tv Fox News Live FOX News March 27, 2022 9:00am-11:00am PDT
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yes, please! neuriva. think bigger. ♪. trace: ukraine's president lashing out at western leaders. he says they're afraid to give him fighter jets and tanks he needs. as russian missiles pummel his city, sparking huge fires at a fuel depot in the western refuge of lviv, which is 50 miles from the polish border. poland of course is a nato ally. good day, everyone, i'm trace gallagher. this is "fox news live." this is day 32 of vladmir putin's brutal invasion. outgunned ukrainian fighters
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continue putting up heroic resistance as we look at these awful pictures but russia's relentless bombardments are taking their toll and there are growing concerns that putin may resort to weapons of mass destruction. >> chemical weapons, biological weapons or nuclear weapons, all four of those would being game changers. if russia does that there is going to be some very difficult decisions that are going to have to be made by, by the nato alliance. one would hope, one would pray that the russians would not make what would be a catastrophic mistake. trace: catastrophic indeed. we have team fox coverage of the war of ukraine. rich edson at the white house about president's latest comments about the putin and clean yawp. first to jeff paul. he is in the western ukrainian city of lviv. jeff? reporter: the mood has changed in lviv after these missile
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strikes that happened yesterday. a big part of the reason that it has, for the most part this portion of the country, the western portion of the country, has remained relatively quiet. a lot of people who live in those war-torn areas, places lick mariupol, kyiv, kharkiv have been coming here to find refuge that has changed in a matter of 24 hours after officials say the area just outside the city center was attacked by at least two different missile strikes. we're learning from our sources on the ground, that they believe a oil depot just outside of the city center was the target. it took firefighters 14 hours to put out the fires. all this happened while president biden was in neighboring poland. yesterday's strike pales in comparison to the level of destruction we continue to see in cities like mariupol. tens of thousands remain trapped
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from the outside world with very little resources just to stay alive. now despite the attacks that happened yesterday people here in this city continue to go about their daily lives. the mayor though, however, saying he believes yesterday's strike was a way for vladmir putin to say hello to president biden. trace? trace: jeff, i'm wondering, last week there were some strikes just outside of lviv but they were targeting mostly the airfields, the local airports which seems like a tactic of war. why, what is the speculation as to why they would go after the oil? reporter: well, i mean that is a big part of this war, is having the ability to move around with supply trucks, move people around and move resources around. so you go after an airport, that is one thing. you go after an oil depot, that is another thing. i think part of it so jarring was the timing and location t
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was a mile, a mile 1/2 just in that direction. we, you could see the black smoke miles around and at the same time it happening so close to the polish border. the president in poland. that caught people off guard with the timing of it all. in the days leading up to it was fairly quiet around here. i should mention, trace, a day full of air raid sirens, we haven't heard one. trace: yeah. knocking on poland's door. jeff paul live in lviv. thank you. the white house in cleanup mode after these comments from the president yesterday in warsaw about vladmir putin. watch this. president biden: we will have a different future a brighter future rooted in democracy, principle, hope and light, decency, dignity, freedom of possibilities. for god sake, this man cannot remain in power. trace: well the white house was quick to clarify the president was not calling for regime change.
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member of the house foreign affairs committee had this reaction. >> the president is undisciplined in his speech. we may feel that. we may say we don't want vladmir putin to be in power in our hearts but when you say that out loud as the president that is official u.s. policy. the lack of clarity, the lack of discipline in that speech is deeply troubling especially given how high tensions are. this is a time for measured words, not off-the-cuff remarks. trace: let's get to rich edson live at the white house with more on this. reporter: good afternoon, trace, after that major speech the white house is stressing the united states is not calling for regime ching despite what the president said about 24 hours ago. president biden landed here, got back to the white house, in the overnight hours, around 2:00, 3:00 in the morning. he spent three days in europe during that trip. met with european leaders to coordinate the massive sanctions campaign against the russian regime. because of that campaign the
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administration has stretched it is not trying to prompt russians to out of the president, aller his decisions. democrats amplifying that pledge again after the president's speech. >> the president i think is a straight-shooter. he is deeply empathetic. i'm sure he is so frustrated of scenes children, women being killed. the white house has been clear. they have been disciplined. they said we need a negotiated end to this war. that has to be putin as a set meant. it is not the policy of regime change. trace: president biden met with ukrainian refugees in europe. they called putin a butcher. they announced billion dollars in humanitarian aid as the war drives ukrainians to nearby countries. the united states will provide europe with more natural gas. european nationals are heavily dependent on russian oil and gas. it would take years of help from other countries and massive investments in infrastructure to actually get europe off russian
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energy. trace? trace: meantime, rich, there are calls for the administration to give more help to the ukrainians, right? reporter: that's right, trace. the united states and nato are providing significant assistance, military assistance to the ukrainians but the ukrainians want more. they want soviet made jets. they want a no-fly zone, heavier weaponry. that is something that republicans here in the united states are latching on to. >> what biden needs to stop doing, stop talking, start acting. stop telling biden or putin what he is going to do. give him every resource you can to the ukrainian people. rally. i don't get why the migs are not there. we need more anti-aircraft, antiship, anti-tank equipment there. reporter: the administration and nato stressed providing heavier weaponry could be provocation toward russia and draw an attack against nato. trace: rich edson from the white house.
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thank you. more on this with congresswoman claudia tenney, republican from new york who serves on the house foreign affairs and house small business committees. congresswoman, thanks for coming on today. the white house as we noted the past 24 hours scrambling to walk back these comments but at the same time the russians made it very clear, the president said what he said. your thoughts. >> yeah it is unfortunate. it is good president biden has gone to the nato allies to try to shore up the support. which is a good thing, a little too late but his rhetoric is showing he is not maybe messaging properly. that's why there has been a cleanup as you implied with your prior guest. and i first indicated that u.s. troops would be going into ukraine. that had to be walked back. then he talked about regime change and implied that and that had to be walked back. then he discussed we would respond in kind should russia should choose to use chemical weapons. that had to be walked back.
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though he gave a soaring speech with lots of rhetoric, there was a lot of yelling and a lot of his what i called qualified language, no joke, i mean this. which prompts that he is not that serious or maybe he really doesn't mean it or he is just reading a speech and i think this lack of credibility on top of the recent trip by vice president cam campus hairs certainly doesn't give confidence in our allies. i would say probably makes our enemies emboldened. trace: you mentioned the president was in some capacity intimating that u.s. troops might be on the ground. i want to play this sound bite so that we have context and clarity. we'll talk about it on the other side. watch. president biden: you know with the ukrainian people, ukrainian people have a lot of backbone, they have a lot of guts, i'm sure you're observing it. stepping up, you will see when you're they're, some of you have been there. trace: so after this visit to poland the russians have a lot
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to unpack about what the president meant and what he did not mean. what is your concern about diplomatic relations going forward? >> the president just isn't a food messenger. he has always been a career politician who is someone who kind of talks in talking points and prepared lines he probably used over and over and yet he didn't get into specifics and i don't think the russians don't hear him saying yes, we're going to provide the polish people with the migs, or the pols migs to the ukrainians or bolster what they need as senator scott indicated in terms of that. i think when the, the problem is with joe biden as with most career politicians who never have a tough race, is that when you scratch the surface you get more surface and you don't get depth, credibility and clarity, which is what our allies and what america needs to show, along with great leadership and strength. we're not showing that. i think the american people are
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seeing it and russians and iranians and enemies including the chinese are now teaming up with others in terms of energy production, are seeing it as well. we're lacking the credibility of the world stage. trace: i want to put this up on the screen. this is michael goodwin of the "new york post" talking about the president's putin out of power comment, he said the following, quoting here, what biden so clearly said is not at all what he meant, clearly talking about the white house backing this up. how in the hell can a line like that so explicit it could potentially lead to world war iii get into a presidential address if the plain meaning wasn't the intent? of course "the washington post" has reported that the white house is saying the president ad-libbed that. that was not part of the script. is that what you believe happened, it was ad-libbed and he just kind of went off-the-cuff? >> if he was a serious leader he wouldn't be ad-libbing messages
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like regime change from the united states and not by the russian people. it is concerned that he is not up to the job. i'm concerned he will continue to make gaffs, and the shadow government that appears to be behind him, not elected by the american people by the way, is dictating what happens and constantly having to clean up for his kind of sloppy and undisciplined rhetoric. trace: i want to put the numbers on the screen because after the state of the union address the president seemed to get a little bit of a bump out of that. this is the recent nbc news poll that shows that his approval rating, congresswoman, is now at 40%. it's down, it has dropped. disapproval at 55%. what do you think is leading to suddenly having this disappointment about the handling of everything from the border to covid to this war? >> i think a lot of people are feeling the pain in their wallets, the pain at the pump, high gas prices inflation, our response, one of the most
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important aspects of national security is securing our southern border. i think people are hearing more and more stories about people on the terror watch list and other criminals coming across the border are not actually asylum claims. that is part of our national security interests but also the fact that president biden, kamala harris, go out on the world scene and kind of embarass us with their statements and lack of seriousness. i think that is undermining the faith that american people have in our leadership and you're seeing it just with the way the world is moving. as many have said, when the u.s. is not leading, when the u.s. isn't in control you see chaos around the world. you see this maneuvering whether iran nuclear deal which hopefully will not happen but the weakness being projected, emboldening iranians, helping russians, saudis going to the chinese, there is a lot happening around the world really concerning the american people, they're feeling it right at home. whether again high gas prices, inflation, high crime rates, all
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those things are really just impacting us, totality of all these things are really what is hurting and affecting his poll numbers. to be honest, i'm surprised they're not a lot lower. trace: i wonder, congresswoman, if you believe talking about reaching out to saudi arabia and venezuela for oil and saudi arabia being in contact with china, i'm wondering if the president and why he hasn't considered getting oil from canada or increasing the oil resources in this country? it seems a little bit baffling on its face. >> yeah. the far left anti-fossil fuel green new dealers are really the tail wagging the dog right now. fossil fuels have to be part of our all of the above energy strategy, we need them not just for prosperity where i live in new york state where some of the best shale reserves are, we can't touch them because of our state government. we could bring prosperity to my district in new york state.
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we can bring energy security and energy literacy which needs to be done. we're not going to eliminate the dependence on fossil fuels and continue to allow murderous dictators like vladmir putin to continue on his spree against the, against the ukrainians and using that leverage. you know, there is actually a lot of reports that show that the russians engaged in a propaganda campaign to push the europeans and to push the united states away from fossil fuels just to strengthen their economic engine which is fossil fuels. trace: congresswoman, thank you for coming on. we very much appreciate it. >> thank you so much. trace: well meantime millions of people in ukraine forced out of their homes since the russian invasion began more than a month ago. about 1/3 of those who escaped went to europe and into neighboring poland. we are live on the ground in poland next.
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aishah hasnie is live for us in the polish city of krakow. reporter: trace, good afternoon, to you. ukrainian refugees and poltz are waking up reflecting the president's remarks in poland and particularly remarks about vladmir putin. emotions are running high already here in poland on heels of the president's visit and attack in ukraine. there was a rally a pro-ukraine rally in krakow were protesters were chanting, close the sky. obviously a plea to nato to close the airspace above ukraine. at a separate rally we saw russian nationals, they were denouncing putin and the war. now yesterday the president spent about an hour meeting with refugees in warsaw. after a couple of emotional conversations with those mothers
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and their children, he was asked what he thought and that's when he called putin a butcher. during a passionate speech last night president biden said putin cannot remain in power. the white house has since walked back those comments but they have been heard here on the ground and they are resonating big time with both ukrainians and the pols. >> so i agreed with president biden because i think that putin is a terrible person. he is a killer. it is like, it is -- [inaudible] such person cannot rule the any country especially big like russia. >> translator: we watched yesterday the speech of mr. president. all is correct there. it was optimistic. he called for putin not to be president any longer that was a bit of comfort. reporter: and, trace, the flow of refugees into poland has
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slowed down a bit in the last couple of days. we've noticed that at the train stations around the border but there are mayors in those border towns that are a little worried that because of this attack in lviv yesterday, that we could see that flow just increase and really see another huge wave of refugees start to come in to poland. it would be a sea of humanity already on top of what we've seen so far. trace? trace: aishah hasnie live for us in poland. ashiah thank you. the refugee crisis in europe getting more critical by the day. president biden got a chance to see it first-hand yesterday when he met with ukrainian refugees in poland. watch. >> you see this, you're dealing every day with vladmir putin. look what he has done to these people. what does it make you think? president biden: he is a butcher. that is what it makes me think. trace: let's bring in judith miller, pulitzer prize-winning
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journalist and manhattan institute of policy research and fox news contributor. judy, sew nice to see you, my old friend. ashiah was talking about this next wave of refugees could come in every day. they're getting 50, 60,000 a day right now. poland, some of the other countries already said, we can't handle this, what is the remedy there, judith? >> the president already increased the amount of aid going to poland and neighboring countries for precisely to help these people and to make their lives bearable after they have been forced out of ukraine and we too, in the united states, have agreed to take 100,000 refugees but ultimately, ultimately the only way this is going to end if the war ends. i think that is what president biden has been focused on in his trip to warsaw, his trip to poland. i know he wanted to go to ukraine but he can't.
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i think it is unfortunate, trace, that the world is now focused on a nine-word ad-lib because the speech that the president gave in poland was absolutely remarkable. he did what i had been urging him to do and others since the state of the union and that is to speak to the russian people. to say, you are not the enemy. this is not what you want. you must do something about the man who leads you. you must end this war. i think that message unfortunately was overshadowed by what i call a gaffe from the heart or what mike morell, former cia official called an unforced error but i think the president's being there, expressing what the heart, just breaking heart that we all feel for these scenes, these images was a good thing. it is unfortunate that we're
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focused on this ad-lib error. trace: they're focused on it i think for a certain reason, judy. the concept of this, even the refugees that we spoke to, that aishah hasnie spoke to, were very emboldened by the fact that you know, president biden said that putin should be out of power which everybody has interpreted as regime change and the white house is scrambling to walk this back because when you think of regime change you think of saddam hussein. you think of that kind of thing and vladmir putin has got to be thinking the very same thing which does not do the diplomatic any favors in this case. >> absolutely. that is absolutely right and that's why it was a terrible error and we all know when joe biden speaks from the heart he is as he called himself, a gaff machine but if we really want to look at the policy, if we want to help ukrainians fight, rhetoric doesn't do it.
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what you need is the s-300 from slovakia as zelenskyy, as president zelenskyy has been calling for. you need the migs in there. you needed a harder and tougher stance before when vladmir putin, nuclear sabre rattled, you needed an american president or certainly senior aides to say we have nukes too, not leave strategic ambiguity in this error. i think we should have been tougher earlier but now the president is responding and i think that americans will forgive him for, for his diplomatic lack of -- over there. when you look at these images, what i want is that the president's actions have to be matched by his rhetoric. i mean you have to have actions that are tougher than we've seen so far. give zelenskyy what he needs to fight the war he wants to win. trace: right. well that is what a lot of people are concerned about that
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his actions have to match his words. last week he said if vladmir putin uses chemical weapons, nuclear weapons, that the united states would respond in kind, meaning they would use equal force, at least that's the definition of responding in kind. that is what worries people, is that we don't really node, when they say they're going to be consequences the white house hasn't laid out those consequences. >> well sometimes it is best not to lay out exactly what you're going to do but i do think we have to do more to get vladmir putin's attention. look, destroying his economy, having the ruble be worth one cent now is clearly not doing it. sanctioning 140 oligarchs and 400 members of the duma, the parliament is not going to do it. he needs to send even more weapons into ukraine to allow them to fight. and that's what i think a lot of us are waiting to see but in terms of rhetoric tone down the
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rhetoric. leave strategic ambiguity. leave putin a way out of the terrible, terrible mistake strategic mistake he has made. trace: yeah. i want to play this sound bite very quickly, and get quick response from you, judy, on the other side. this is wladimir klitschko. former champion and ukrainian defense force. >> military equipment supply because only this way can we defend and protect the civilians. the target is not the capital city, the target is not just invading the country. the target is unfortunately civilians. thousands of them are dead by now and who knows, the longer the war goes the more civilians will lose their lives. so whatever it takes we need to protect our skies. trace: only 30 seconds left but they're calling really in essence for a no-fly zone or for
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those polish migs to be delivered to them. your final thoughts? >> if not a no-fly zone but harder to fly zone? getting migs, f-300s in there should enable president zelenskyy to do that. trace: judith miller, always great to see you. thank you for coming on. we appreciate it. >> thank you very much. trace: meantime an american gun company putting a stranded shipment of 400 firearms to very good use. those weapons making their way into the hands of ukrainian resistance fighters. how the family-owned business in florida worked to make that happen. can you imagine the logistical nightmare trying to get weapons from the united states, from a private gun dealership into the hands of ukrainians on the streets of kyiv? his amazing story next. ♪. [clapping]
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brand-new video of fox news channel as latest devastation in ukraine as russia continues to bombard city as cross the country. let's bring in charles watson with more, charles. charles: despite what is going on with the war in ukraine the people there are trying to find any semblance of normal but in all too often the reality of war rear its ugly head. here you have people gathered on the streets of lviv trying to enjoy a concert in the live live opera and they hear this. those are air raid sirens set off by russian missile strikes saturday that literally sent people running for their lives. officials in lviv said two of those cruise missiles that are ukrainian fuel depo holding essentially supplies. firefighters working hard to try
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to extinguish the fires. have been set up for ukrainians who are trying to escape mariupol. the donetsk government said they are given the opportunity to be evacuated on russian territory if they want. >> all the houses, everything is destroyed. people get their water under attack. it's scary. charles: others who are displaced if they haven't left to find refuge are finding so solace at church and you can bet no doubt, every prayer is needed these days for the innocent people caught in this war.
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trace: indeed, charles watson, thank you, u.s. gun makers doing its part to help ukraine. adrian's family own-businesses business in florida putted 401 stranded guns to good use. semiautomatic rifles was supposed to go to a customer who went silent during invasion and the company is sending $200,000 if weaponry to the ukraine resistant movement. thank you so much. at what point did your company decide that it was take to things on themselves and get transpired. >> as you mentioned at the top, we had an order for these guns to go to our distribute other over there that we have been working there since 2015. while we were getting that order together, we lost contact with them due to the in.
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so i think they may have seen this coming. i don't know what the timeline was by we feel they saw this coming early on and so they got out and we were sitting on 400 guns and we thought, well, you know, there's no better thing to do with them than just send them over there and donate them to the people on the ground over there, the resistance movement like you mentioned to hopefully protect their communities, their churches, you know, and just their neighborhoods. in the grand scheme of things it's a small donation on our part but it was impressed upon our hearts to get them over there because we have friends on the ground there. trace: chad, what amaidses me, i know, it cannot be easy to send hundreds of weapons to a foreign country. there have got to be laws and regulations. this has to have been a bureaucratic nightmare for your company? >> it actually -- you would
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think and normally, yes, you're right. getting an export license especially for a battle-torn country right now, you would think next to impossible but we've had people on the ground here in the u.s. as well as ukraine defense ministry that made it. it was like an urgent situation so they got the licensing through in four days. it typically takes four months to get the license approved. so we had some people doing some very difficult, hard work and they are working around the clock to make that happen. >> it's fascinating, the work that you guys are doing. the associated press wrote this, surmising u.s. retired major john spencer said the semiautomatic are million valuable than antiaircraft missiles that require extensive training beyond the reach of
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most civilians many who haven't held a gun before. he, of course, referring to the possibility of street to street hand to hand combat and the truth is he's right, a lot of the civilians don't know how the fire a missile at a plane but they can fire a gun. >> that's very true. and this particular firearm that we sent over there right out of the box is ready to go and it also is chambered for common ammunition. so finding ammo for it might not be very difficult and there's ammunition manufacturers that are sending pallets and pallets of ammo over there for those people so that the guns aren't useless to them. >> yeah, i have to go very quickly, chad. are you getting any response? have they gotten the weapons, are they using them, do you know? >> i don't know yet. but we hope to find that out pretty soon and if we go we will let you guys know and follow the social media and we will have all of the updates. trace: please let us know, great work that you guys are doing.
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in the meantime president biden going after america's wealthiest with new 20% minimum tax on billionaires, budget proposal to be released tomorrow. alexandria hoff. alex: according to the white house it does set a 20% tax rate floor and by their own calculation would reduce the federal deficit by a trillion and could raise up 360 billion over ten years. but we are not just talking about taxable income here, what piqued the interest of wealthy is unrealized gains such as increase in value of stock that one holds. his idea was first brought up as a way to fund president biden's fallen build back better plan. here is senator lindsey graham in october. senator: unrealized gains is what they are trying to get.
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that could have a ripple effect on the tax market. if you propose tax on unrealized gain, people may get out of the stock market and go to other assets that would be harder to let the tax on. alex: in the fall elon musk issued a strong idea of this and pose today followers if he should sell 10% of tesla stock. they voted yes and he did it. selling stock is how he pays his tax bills. musk also warned on twitter that the taxing on realized gains could creep to middle class. according to new york post house speaker nancy pelosi called previous attempt to pass a billionaire's tax a publicity stunt. in 2018 her financial disclosure put her at $118 million, trace. trace: that's a bunch. alexandria hof. live for us in dc. un reporting more than 4 million ukrainians have fled homeland since the beginning of vladimir
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trace: pope francis calling for speech in ukraine to passionate speech to crowd in peter's square. a defeat for all of us in a place where death, fathers and mothers bury their children. men kill their brothers and the powerful decide and the poor die. meantime as putin's invasion of ukraine enters its second month, millions of ukrainians continue to flee to neighboring countries. this, of course, is causing desperate need for housing. let's bring in aby, web developer who helped design a website connecting ukrainian refugees with people worldwide who can provide spare rooms even
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a house. aby, great to have you on. this is a great idea, clearly you're a brilliant guy, how one did you come with the concept and two how did you get the people in the various countries to cooperate? >> sure, so i came up with this idea when i was in a protest in san diego and i felt that i could do something way more global more than just few hundred people in the protest because i have platform online and i know how to do websites and apps and i coded up in website and got in contact with aid organizations in europe, moldova, poland, et cetera, connecting with them on whatsapp, facebook, telegram, et cetera, just getting this right into the hands of the right people doing news on like polish radio stations, et cetera, and really getting the word out there and so far it's been great. we have over 60,000 available listings now across primarily europe but also the entire world and 3,000 refugees find housing so far.
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trace: and i wonder if you know about the discrepancy, 60,000 listings, 3,000 have used them, how do you get the word to the various refugees that these places are available and that they should use them? >> yeah, again, like it's getting in touch with a lot of the aid organizations and working closely with them over the week has been really hard but like i'm getting there. there's just so much bureaucracy that goes into a lot of the major ngo's but i have been doing work on the ground talking to local bus drivers, taxi drivers, et cetera, working with big organizations such as a habad, for example, that's on the ground in europe and helping spread the word that way and working with the volunteers to use this platform and, yeah. trace: and it's interesting to me avi that the refugees can go on this thing almost like an air b&b thing where they can filter their search and say that i have children, i need this, i need that, tell me about that.
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>> right, so as a refugee, you can go to ukrainetakeshelter.com and you're presented with a search bar and you can enter a city or where you're headed and you can see hundreds of results and add filters to that, disability assistance, child support et cetera and you can see the listings change depending on the filters that you have which makes easy to goes through hundred and hundreds of listings and find the specific ones that fit you the most. trace: you found that some of these people that are offering their homes, their places, bedrooms, couches, whatever they have to offer, are also offering different things like plane tickets and other stuff. what else have you seen because of this? >> right, yeah, people are offering everything from psychiatric support to like helping with just taking care of specific pets. i've seen it all and i'm hoping to expand the website to help find jobs for refugees, help find transportation, because refugees need a lot more than housing, i have big plans for this website in the future.
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>> avi schiffman this is a great idea and this will generate a lot of good will for a lot of people who are in desperate need right now. thanks for coming up. we appreciate it. >> thank you. trace: cinderella is wearing peacock feathers for now, tinny st. peters hours away from facing north carolina in march madness run. we will take you live to the campus as students look to cheer their peacocks into the final four coming up certified from headlamp to tailpipe. that's certified head turns. and it's all backed by our unlimited mileage warranty. that means unlimited peace of mind. mercedes-benz certified pre-owned. translation: the mercedes of your dreams
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so many people are overweight now i prefer you didn't. and asking themselves, "why can't i lose weight?" for most, the reason is insulin resistance, and they don't even know they have it. conventional starvation diets don't address insulin resistance. that's why they don't work. now, there's golo. golo helps with insulin resistance,
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getting rid of sugar cravings, helps control stress and emotional eating, and losing weight. go to golo.com and see how golo can change your life. that's g-o-l-o.com. trace: st. petes universities has made history, one win away from reaching final four of ncaa men's tournament but they have to make it power house north carolina this afternoon. let's get to nate, live on st. peters campus in jersey city, nate. reporter: trace, good afternoon, big test today against north carolina but cinderella is here in jersey city and you can feel the excitement. in a few hours all of the students on campus, at least many of them will be going down montgomery street right here just about 30 yards or so to the recreational life center which
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is where the team plays their home games but it's been turned into a venue for watch parties with hundreds of fans supporting the team. i want you to take a look at the moment that they beat perdue, 3 seed to advance to the elite 8. watch this energy here. [cheers and applause] reporter: you see it's madness in there. it looks like a lot of fun. fans here on campus are certainly hoping for more of that against north carolina. we've also talked, trace, to some people who are visiting jersey city just because of the basketball team. >> i don't live in jersey city, i'm from pittsburgh but you have to love it. >> it's just an exciting atmosphere. >> tremendous. that's why we had to walk up here to see how it's going on up here. reporter: last night duke and villanova won and they clinched their spots in final four. the peacocks win tonight they will
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play duke for a spot in national championship game. here is union guard on what makes the team so special? >> every time on the court we try our best to do whatever we have to do, guarding the ball, getting a game plan. report report doing all the little things that is what makes the team so difficult to play against. per for perspective about how historic tonight is, right now, the lowest seed to make the final four is an 11 seed. that's happened a couple times, more than a couple of times. four times. st. peters is a 15 seed, trace, if they win they will smash the record. tipoff is at 5:05. trace: super fun, nate foy, the war on ukraine, coming up.
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have just landed in the safe haven of israel, escaping certain devastation and perhaps death. the time for action is now. we do not know when the borders will be closed. to save one life, is to save the world. there are thousands more innocent women, children and elderly, trapped in ukraine, seeking safety and freedom. your donation of any amount will be used to save jewish lives. every donation helps. i'm asking you to help us help the jewish people of ukraine now. donate today at jhm.org or call 1-855-694-9654. god bless you and
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[cheers and applause] [sirens] trace: sirens piercing the air in lviv, the day russia sent rockets striking the western ukrainian city. one of the rockets hitting an industrial fuel storage area where firefighters fought to deal with the inferno. all this as the humanitarian crisis grows even worse and ukrainian civilians struggle to leave the country, hello,
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everyone, i'm trace gallagher, welcome to fox news live, we begin fox news live in lviv where jeff paul is standing by live. jeff: we saw crowds of people out and about today enjoying their sunday despite the fact that 24 hours ago this city was essentially under attack. our sources on the ground tell us that they believe the target of this industries was an oil depo just outside the city center. the mayor of lviv says the russian army that left as many as 5 injured. it took firefighters 14 hours to put out the fire. people in lviv feel this highlights why help and resources are needed to protect ukraine even a local priest this morning addressed the need for more action and not politics. >> our military needs weapons because we can't stop the war with diplomacy.
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diplomacy doesn't work. we don't know his reasons and we cannot con rinse him by talking. i don't know his reasons but he's against the whole world. jeff: the devastating attack russian forces continue. humanitarian corridors have been established throughout the country, scores of innocent civilians remain trapped without food and water just to live. and now there are concerns from the ukrainian government that thousands of residents who are being evacuated are instead being taken to russia. >> they act like humans but what they did is completely different and they are bombing cities. look how mariupol is now, what they did with the city. jeff: now, what was very loud and chaotic day yesterday, trace, today is totally the opposite. we heard air raid sirens today, so far haven't heard one. trace.
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trace: interesting, jeff, because lviv has been a safe haven. i'm wonder if the sentiment is starting to change with the people who live there and have come there. jeff: i think still even despite those strikes this remains knock on wood one of the safest places in ukraine, in fact, the whole western region of ukraine has remained relatively quiet compared to images that we are seeing coming out of the east and the coast. we continue to see people arrive to the city by bus, by train, by personal car, however they can get here because in comparison as you see behind us traffic is still bustling here, restaurants are still open and this remains a safe haven for all those people who right now have lost everything. trace. trace: speculation, jeff, that maybe aside from the fact they went after the oil there, the fuel depo, this might have been a message kind of knocking on poland's door, maybe a little
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message to president biden? jeff: yeah, i mean, we are 50 miles away from the polish border. the president was here during this most recent attack and i think what really makes this sort of a jarring incident is the fact that it was fairly close to the city center about a mile to a mile and a half away from essentially where we are standing and previous attacks we have seen they have been further away from the city center where as this one, you can see smoke from miles around the city. trace: fascinating, jeff paul, thank you. president biden back at the white house after ending trip to europe with fiery speech in warsaw, poland where he declared russian president vladimir putin cannot remain a power. a statement that his own secretary of state wacked balk this morning. let's get back to rich edison, he's on the north lawn following the president's movements, rich. rich: good afternoon, trace. it's a quiet day for president biden at the white house. he returned late last night or early in the morning depending on your perspective,
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2:00 o'clock in the morning after 3 days in europe. that trip ended with a major speech in warsaw and lasting declaration that russian president vladimir putin cannot remain in power. that needed a major clarification from the white house and top administration officials traveling in israel, secretary of state antony blinken stressed the massive western sanctions campaign is not designed to push putin from power. >> president putin cannot be empowered to wage war or engage in aggression against ukraine or anyone else. as you know, and as you heard us say repeatedly, we do not have a strategy of regime change in russia. >> clarification follows confusion over the white house's position on a response to potential chemical weapons used or the purpose of sanctions. though critics argue the president muddled the american message at a time when there should be more sensitivity and clarity coming from the u.s. government. >> there was a horrendous gaffe right at the end of it.
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i just -- i wished he would stay on script. whoever wrote the speech did a good job for him but my gosh i wish they would keep him on script. many people who don't deal in the lane of foreign relations don't realize that the nine words that he uttered were -- would cause the kind of eruption that they did. jeff: president biden met with ukrainian refugees in europe where he called putin a butcher. the white house announced a billion dollars in humanitarian aid as the war drives ukrainians to nearby countries. the u.s. also announced it's going to boost the amount of natural gas that the united states is sending to europe as european countries are trying to wean themselves of what's an oil and gas dominance and dependency from russia, trace. trace: what are you hearing providing weapons to ukraine. jeff: president volodymyr zelenksyy asked nato to provide
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1% of its planes and its tanks. he's also called for a no-fly zone but there's been reluctance to do so from the united states and from nato, the reason behind that is because they say that basically you provide more equipment, heavier equipment. there's a concern that that would act as a provocation where putin would retaliate against nato. the supporters are providing this type of weaponry say, look, you have putin, he has narrowed his war aims, he's scaled back the war objectives here and now is the time to provide that type of weaponry, trace. trace: rich edison live for us, thank you. ukrainians fired up after president biden's condemnation of vladimir putin with rallies coming up in poland to protest the russian war. aishah hosni. aishah: good afternoon to you, refugees all across poland are reacting, responding to the president's speech yesterday his
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visit to two poland, two-day poland but they are demanding more concrete solutions to bringing an end to vladimir putin's destruction here on the ground in poland, emotions have been running high today on the heels of biden's visit and the attack in lviv, ukraine. this morning there was a rally where protestors were chanting close the sky at a separate rally we saw russian nationals who were denouncing putin and the war. the president spent about an hour meeting with refugees in warsaw yesterday and emotional conversations with mothers and their children. he was asked what he thought and that is when he called putin a butcher. and then later in the afternoon during the passionate speech, president biden said putin cannot remain in power. well, the white house, of course, walked that back but they are -- words are already resonating with ukrainian refugees who now want to see more action than words.
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>> we are waiting for help from them and for more important decisions like closing the air space because they bombed us when we were fleeing. russian planes bombed areas close to our car. i'm thankful to the americans and american government and appreciate them but we also hope germany and france will do the same as the u.s. aishah: trace, the flow of refugees here in poland has slowed some since the beginning to have crisis but people are warning that that could pick up any day now with the attack in lviv, trace. trace: aishah, if it does pick up, they have said in weeks that they cannot handle many more refugees, is there a plan in place to be able to take care of these people? aishah: well, first and foremost, i think no one could have been prepared for the mass of humanity that fled ukraine in
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those first couple of weeks, we are talking about 4 million people in a matter of 4 weeks. we haven't seen anything quite like it since world war ii, at least here in europe. so people were doing the best that they could. we know that the cities especially the border towns that are very small, not prepared, they don't have the infrastructure for something like this are leaning heavily on aid groups, nonprofit groups that are on the ground 24/7 and we have heard from the un as well that bigger cities like krakow and warsaw, people are doing the best that they can and they have been telling me that they do feel more organized now four weeks into this than in the very beginning. i don't think anyone could have been prepared for what would happen 4 weeks ago. trace: aishah, thank you, fox news exclusive for inside look
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for the russian invasion. let's bring in the speaker of the ukrainian parliament. rusan, stefanchek, i'm so glad that you are on with us because we have been watching the progress that ukrainians have made in this, they are actually pushing russian soldiers back especially in the outskirts of kyiv. i'm wondering that you believe that your country, the forces in our country are going more on the offensive than they have so far on n this conflict? >> hello, sure. i believe our country, i believe our countries and the current situation is next, the russian troops continue to attack ukraine from the territory of russia, belarus and occupied parts of ukraine and crimea. that's a full-scare war against
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ukraine and invasion plan, the occupying forces, they are being regrouped, they are advancing to ukrainian territory. the worst situation in the city of mariupol as you know and you talked about that which is now practically destroyed. nearly 100 bombs are dropped by the russians and killing thousands of civilians every single day. russia bombings from the buildings and then you know it's a drama theater with a thousand civilians and school with 400 civilians and hospitals with civilians in it. russia continually violates its commitment when it's come to human corridors and the russian army, convoys to non-occupied territory of ukraine.
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only private cars can make it out of town if they are lucky enough. and despite 2,000 city -- [inaudible] >> territory of russia. people are separated from their families, their documents and they are sent to filtration camps in russia. russia kidnapped more than 2,000 children from the occupied parts of donbas and location remains unknown and lastly the ukrainian city lviv as you know, that's located less than 100 miles where the president of the united states of america
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brutally attacked by russian missiles and that means that russian missiles are not far from the u.s. as most think they are. such cynical action, putin has declared to challenge the american, the american people. trace: i'm wondering, sir, because you mentioned the american president, president biden was in poland. i know that you watched the nato summit closely, are you satisfied, are you satisfied with what came out of the summit or are there things that you still desperately need and that they did not address? >> ukrainian has been calling to nato to step up its support. has capabilities to provide ukraine with military equipment that will be again changed in fighting the russian aggression.
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i'm -- we are sending tanks, combat aircraft and air defense system. we are not asking that nato send its troop to defend ukraine. all we ask what president zelenskyy, close the sky and we will do the rest. just 1% of what you have. unfortunately this has not happened although we have increased military cooperation with number of nato members but not with allies as a whole. ukraine shielding nato eastern plan if russia is allowed to succeed in ukraine it's a real move to attack other european country and you know with russian official already talking about they need to destroy poland and baltic states after ukraine. their opinions show that the majority of russian population supports favor aggression action for russia. trace: yeah. sir, i want to if i can, i want
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to play a soundbite, this is president biden talking about russian president putin being forced out of power and i will get your response. >> and putin, it's vladimir putin who is to blame, period. for god sake this man cannot remain in power. trace: this man cannot remain in power. the white house has since walked that back saying that's not what he meant. he did not mean regime change. what about your people, what about when you heard that, what did you think and what do you think now? >> i think that we are -- we are really grateful to the president and the government of the united states in solidarity with ukrainian people and support, it provides us in critical times and sanctions that the u.s. and allies and partners have enforced on russia significantly
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to economy. the military equipment being sent to ukraine helps our army destroy the force, russian, but we must not stop taking the measures to force russia cease barbaric war on ukraine. more sanctions must be introduced. all russian banks -- all to avoid sanctions must be closed. we need to make sure that all global business cut their ties with russia and pull out of the russian market. the russian war machine must be deprived of resource using to attack ukraine. trace: ruslan, thank you for coming up. best of luck to you and your people. we appreciate you coming and talking to us. thank you. >> thank you. trace: meantime thousands of
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fu fighters hawkins has died at 50 year's old, played with rock and roll hall of fame band for two decades. they were quoting devastated by the untimely lost. the colombian attorney general office says preliminary tests reveal hawkins had several substances in his system, at least 19,000 people in the meantime have been evacuated as a colorado wild fire grows south of bolder, the blaze began saturday from an unknown cause and ripped through 120 acres since then. authorities say they expect to be battling the blaze for at least a few more days because of the heavy fuel in the area. have you heard about it? st. peters, the peacock, against the tar hill, north carolina after historic win on saturday night where the peacocks became the first number 15 team to advance to the elite 8 round of
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the ncaa tournament. that should be a good one. meantime back to coverage of the war, russia covering missiles at a fuel depo used by ukrainian forces in the eastern city of lviv yesterday. only several miles away from the polish border this as the ukrainian defenders pushed the russian advance back in some areas around kyiv. with us now the analyze the latest movement on the ground black hawk helicopter pilot, battalion commander, colonel, great to have you on as always. i just wonder if we can get your expertise. i want to put this on the screen. these are maps 1 march 20 to, this is march 20. just so our audience knows the red areas that we are seeing there, kind of red, that's where either russia controls the territory and you see kind of the hash marked red areas, that's where they have advanced. this is again march 20th, if we
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can slip forward to march 26th yesterday, you can kind of fee where we are. it really almost looks like the identical map. i mean, you look at it. if you looked at them both side to side you would see the same thing. the map looks identical. what does that tell you about russia's push forward, colonel? >> hey, thanks, trace, for having me back on. that's the first thing that sticks out to anybody looking at these two, is that they don't really seem to change much and i think it's indicative of russia's ability to move beyond where they're at now when it's also critical to understand the motivation the ukrainians to fight back and to me it's starting to look like going back into history, almost like world war i trench warfare where you'll spend an entire day in some sort of conflict or direct combat and things will change around 20 yards or so. i think what you're seeing here is the result of a logistics problem specifically on the russian forces because they have
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enough to where people in forces in general to be able to continue to move. but when -- when the ukrainians are clearly fighting back, the sustainment or logistics is a problem really before they even started this conflict they had a hard time sustaining themselves so now that they are in the country and meeting a lot more resistance than they anticipated, these kinds of pauses are to be expected and i don't think you will see a whole lot of movement in the near future. >> i think that seems like a fair assessment. what do you make then, sir, of these attacks on lviv and the western part of ukraine. is it a message, are they tactically going after something, what's your thought on that? >> yeah, when i first saw that i asked the same question and if i was a challenge to zoom in and take a tactical action and try to link it to some sort of national strategic goal in the end and ultimately what i came away from this is they are trying to influence the ability
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of the western side of ukraine and all those supplies and people that are coming in or going out depending on what they're doing in order to help influence what's going on in the northeast and south in the conflict itself specifically focused on one, the population, to continue the conflict of in some ways terrorizing the population and two influencing the ability of the most stable regions to continue to ride supplies and other logistics to the actual front lines. trace: i want to play the soundbite if i can, colonel, this is the president talking to u.s. troops on friday in poland. watch. >> the average citizen, look at how they are stepping up, look at how they are stepping up and you will see when you're there and you will see. trace: a lot of people said have been there and some would go
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there. if you're russia, is that the way you read this? >> well, yeah, if you're russia in some ways this is just a confirmation of what you're already thinking the u.s. and nato are going to do anyways and it comes down to the conflict also often experienced due to mixed messages and bad signals and we had the argument to send majors to respond, our american soldiers going to ukraine or not, are we going to get involved in pushing for a regime change or not and these things may sometimes seem simple to many but simple messages sometimes get mixed and cause a conflict to get bigger. trace: i want to go back to the battle on the ground. i know that russian forces have tried to encircle kyiv. they've been pushed back a little bit. do you believe that they will try again, forces on the ground or have they kind of for the time being given on trying to
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control kyiv? >> i'd be surprised if they completely gave up at this point. i think if they did, they would probably move some of those forces somewhere else to try again and any conflict, though, even some of the more major conflicts throughout history there were always pauses as you run into human factors of exhaustion, the logistics and in this case you are going against a significant and large city center, so that kind of conflict is difficult to execute on the best of conditions. so i would expect all of these factors that are playing in i would be surprised that they are done, shelling ukraine, whether they move or not is to be seen. trace: great insight as always, we appreciate it. >> thanks again, trace. trace: in the meantime ukrainian president zelenskyy new plea for
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trace: some of the headlines from ukraine, ukrainian president zelenskyy slamming the russian occupiers for the crimes against the ukrainian people and pressing the wet for more aid such as fighter jets and more weapons that was all in an address yesterday. in eastern separatist region in ukraine it is considering a vote on joining russia, one of the two regions that russian president vladimir putin recognized as independent states several days before the start of the russian invasion. several explosions rocking the area near ukraine's western city of lviv yesterday while president biden visiting its neighbor country poland. the missile strikes hit a fuel depo that was being used by ukrainian forces and 3.8 million refugees have net ukraine since the start of the russian war with over 2 million seeking safety in neighboring poland. meantime president biden will
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propose a new tax minimum when he unveils the 2023 budget plan tomorrow which will tax american households worth more than a hundred million dollars, at least 20%, alexandria hoff with the latest on this, alex. alex: yeah. this proposal is expected to be announced tomorrow and affects 1.0%, sets 20% tax rate floor by the white house's own calculation it would reduce the federal deficit by a trillion dollars and could raise up to 360 billion over ten years. we were not just talking about income being taxed. what has piqued the interest of the ultra wealthy has been that it targets unrealized gains, other investment assets. this idea was first brought up as a way to fund president biden's fallen build back better plan. here is senator lindsey graham back in october. senator: unrealized gains is what they are trying to get. that could have a ripple effect with the stock market.
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if you impose a tax on unrealized gain, people may get out of the stock market and go to other assets that would be harder to let the tax on. alex: elon musk also issued strong response. he polled twitter followers asking them if he should sell 10% of tesla stock and they voted yes and he later did. musk also warned on twitter that this taxing of unrealized gains could creep down to the middle class writing, quote, eventually they run out of other people's money and then they come for you. house speaker nancy pelosi has reportedly called this previous attempt to pass a billionaire's tax a publicity stunt. 2018 personal financial disclosure put her net worth at $118 million. i will send it back to you. trace: alexandria hoff live for us in dc. sky-high gas prices and rapid inflation are worrying households around america.
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to help us break this down, mitch roschelle, great to have you. where are we as a country right now economically? your view? mitch: right now i'm in michigan and the university of michigan last week published their consumer sentiment survey and it was a ten-year low, so trace, where we are is the consumer is feeling tremendous fatigue with rising prices and no end in sight to rising prices and the lack of a policy decision other than what the fed is doing to raise interest rates really has regular consumers which drive the economy very worried about the economy going forward. trace: yeah, i want to put this up on the screen. this is the food prices, you talk about food prices going up with no end in sight. i want to put the food prices. it really does. you have bacon up 18, almost 19%, beef 16 plus, oranges 14.3, pork 14, chicken 12, crackers
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and bread, crackers and bread, of course, wheat, a lot of it coming from russia up 12.7% and when you say no end in sight, it gives people a little bit of the shakes because that's a bold statement. >> and i think the interesting thing is when the government publishes inflation statistics they often talk about core inflation as opposed to inflation number. the inflation number carves out food and energy because it tends to be more volatile but it's really food and energy that everybody cares about and that's the thing there's no end in sight and i'm glad that you referenced the war in the ukraine and the fact that grain comes for the world comes often from russia and ukraine. that's not even impacting prices yet and i think that the fact that every news story has inflation to it, that has the world on edge not just us. >> yeah, we see -- we talk about bacon and eggs and wheat and different things like that.
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i want to put the gas prices up because there's not a 20-foot sign on every corner giving you the price of bacon but there is a 2-foot sign, 30-foot sign in some cases giving you the price of gas and you see right there, 28.86 a gallon, today it is 4.24 which the good news down 2 cents from last week but still you're talking about almost 2 buck a gallon rise and out the back door in california it's 7 bucks a gallon in a lot of cases. so it's a different thing here but it is visceral for people, mitch, because every time that you drive down the road, you see 5 bucks, 6 bucks, 7 bucks a gallon and it's depressing and it's one of those things that is politically debilitating for a lot of -- for a lot of candidates. mitch: and this summer we have travel season. people like to get in their cars and travel so they will feel it this summer. you have air-conditioning this summer, we didn't talk about natural gas and heating people's homes. i think it's going to be an issue when someone is driving to the polls in november and sees
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the price change on gasoline. they could influence the way they vote when they get into the voting booth. tracee: it's interesting i was reading paul from the new york times and he says inflation will be much easier to solve this time than it was in 1979, 1980, is that something that you would agree with? mitch: no, i don't think there's many times i've agreed with paul. people stop consuming because they can't afford to or too frustrated. that means that likely you're in a recession because the consumer drives our economy. he says it's easy to create a recession that the consumer leads, that's one thing. don't forget, back in the days that he's referring to, what paul volker, fair chairman at the time, he created a self-induced coma that it
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brought the economy to a grinding halt. either way not a good story. trace: 30 seconds. the president talks about raising taxes and spending more money, your thoughts? mitch: no, the last thing in the world what you want to do is stimulate the demand side of the economy and that's what you're going to do and by the way real quickly, that wealth tax, that is ridiculous in a word. trace: mitch roschelle, thank you so much for coming on, we appreciate your time. mitch: good to see you trace. trace: in the meantime our newsroom is getting the new images out of the war in ukraine. we are going to show you them as they come in next. ♪ ♪ ♪
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i'm alphonso, and there's more to me than hiv. there's my career,... my cause,... my choir. i'm a work in progress. so much goes into who i am. hiv medicine is one part of it. dovato is for some adults who are starting hiv-1 treatment or replacing their current hiv-1 regimen. with just 2 medicines in 1 pill,...
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dovato is as effective as a 3-drug regimen to help you... reach and stay undetectable. research shows people who take hiv treatment as prescribed... and get to and stay undetectable... can no longer transmit hiv through sex. don't take dovato if you're allergic to its ingredients... or if you take dofetilide. taking dovato with... dofetilide can cause serious or life-threatening side effects. hepatitis b can become harder to treat while on dovato. don't stop dovato without talking to your doctor,... as your hepatitis b may worsen or become life-threatening. serious or life-threatening side effects can occur,... including allergic reactions, lactic acid buildup, and liver problems. if you have a rash and other symptoms of an allergic reaction,... stop dovato and get medical help right away. tell your doctor if you have kidney or liver problems,... or if you are, may be, or plan to be pregnant. dovato may harm your unborn baby. use effective birth control while on dovato. do not breastfeed while taking dovato. most common side effects are headache, nausea, diarrhea, trouble sleeping,
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tiredness, and anxiety. so much goes into who i am and hope to be. ask your doctor if treating hiv with dovato is right for you. trace: fuel depo near lviv after russian attack. charles watson with us live and the new footage he's got the show us. charles, good day. charles: hey, trace, we are getting a look at the scene on the ground in the moments after rockets were launched in lviv. oil facility hit by 3 russian cruise missiles on saturday destroying multiple oil tanks and causing a huge explosion and a lot of black smoke that could be seen for miles according to authorities at least 5 were wounded. no one was killed. support coming in all forms with big and small gestures from
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around the world, carrying medical equipment arriving in romania over the weekend. >> we are thinking of them and we admire the courage and devotion of ukrainian brothers. charles: in the meantime the pressure is onto encourage russian citizens not to remain indifferent in the war on ukraine. for example, passengers on the railway line from moscow, russians are confronted with images of the ukraine war and art exhibition asking do you support this and open francis on sunday stepped up plea for negotiations to end fighting in ukraine warning that humanity must eliminate war and war will wipe out humanity, francis told the public in st. peter's square that more than a month after ukraine was invaded by russia, quote, the cruel and senseless war continues representing a defeat for all.
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>> i renew my appeal, enough, stop it, silence the arms, negotiate seriously for peace. charles: simple message, trace, but i'm sure a lot of people in ukraine and beyond can get behind it. we will send it back to you. trace: indeed, charles watson with the latest images from the war zone, charles, thank you. up next we will talk with an aid group working to find homes for desperate ukrainian refugees. next. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ oh, oh, oh ♪ ozempic® is proven to lower a1c. most people who took ozempic® reached an a1c under 7 and maintained it. and you may lose weight. adults lost on average up to 12 pounds. in adults also with known heart disease, ozempic® lowers the risk of major cardiovascular events such as heart attack, stroke, or death. ozempic® helped me get back in my type 2 diabetes zone.
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trace: russian air strikes shelling in ground forces in ukrainian cities the red cross is working around the clock to help refugees both inside and outside of ukraine. red cross workers are distributing emergency supplies, food, fuel, hygiene items to refugees in need and have supported evacuations in regions like kyiv, kharkiv and kherson. if you would like to join go to redcross. so far our efforts have brought in almost $12.5 million. well, a chance in life organization is helping ukrainian refugees settling in their new homes in italy
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providing anything from transportation to medical care. joining us now gabriel, president and executive director of a chance in life. sir, you're doing great work. i know the refugees keep flooding into italy, do you have what you need to be able to take care of these people? >> no, we need more. thank you, trace, we need more. at the moment 72,000 refugees of ukraine in italy. there are only 7% men. so as they are arrive in italy we need to find accommodation for them, provide them with food, child care, education, basic needs basically and we are working nonstop to ensure that this happens. trace: i know, sir, that your group specifically a chance in life is really focusing on the most vulnerable people and i found that interesting because in a war zone it has to be, it has to be overwhelmingly difficult trying to choose those
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who are the most vulnerable. >> i think that, you know, if you are leaving your home, your house, whatever you have overnight, just a few minutes, whatever you can carry with you, these are all desperate situations and so we are helping all of the refugees that are coming in and once that arrive, again, some of them don't even have their documents, their passports, children interrupt school and we are ensuring that they get first basic services and then eventually education, medical care and all they need to live -- to live in the most -- with dignity. trace: yeah, mr. demanoco, i wonder, you say that italy has the second largest ukrainian community outside of poland, outside of, of course, ukraine, i'm wondering what you believe when the people come to italy, would they be staying there or is this just temporary for them? >> i spoke with many of them and they wish to go back to their home. they told us our home is
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ukraine. we want to go back. we want to unite with our husbands, with our fathers, we want to be in our community. so, yes, temporarily maybe they can be joining their family in ukraine but they do want to go back. trace: i wonder because your reach is clearly limited and i know that there are other aid groups out there working, but what message would you like to pass along to other aid groups that may not know what's happening in italy? >> the message that i would like to give to everyone is if we work together we can go further. collaboration is key rather than planting a flag and saying we are working in this town, if we work together we can maximize the impact on the refugees and the local population. trace: yeah, grabriele, have you ever seen a humanitarian crisis on what is unfolding now in eastern europe and what your country is now seeing?
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>> the un commissioner for refugees philip said that this is the largest, dramatic situation after world war ii. so no, i haven't seen it. i've been to italy and i spoke with some of the refugees in particular the one young lady, her name is valeria. she was there with her son 3 year's old, we were talking with her about the long journey from ukraine to poland and then to italy and all of a sudden her son, again, 3-year-old looked at her, where is daddy, i want daddy, she start crying. i have never seen anything like this. they come with nothing and we are trying to provide them with the very basic needs they might have. trace: you're expecting 90,000 ukrainian refugees to come to italy and how in the world, a small country like italy would they take care of that amount of people in such a short amount of time. >> yeah, the state department of italy is expecting between
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700,000 and 900,000 refugees in italy. now keep in mind that italy has the population of 60 million people to compare to the u.s. it's about, i think, 330 million and the u.s. is going to accept 100,000 refugees. so you can see the difference between a small country like italy relatively speaking and the impact that almost one million refugees are going to make. trace: gabriele delmonaco, thank you for coming and we appreciate your time and your work. >> thank you, trace, thank you for having me, thank you. trace: day 32 on the war of ukraine. that's all, fox news sunday next. i'm trace gallagher.
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nicorette knows, quitting smoking is freaking hard. you get advice like: try hypnosis... or... quit cold turkey. kidding me?! instead, start small. with nicorette. which can lead to something big. start stopping with nicorette all of this is humanitarian aid that the fellowship is sending from israel directly into ukraine. food, medicine, warm clothing is needed now!
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lives abruptly changed... look at all of these people and there are hundreds and thousands more. we're called to step into this crisis... this inhumanity. the international fellowship of christians and jews needs your $45 gift now to help rush food, blankets and shelter to jewish refugees fleeing for lives in ukraine. please give as generously as you can, to help the refugees while there is still time. this is one plane, praise god! but we need 5 planes. we need 10 planes. we need 100 planes! you can give $45 now to help provide the food, and blankets that they so urgently need!
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jon: i'm jon roberts, president biden blasts president up inin a powerful speech but off the cuff remark that has captured the world's attention. >> for god sake, this man cannot remain in power. the secretary of state saying this is about putin's grip on ukraine, not russia. >> we do not have a strategy of regime change. jon: now the challenges ahead after a pep talk with u.s. troops and show of force with nato. the u.s. announcing new sanctions and help for refugees but ukraine says it needs
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