basically gotten themselves nord stream 2 they now have themselves so dependent. that's by the way a huge cautionary tale for us at home why we have to be energy independent. we can't do this crazy stuff and depend on russia for oil. that's why a lot of the softness
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and h. in certain countries in europe because they depend on russia. we have to be tough. it's amazing to me that biden now had lost -- has lost yet our footing around the globe. so we have to be stand up and be strong and have something better than just harshly worded letters. >> brian: too, jeremy, if they go in say that. if he hold out he could with store some of that standing that's what's at stake his entire presidency and of course eastern europe. real quick, this is an important time. the press has an important job. watch president biden after that 10:30 response yesterday, listen to what he didn't say. >> thank you, i will keep you informed. >> mr. president. >> mr. president. >> mr. president whether or not they are diest can a a little. >> ukraine as a precursor to a russian invasion? >> are they behind the cyberattack, mr. president? >> brian: find it unbelievably frustrating. especially if you know the topic, you welcome those questions.
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what's he worried about? >> oh, well, all of his handlers are trying to rush him off the stage because they see just how weak he looks. he has been weak this entire time but just how embarrassing it is his record. think about this, jimmy carter lost the embassy in tehran decades ago. that was the end of his presidency. joe biden has lost two embassies in seven months. he lost our american embassy in kabul and now lost our embassy in kyiv. so this is actual. one of the reasons why i'm running for congress is to restore actually fresh leadership back to washington and get accountability for what's happened. i would love to you join hunt for georgia.com. will. >> brian: congressman hunt, if you become congressman hunt i hope you are on the armed services committee with your background. thank you very much. i would like to check in with the power invested in me with janice dean. not just the run down. i want to find out the weather for me. >> janice: so great of you. you are such a good person, brian kilmeade. he has his own website brian
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kilmeade.com. lots of construction going on out here in midtown, manhattan. take a look at the maps. i have good news if you like warm temperatures. it's not so warm right now. but look at some of the heat that's going to come our way on thursday. so, in some cases 10 to 15 degrees above what we are today. so 61 in new york, 64 in philadelphia. now, we do have a big storm system we are watching. this cold front and an associated low bringing the potential for not only heavy snow but severe storms. we could have a severe weather outbreak tonight into thursday. watching that and then the potential for some measurable snow from the rockies up towards the great lakes. but my concern, of course, is not only the potential for severe storms but the ice forecast. if you live in some of these areas. make sure you are listening to your latest forecast details and the severe storms tonight and overnight. fox weather.com. to download your app. and make sure you are on top of all the forecast details. all right, brian kilmeade.com. back to you. [laughter] >> brian: thanks, janice, i appreciate it. >> you are welcome. >> brian: i'm going to choose to
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go break down. a former lee via's executive not holding back after turning down $1 million in severance to keep our mouth shut over school closures. douglas murray reacts. part 2 of my interview with master p. how he went from rapper to business titan. >> we got to look out for the elderly people in our community. and that's what this is about for me success and wealth is about what you give. you have. for severe eosinophilic asthma. not for sudden breathing problems. allergic reactions can occur. get help right away for swelling of face, mouth, tongue, or trouble breathing. infections that can cause shingles have occured. don't stop steroids unless told by your doctor. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection. may cause headache, injection site reactions, back pain, and fatigue. ask your asthma specialist about a nunormal with nucala.
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>> speaking out after quitting her job and giving up a million-dollar payout. the company tried to silence her push to keep schools open. >> this whole thing is sort of culminated and really being about the silencing of dissent. and really not being allowed to hold a viewpoint that is outside whatever the mainstream narrative is, the orthodoxy. to agree to stay silent at the last minute because of money felt so unacceptable and just grows to me and in violation of everything i said i stood for. >> she had to leave levi. author douglas murray is joining
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us on this wednesday with a reaction. you know the thing about her story is when you look at the average person and then look at her and she was a highly paid, highly compensated executive. they hear that she moved her family from california to colorado so that her children wouldn't have to wear the mask and get have a more normal school life. and she quit over that ultimately because of the top guys said you could be the ceo of the whole company, but you've got to shut up and she wouldn't do it. >> it's incredibly admirable story. i urge everyone to read it. it is an extraordinary story. real actual everyday heroism. she didn't have to give up the job. she did it because she wanted to speak out against schools during covid. she didn't want to do that thing that so many in california expected of them which is to be
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a hypocrite. remember, and california, there is a democrat mayor in san francisco who has our mask off while dancing around and really getting the music. there is a democrat governor who has his mask off while telling nice french dinner with lobbyists. all the while, they preside over a state where the children are meant to be masks in the schoolroom and whilst they are doing physical exercise. here is an executive from levi who says no, i'm not willing to. i'm going to oppose this. and so she has to go. >> ainsley: people are dying and we were all out of school for a few weeks. we thought it was going to be a few weeks and it turned into months. in many areas it turn into a year if not more. she sang what most parents are agreeing with. they want the schools to stay open. what is the big deal? is she not allowed to have an opinion? they cancel you if you disagree?
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>> look at the details of what she was put through. when she started to speak out on this, she was attacked within her own company for being let's get ready for the list. despite the fact that she has two black children. anti-trans for some reason. anti-other minorities. the head of the diversity and inclusion and equity unit at levi said that she was an adequate ally to the black community. other people said that she was antifat people, antiobesity. and this is the absolute litany of the modern accusations against somebody to unperson somebody and eventually force them out. they tried to force her out on that and silencer. she said i will not have my silence bought. that is one of the things i think is most admirable about this. if more people in this country behave like that, we would be a lot better off.
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>> brian: we only have 20 or 30 seconds. you believe that she gets another job quickly at the level she deserves? accuse people know this has nothing to do with her job performance. >> you know, i hope so. she doubled the value of the brand and the time that she was at levi. any sensible capitalist would hire her tomorrow. anyone who wanted decent and honest people in the company should hire her straightaway. >> steve: particular job. thank you. >> ainsley: thanks, douglas. still a calm, we have candace cameron barre. she is going to join us. ♪ ♪ psoriasis really messes with you. try. hope. fail. no one should suffer like that. i started cosentyx®. five years clear. real people with psoriasis look and feel better with cosentyx.
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there's high hopes for him. seeing comments that remind me of one more -- >> 6-year-old little girl and 2019 is found safe. >> when i heard this, i was so overjoyed. it's practically never happens. this is really a miracle. ♪♪ oh, say can you see ♪♪ speak of the national anthem at the sold out daytona this weekend. ♪ ♪ >> that is fire island new york off the southern coast of long island. it's supposed to be so much fun in the summertime. >> brian: i went there this summer. it's sandy. it was totally overrun, totally
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covered. everything was under water. it went back. >> steve: thank goodness. >> ainsley: the water receded. >> steve: look at this as you pan over to the mezzanine level of studio m. welcome to our number three. a new show, "fox & friends." we are number one thanks to you. >> brian: by the way, we just set a world panning record. four straight bands. it's never been done before. your move, cnn. try to beat it on today show that still on. u.s. and nato are still skeptical on the ukraine border. the ukrainians gather for a day of unity. ♪ ♪ >> ainsley: steve harrigan is live from key have as president biden vows u.s. troops will not fight should
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vladimir putin invade. good morning. >> good morning, ainsley. here we are seeing images over and over again from russian control state television of russian forces pulling back. they are putting russian tanks on trains. they are pulling out military vehicles. russian president vladimir boudin says he continues to pull back amounts of russian forces from ukraine's border, not giving those amounts. when you talk to the nato secretary general, he said facts on the ground actually show the exact opposite is happening around ukraine. >> so far, we have not seen any de-escalation on the ground. on the contrary, it appears that russia continues their military buildup. >> in a definite nervous afternoon yesterday. there were multiple cyberattacks across ukraine. two of the main banks hit. the defense ministry also hit as well.
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it's not clear whether the attackers work for the russian government or whether they could have been hackers. it was not a major damage attack as far as that goes. it could have just been a warning shot of course before russian invasions, we have often seen these cyberattacks. guys, back to you. >> steve: thank you very much. let's bring in an expert on this. retired brigadier general is a u.s. senate candidate for new hampshire and a joins us live. generally, good morning to you. what do you make of my vladimir putin is doing? on one hand, i'm pulling people back on the other hand we hear from the nato guide, we don't see that. is this some psi ops on here? >> it's classic military deception. it is not a surprise. you don't want to give you a hand. as i have said before, putin's playing chess and we are playing checkers. he's got a strategy. he's going to follow that
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strategy. we don't know what he's going to do. the cards are all in his hand and he's playing them. you know, the larger problem, steve is the fact that we have a huge imbalance in our national security in the homeland and in our foreign policy which makes us look weak. we have ineffective leadership. our leadership is not respected. lack of trust and we have no credibility. and we back out lack of credibility up with withdrawal from afghanistan and a number of actions that we have done that have been bold in the china, and iran. >> ainsley: is that what you mean when you say ukraine is the first domino but it won't be a the last? are you talking about surrounding areas are china? >> yeah, i'm talking about. it's a problem with russia, china, north korea, and iran. they are all expanding. we are not able to contain them.
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iran is moving forward with its nuclear program. north korea is doing the same and they are being very provocative with their missile launches. china is doing everything across the globe to include signing a silk road trade deal in cuba which is very, very dangerous. in our backyard, 90 miles from our borders. we've got china. back in the '60s, it was the soviet union. russia, there's really no secret there. he does not want to ukraine in nato. he doesn't want a nato ally in the country bordering his country. ukraine is hugely resource-rich. the land alone if it was agriculturally developed good feet over 600 million people. this is a very important country to him. both culturally and resourcewise. and, you know, he's playing his cards just like china, russia, and north korea is.
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this is a huge foreign policy problem. and we are weak at our diplomacy. we don't use the terrence. and we have no peace through strength. >> a couple of things. what do terrence would you like to see? more troops and our nato nations. you think that one thing we could offer them is only giving -- excuse me, ukraine and associate membership, not giving them full membership should that come down the pike. what are you saying would be good? >> i think we should have already pulled the trigger on some of those sanctions so we are not always looked at as someone who has just -- who just threatens to do things and then gets caught holding the bag. i think we should have moved our very strategic navy. subsurface and air and locations in the black sea in the mediterranean to match what is done and to give a real signal that hey, we are there to support you, ukraine. we are there to support your ground fight. we don't want up but troops on the ground.
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you can do a lot of things outside there in a very indirect way to be able to disrupt and degrade any kind of invasion across the border. lastly, we have great special operation forces that can get into that country and can do the proper training, advising, assisting of the ukrainians. give them the assistance that they need. to be there for stay behind operations if required. and then, and then, you know, really, you know, support them when an invasion happens. it makes sense to do that then it does to sit with our arms crossed and get up in briefings and threatened to do things. >> steve: general, a quick yes-or-no answer. it does he invade? >> i say yes. i say at one point in time, he does invade. i'm willing and hoping to be
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wrong. >> steve: general, thank you very much for joining us today for manchester. >> you are very welcome very welcome. >> ainsley: president trump is reacting to the drum investigation. all of that news broke over the weekend and through the weekend. the president of fox news caught up with president trump to get his reaction. he said it looks like this is just the beginning. if you read the filing of any understanding of what took place -- and i call this a long time ago. you are going to see a lot of bad things happening having to do with what really just is a continuation of the crime of the century. >> steve: ride, and that crime is -- we got a heads up from mr. durham who is conducting the investigation from the department of justice. one of the filings he made on friday. and it's a conflict of interest filing. what is clear is that hilary rodham and in, clinton campaign so they could invent a
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connection between trump and russia during the campaign and when he was president as well per the internet company run by the name of rodney joffe. who in government gave him this contract where he could get this information about the white house? why would he then cooperate with the hilary clinton campaign? and, how did he wind up with the same law year michael sussman -- these are big questions that we don't have answers to. yesterday, dailymail.com was outside we believe chelsea clinton's apartment when mrs. clinton came in and, they had some questions. >> did you pay to spy on a trump campaign? when are you going to comment on the spine allegations, hilary? >> brian: i guess that is a no. she will deny it.
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others say, technically, it was not really working for hillary clinton at that time in which he met baker. about what he has said. this firm by rodney joffe. he says there is no proof that he was political. you know he is political. number two is, this is as bad in some ways as somebody with this type of governmental access with a private contract. you cannot -- you have to be trusted when you have these government contracts. if you have the government contract and you're getting some information to another country, you go to jail for life, maybe even executed. he has this type of access and decides to use it for political purposes. that seems to be where this durham report is going good for everybody and republicans and
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democrats wondering what other contractor has political leanings instead of doing their job trying to make sure somebody wins the race. >> he wasn't working for her at the time. he was the attorney for the campaign. the reason he is indicted is because he found bank records being paid by hillary clinton's campaign to allegedly do this. >> steve: a lot of this information has been uncovered during the investigation of the bank situation. now, mr. durham -- the good thing about mr. durham, is unlike certain prosecutors or investigators who, you know, during the miller case, how many times did we hear leak, leak, leak? you don't hear anything. the only reason we know about this filing is because he made it public. he filed it with the court to talk about conflicts of interest at this particular attorney has with other people so the court is aware and they can figure a way to do something about the
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conflicts before the case winds up in court but it sounds like it will in the month of may. >> ainsley: president trump was the doj to absolutely declassify all the records. treason at the highest level. if they can do this to our country to a sitting president, other countries can do this. it's in that a mock matter of national security as well. >> brian: you see this crime surge is very serious. once the world to save his big city is far from it. that's why mayor eric adams got elected. former captain of the police force was there for i think 20 years. he went up to capitol hill -- excuse me, he went up to albany to try to convince fellow democrats that you need to get rid of the no cash bail. you been to the prisons through no fault of this policy. the previous mayor was there. we now have a crime problem that is overrunning the streets of new york between smash and grab sam between throwing people on the track and outright assault.
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we have to be able to put people in jail and stay there. cops aren't making the arrests, because i know they don't stay pure these criminals are allowed to stay on the streets. he failed. it is not necessarily his fault. these lawmakers have no conscience. they don't live on the streets. they live in cocoons. they did not bend. instead of calling a press conference to say, my party is letting me down and i'm going to need the most powerful democrats to stand up to them alongside me, he came and attacked the press. >> i'm a black man that's the mayor. that my story has been interpreted by people that don't look like me. we've got to be honest about that. how many black editorial boards? how many blacks have determine how these stories are being written? how many asians? how many east indians? everybody talks about my government being the first -- we
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should diversification in the newsrooms. not writing stories for people who are arrested and beaten by police officers. you're not writing stories from those that are dealing with high crime. diversify your newsrooms so i can look out and see people that look like me. >> steve: when he looked out and look at the reporters, he saw a number of reporters that were selected by his staff to be there, because of covid protocols. only people selected by the staff actually got to be there. and so, if he is complaining about who is in the room, his office but those people in the room. the irony is that this rant talking about the racial bias came one week after he signed an executive order promising to respect to free speech rights. he said "we are going to allow the press no matter if we agree or disagree, we are going to allow them to report what happened in the city. that is what the press has been
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doing. it does not make him look good. it's a problem with the makeup of the press. >> ainsley: one paper in particular was writing about his meeting. >> brian: he got beat up. >> ainsley: he doesn't like that and that's why he's complaining about what's being written about him in the press. some others said the democratic political consultant said eric adams -- he's not getting the help that he needs in albany. he's frustrated. he is angry and he's taking it out on the press. talk of race will not help them put it exactly right. if he would just focus on crime i get crime fixed in this city, because that is what everyone talks about in this city. we are all worried about the crime in our neighborhoods. if you would just get it under control and work with these lawmakers and hopefully, they will listen to him and they will start changing how they feel about it. then he would be glowing.
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>> steve: that would be a great story and people would report that story. crime is out of control as we've said. as we been talking about for months now. it just so happens, he is the mayor now. six weeks in a crime is out of control. there is something that happened back in december that was horrific. we could show you images of stuff like this happening every day across new york city. >> ainsley: we want him to clean up the city. >> brian: and editorial today's "new york times" talking about how this no cash bail has hurt black new yorkers more than anything else. read that story on "the new york times" editorial section and know the mayor and this editorial, they agree with each other. they don't agree on who to blame publicly. >> steve: that is some of what's going on. in the meantime, joining us right now with news from texas. >> ainsley: remember when lori lightfoot tried to pull this and she said she was willing to talk to reporters of fellow. she got sued because of it.
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people are more interested than crime. new overnight. two texas deputies are injured in a shoot out with a suspect. it happened in texas west of houston good deputies responding to a man firing a weapon inside a home here the deputies injuries are nonlife threatening for the suspect was shot and killed. in new york city, an urgent manhunt is underway for a suspect he reportedly tried to ram into nypd officers with a car near the reporting officer's opening fire on the vehicle. police believe the car was connected to a series of robberies. that driver took off. no officers were hurt. there's into this. this cdc is reportedly set to update its mass guidance. the director is expected to discuss masking guidance at the white house covid briefing today. the agency is reportedly considering a new benchmark for whether mask are needed. basing it on levels of severe
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disease and hospitalization instead of on level of transmission. 97% of the u.s. counties are above the threshold for mass recommendations. new overnight san francisco overwhelming voting to recall three school board officials. frustrated parents are fed up with these woke politics that the school board has been prioritizing instead of educating children. san francisco mayor will appoint three replacements in the coming days. they will likely take office in mid-march. former nfl quarterback tom brady said that a future hall of famer still wants to play football for the nfl network reporting sources close to brady believe he is not fully close the door on the nfl despite his recent retirement. they believe brady is maybe, just may be looking another team. how about that guy? the saga continues on brady. >> steve: apparently -- the life of golf not so great.
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>> ainsley: stay retired. we know he will. >> ainsley: is at their table tennis or -- >> ainsley: foosball. >> steve: it's all about pickle ball down in florida. i just bought a pickle ball set. >> brian: 19 minutes after the hour. i took a trip down to the big east and asked their wrapper about his journey to success. where he came from, what message she's trying to get out to others trying to make it in this world.
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his community. >> brian: i spent the day with him and saw how much he gives back to new orleans, but it means to him. i think you are going to like what he's doing with his life. watch. speak out your looking to dominate another area of new orleans. where are we? >> the restaurant business, i'm going to take you into the place where you want one of the best burgers in louisiana. >> steve: do we have to pay a cover? >> i got you. you're with me. >> just have an amazing food. >> this premise, you want to grow this. >> i want to turn it into a franchise all over new orleans. we market and a lot of my product is in here. the more we make, the more we give. you can see a lot of products because we look at aunt jemima and uncle ben. people like us on that and we change that narrative. putting products on the shelves. i wanted to be thousands of
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people like me that have products. that's how we build economic empowerment. >> brian: what made you do the deal? >> we shared a lot of the same passion, food, family community. we thought it was a perfect deal to work with master p. and get some of his items launched in the entire store. >> it looks like you know your way around. >> this is known as the products we have. we have so much other stuff we make. i don't know if you've ever tasted anything like this. this is a master p. icon ship. >> brian: how would you describe them? >> this is the way i like it. we are all about taste. it's got the taste good. in louisiana, you've never tasted one like this. >> brian: the best one i've ever had. a little bit of bite, a little bit of time. you've got to be with master p. to be able to eat in the supermarket. i get to know your name around. >> this is master crunch cereal.
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we've got a quality premium at affordable costs. that's master crunch cereal. i have my own brand. this is a blessing to be able to feed so many families. nobody has seen this yet. this is a new product that's coming out. so this character is what my grandpa -- i call it sergeant. he fought in the vietnam war. >> brian: those children of our heroes who have sacrificed their lives to save hours. folds of honor will receive a donation from the soldiers snacks from every bag purchased. man, this is going to be -- >> best to make them say king kong energy drinks. >> brian: do you mind if i take one? ♪ ♪ >> yes, sir. good, good. >> per se, we a few blocks from
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where you grew up. where we now? >> this is where a lot of the elderly people stay out. this is some of that beautiful people that i love the people that raised me. i feel like i could keep coming back and put the story here. we want to make sure we take care of them. we've got to look out. for the elderly people in our community. that's what it's about for me no matter where i get in life, how successful i get. you know, success and wealth is empowering. what you get is what you have. a lot of people are disabled here have everything they need. when he comes here, nothing but love because we know is genuine and it comes from the heart what he is doing for seniors and people in this community. >> this community is so grateful and appreciative for him coming every year. he understands how it really is. >> now you see why i brought you here. we are at the smoothie center. for 20 seconds, we are having a
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big concert. >> brian: there is a plan to everything. to end here is where you are going to begin again. what we saw today was phenomenal. >> steve: your fans that never stop yelling your name and what it means to you. what this all plays means to you. >> it means everything to me. new orleans is everything to me. this is home. >> brian: even though he made money, he never left home. how is big papa's burger chicken and waffles place? >> brian: fantastic. he does not want to build a store outside the community. he wants everyone to be able to go end. soldiers snacks after his grandfather. he falls at these other musicians and says do you want to go 50/50? i'm going to put your name on a snack. you don't have to work for somebody. you can be the owner of something. that is his message. flip over that product and say, can i do it better? get to know the manufacturers. he got to know the whole
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process. while he's coming up in music with a kid, he takes off and goes to college. he said i'm going to these business meetings. these guys are talking over my head. i went back to college to learn more. i don't think i'm the best rapper. i never said i was. as a way to make an impact and be successful. that's why he broadens his horizons. >> you such a cool guy. everyone loves so many so nice. he opened up that store in the old folks home or in the nursing home. >> steve: these people have to hop on a bus in order to go shopping. it cost money. this fixed income plus his crown. the challenges in bad weather. we have to get a supermarket and the senior centers. now he's spreading them all out. and it is affordable any sponsors whole entire rooms. i could've went on more about his business for another half hour. >> those products in the grocery store. are they available elsewhere out of new orleans?
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and if you own a supermarket or chain and you want to make an impact, carry these snacks. they are also my money goes back to communities in need. you will see it all. those stories are all on the bottles, on the boxes and on the bags. >> that's a great job. >> brian: he's got a great message on business. got a real sense of what's going on out there and what the consumer wants. >> ainsley: good job. god bless you. >> coming up on this wednesday, tourists fed why so many americans are searching for sunnier skies rather than masks weather. from the beginning, newday has been the mortgage company for enlisted veterans, helping thousands buy a home, get cash, or lower their
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lives matter actavis during the unrest in the summer of 2020. he has pleaded not guilty. some sad news to report here. here. commentator pj has died. he defied liberal politics bringing leaders of politics another perspective. a two-time best seller. his death comes after a battle with lung cancer. he was 74 years old. those are your headlines. steve, over to you. >> steve: he was a genius when it came to national lampoon. thank you. travelers are flocking down south of florida. look at those images. the sunshine state surging above prepandemic levels despite media critics bashing governor ron desantis' covid response. >> you have this governor ron desantis, this trumpet many me. >> why did it take so long for
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the governor? the science has been clear on is now for a while. >> the governor's box response to the outbreak. >> is he going to be forced to own whatever the consequences are in the sunshine state? >> he is no fan of covid restrictions and no fan of dr. anthony fauci. it's a policy dispute that he sees as a political cash cow. >> steve: as we are coming out of the omicron variant for the most part, numbers are going down. let's go to clay travis. good morning to you. down there in nashville, why do you make of the war of words we've heard over the last number of months over the last year aimed at florida and ron desantis? ed turns out, americans are voting with their feet, they are going to florida. >> ron desantis was right. if the rest of the country had done everything that ron desantis said and did in florida, we would be in a much better place. we are still millions of jobs away from where we where in
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february before covid restrictions and pandemic response began. to your point, steve, people are voting with their feet. it's not only that florida is setting all-time tourism records, it is that they are experiencing growth. much of that growth is coming from new york from california from illinois, from states with the most restrictive covid policies. if people were really afraid of what lord it was doing, why would they overwhelmingly be moving there? people are with their own actions reflecting that they support the actions taken by florida governor ron desantis. florida continues to set all-time record and tourism. by the way, do you know everybody who has been criticizing ron desantis in the mainstream media goes for vacation? to florida. including right now, chris cuomo who was on vacation in florida
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after cnn has been teeing off on the list. >> steve: the thing is when you look at the truckers up in canada, having a peaceful protest talking about they don't like the restrictions. there are people i'm sitting in new york city. there are a lot of people don't like the restrictions here. i spent this last week and in florida. they don't have the restrictions they are but at the same time, people aren't walking around willy-nilly. i would say half the people in stores are still wearing the masks and they are still being careful. when you give people the information to make wise decisions, they can decide for themselves. >> that such an important point. that's why i have an antimask mandate brick in the schools were a long time. i'm not anti-kids wearing mask and schools of parents what their kids to wear a mask. i'm anti-it being mandated. the same thing with a vaccine. i think your point, ron desantis have called florida an oasis of freedom.
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thank god for federalism, steve. if we haven't had it, i think we may have ended up more like canada or australia if we had not allowed every governor the ability to look and what the situation is on the ground and analyze risk factors and what makes sense for their people as opposed to one overall one-size-fits-all federal response which may well have turned us into canada or australia. >> i know during the pandemic you talk during -- you live now in the nashville area. i'm sure that you seen the story about jennifer. she was a brand manager or brand president at levi. that is situated out in california. she moved her family to colorado so that, you know, because she wanted her kids not to be living under the mask mandates they are. she was on with tucker last night.
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she was offered a million dollars to just shut up talking about it. she wouldn't take the money. here she is last night. >> this whole thing is sort of culminated and really being about the silencing of dissent. and really not being allowed to hold a viewpoint that is outside whatever the mainstream narrative is. they agreed to stay silent at the last minute because the money just felt so unacceptable and just grows to me and in violation of everything i said i stood for. >> steve: simply saying things that parents across this country are saying. given her corporate job, or corporate overlords where, like, you've got to shut up. >> no doubt pretty good for her for being able to choose principle over profit. by the way, i don't know if you guys have talked about this yet on the show, but even in san francisco has rejected the heavy-handed left-wing nature of
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totalitarian insanity that seems to have rained down upon many big blue cities. with the scoreboard, did you see the absolute evisceration of the school board members who had wanted to change all the schools names and even the mayor of san francisco herself said hey, i hate that they kids are in masks. they need to be back in school and the need to be back normally. the tide has turned quickly i expect my march 1st when joe biden does it state of the union address that suddenly there's going to be an awful lot of democrats running scared over people like jennifer who are willing to stand up and over the vast numbers of moms and dads that have joined them and what i would call the parent revolution sweeping across this country. >> steve: i am too lazy to look at my phone. what is clicking right now? >> that's a good question. we will speak to the issues that are going on. we have a teachers union member in l.a. who has been arguing that it's unsafe work is to be back in schools without masks
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who went to the rams-49ers game in the nfc championship game and pushed it all sort of videos of himself without a mask on. it ain't helping his argument against masks in schools in california. lots of parents are furious. >> steve: no kidding, check it out. thank you very much for joining us today. >> you will have a great morning. >> steve: just like "full house" has lived on for generations, so will the legacy of bob saget. candace cameron bure joins us to pay tribute to america's dad. >> m either radice, baddies, dad? >> you were until you said that.
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>> don't miss out on what's happening right now because you're waiting for something better to come along. you can't live for the future just like you can live in the past. >> ainsley: they played america's favorite father-daughter two oh. activists candace cameron bure is honoring the legacy of her beloved friend then television dad. angie joined us now. good morning to you. >> good morning. >> ainsley: good morning. we are so sorry for your loss but we all grew up with him. you knew him personally. you said he was the glue that kept full house together. how are you doing? >> he really was. i'm doing okay. it's been a little over a month. you know, there's days that are great and days that it just hits you. even hearing that clip from "full house," and brings back so many memories. that is when it grabs me.
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it's a little hard to hear those clips. >> ainsley: he gave such good on the show and we all took his advice. the family i know is suing because they want everything to be private. i won't get into that but i wanted to know, how is a family doing? have you talked to his wife? >> i have. i keep in close contact with kelly. you know, it has been difficult these past couple of weeks because of more things that have come out and there's a lot of questions. i'm trying honestly not to think about it in the sense that i just -- i want to remember bob and what a kind and loving and amazing person that he was. and let it be that. >> ainsley: i know you and your brother are outspoken christians which are wonderful. and you've created the sweatshirt that says love like,
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hug like bob. tell us where that money goes and why you decided to do this. >> yeah, i did it really for selfish reasons, but because i love. he is the best example of humanity. and sacrifice. and then, there is nobody that hugs like bob. and i will always remember that as a huge part of his legacy. so you can go to the website or you can go to my instagram page and you will see that sweatshirt and 100% of the proceeds go to the research foundation. and that is because bob raised millions of dollars over the years because his sister died of the disease. >> ainsley: yeah, i remember that story. what was he like onset? i was reading a little bit about his life. people said he wasn't afraid to show his emotions. he was not afraid to cry. he was such a loving person.
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>> yes, he was all those things. he always carried his emotions right at the surface. in the best of ways. he was so emotionally available. and he just always let you know that he loves you. every text, every phone call, every moment in person, he would give you the biggest hug. and he always let you know how much he cared about you. and that is such an incredibly powerful gift that he gave. and we are all reminded of that, all of us who knew bob well and received that love and those hugs from him. and that's what i want to carry on. i want to hug like bob. >> you have been working on a new project. we get to watch at coming up. tell us about this. >> yes, i have a new garden mystery movie that is premiering this sunday.
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it is the 18th movie in this series. this one is called haunted by murder. there is a special guest star in it. this is the origin story of how it became so involved in mystery solving a crime solving. we have some flashback scenes in this when aurora is a teenager. and teenage aurora is played by no one other than my daughter. which is pretty fun. >> steve: how many children do you have? >> i have three kids. two boys and they are all adults. 20, 22, and 23 years old. >> ainsley: you look fantastic. you look very young and i know you are. thank you very much for coming on. thank you for being such an outspoken christian. you are wonderful. we all looked up to you. i say it's amazing. i'll have to get it. >> awesome. >> let's check in with their
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senior meteorologist for our fog's weather forecast. >> we've got some fans out here for you. what are your names? >> mike. >> peg a >> charleston, south carolina. >> and you love ainsley, too? >> let's take a look at the temperature. we are going to warm things up in the northeast. 33 right now in new york. 41 a buffalo pier they are getting it across the great lakes. look at that. temperatures in the 40s and 50s today. and then tomorrow, oh, my gosh, you're not going to believe it. 61 here in new york. a little taste of what's to come. it is not going to last because that cold front is going to move through. we are going to set some potential records for part of new york and massachusetts and vermont. we will enjoy that. look at what's coming. a storm system across the central u.s. not only snow. there is your forecast. several inches where the plane states up to where the great lakes and we are going to
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worry about ice unfortunately. keep that in mind. if you want your latest forecast details and the severe threats as well appear large hail damaging wind tornadoes. wave to ainsley. we love ainsley. >> ainsley: how mark, my south carolina friends. >> they are beeping for you, too. >> steve: thank you. meanwhile, rev your engines because the official start of the 2022 nascar season. at daytona 500 just a couple of days away in our next guest is previewing the drivers and their impressive slate of new cars. >> brian: studio host joins us ahead of the big race. shannon, what do you expect this week? >> well, it is daytona, so you never know what you expect that the daytona 500, one of the most unpredictable races of the season. expect chaos, right? expect to see a big one could expect to see the new cars to look really cool on the racetrack and expect to see some of that champions of our sport
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who have never won this race. really lay it all on the line. some guys went to check this out there box. one of the guys is kyle busch. 0 for 16 in this race. it shows how hard this race is to win. >> steve: speaking of new cars, we know they were a supply chain issues and all the builders are using a lot of the same vendors for stuff. i have been reading about everybody has got a car right now. some of them might not have a backup car. >> that is a problem when you have a place like daytona and daytona 500 where everything could happen. those guys are going to have to be very careful. we had practice last night and we saw teams go out. it went through their emotions, right? they spent a little time with other manufacturers, other like manufacturers. of course we have qualifying this evening and the dual races. you have to be really careful not to wreck your primary. if you don't have a backup one. >> he would think they would be able to get an extra car.
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shannon, thank you so much. we will be watching. fox bet super six is giving nascar fans every chance to win $25,000. during the daytona 500. you simply download the free to play a fox bet super six app or scan the qr card right now. and enter your race picks for the daytona 500 contest and big chance to win big. >> brian: given away $6 million in cash prizes to date and there will be chances to win cash throughout the nascar season. ♪
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>> well, there you have daytona beach, 500 is this weekend. our weekend crew will be live from daytona on saturday and sunday. check it out. >> and we're going to show you the interview with kathryn limbaugh. we'll remember rush limbaugh tomorrow. >> bill: revealing today our first round of what we call the power rankings. these are the races to watch in this year's mid-term elections and the forecast is fascinating. welcome to wednesday. we're how many days, dana? >> dana: 265 days until the mid-term elections. i'm dana perino and this is "america's newsroom." i love our power rankings, the politics. this is interesting because it's a big year and you could see changes in the house. most likely in the house and also possibly in the senate. there
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