tv FOX and Friends FOX News April 8, 2022 3:00am-6:00am PDT
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not just people that are coming into the country, influx of drugs, fentanyl, crisis, everybody says if title 42 ends, it's only going to get worse, certainly a story to watch. >> ashley: everybody is talking about it going to be a story for a long time and going to get worse. >> carley: great to spend the last two hours with you. >> ashley: you too. >> carley: have a great friday. thanks for watching, "fox & friends" starts now. >> move back. >> preparation force a potential nightmare scenario at the southern border are underway right now. >> this is the first administration in history who came in office and unsecured the border. >> this nomination is confirmed. >> president biden and ketanji brown jackson set to give remarks from the white house. >> is there super spreader event. >> at that time the vaccines weren't available. it certainly puts us in a different space. >> ukraine prepared for another
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russian assault. >> it comes as the united nations has voted. >> in favor 9-3. >> to suspend russia from leading human rights spot. >> back at the masters in it to win it. >> this is spectacular. >> one under par 71. [cheers and applause] >> to have that type of energy out there is awesome to see. ♪ >> ainsley: that's a city very familiar to our own will cain, dallas, texas. it's going to be very sunny there today. 70 degrees is the high. going to have a good weekend if you are living in dallas on saturday going to have a high of 87 and cloudy sunday. it will be calm sunday. 86 degrees on sunday. >> brian: right, and will, how is philadelphia?
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that's the real story. >> will: ainsley, i was in the bathroom this morning cleaning up and brushing my teeth and shaving. and brian said don't you do that before going in? >> will: there was no going home. terrible stories in new york city. planes couldn't come in. i landed in philadelphia. got a car to new york in the middle of the night slept on my couch. saw brian's bright and shiny face. >> ainsley: what time did you roll into new york city? >> will: 2:30. you got how many hours of sleep? >> will: two. >> brian: not consecutive. two hours of sleep. but the good news is that's why you have that corner office with the pullout couch and king bed. we don't have that. >> will: right. >> brian: you do, will. >> ainsley: his butler ironed his suit and served him orange juice. >> ainsley: you are a hard worker. thanks for coming in. >> brian: appreciate it i owe you a favor. >> ainsley: montana going to be on the show today.
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>> brian: close the show hopefully with a musical rendition. he is going to be playing. let's talk about something not controversial brings the country together. illegal immigration. if you look at this administration, they have an interesting way of handling it ignoring it and then allowing some provisions that might somewhat control it to edevelop poor rate may. i'm talking about title 42 and talking about an administration that has basically just allowed the border to collapse in a way that t >> allowed the border to collapse in a way the numbers don't lie, we've never seen in our lifetime. before title 42 goes away there are democrats who are saying this is the stupidest thing i ever heard. >> bill was tweeting about this, they are getting drills, that they are prepared for the
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influx of what we are hearing from dhs. once title 42 ends, morrison double land we are hearing from townhall.com, he interviewed migrants in mexico that they are looking forward to title 42 ending and enough enough migrants come to america all at once border patrol agents won't be able to stop them. >> small preparation by the texas national guard but if there's a silver lining, don't know if we can call it the silver lining but there's promise in the fact the democrats seem to be breaking ranks when it comes to title 42, they will vote to extend, and they include senator mark kelly, senator kristin sinema,
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senator joe manchin and maggie hassan, said they will vote to extend title 42, the repeal of which to absolutely flood that. >> senator warnock said it's the wrong time to do this, masto, if you add up all the democrats, not just the ones supporting this the democrats speaking out against it and all the republicans takes you to 57 votes, they need 60, it will continue for 60 more days. >> the border is being overwhelmed, intentional negligence, president biden ran on doing a terrible job on the border and there doesn't seem enough national outrage about what is happening to the country and the reason your state's national guard is being
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trained is they are doing something the federal government is refusing to do, they don't have the numbers to do it. they have to provide backup to the border patrol which is huge gaps on the border. >> i have done diners across this country in texas and other places, there's one thing i've heard at every diner, i've got an idea when it comes to illegal immigration, shift them to washington dc, put the problem on the doorstep of politicians maybe you will get somebody to act. the governor of texas put forward that proposal, put illegal immigrants on buses and send them to the steps of the capital. peter doocy asked jen psaki to do that, here's what she had to say. >> bussing border crossers to
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all the everyone you, including clinton, obama wanted to do something to secure the border. president biden came in and unsecured the border and look a. i want to say one more thing. last month. because of the crisis on the border right now. border patrol is catching about 8,000 a day and what happened, they are so overwhelmed. 67,000 crossed the border and got away. they weren't fingerprinted. they weren't photographed. no by graphic information. no vetting was done. 60,000 people entered this country and got away. who the hell are they? they should scare every american. >> brian: yeah, who are they? we don't know. and we for this.
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we are recommending if you are an illegal immigrant apple care because you want -- if something does happen to the phone on the bus ride over or when you dismount from washington, d.c. or if you are in florida you are going to end up in delaware you do want apple care so we can go and there is a great computer repair shop in delaware should something go wrong. >> will: great advice. >> brian: they will hold on to it. >> ainsley: nothing get leaked. >> brian: worse come to worse droop it over at your house: human smuggler was arrested in texas, dps. told bill melugin they arrested 17 illegal immigrants $200 per person claiming he was told by cartel members to pick up a waiting car after crossing illegally to migrants and did you see the shots of about 2 dozen unaccompanied minors that were just found? so people are sending -- because joe biden and aoc and these geniuses won't enforce the law, people are sending their children with human traffickers
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employed by cartels to go thousands of miles through the jungle to be dropped at the border. do you think they are okay? that is nuts. that's because of all the incentives that on the books. please, link all these together because they belong together. >> ainsley: if they can get enough votes for the bipartisan bill to pass to extend title 42, they want to extend it at least 60 more days and require dhs to have a plan to deal with the post title 42 migrant influx. >> brian: they have no plan. >> ainsley: they have no plan. >> will: whether or not it is a publicity student to drop illegal immigrants in washington, d.c. it's not. it's a real life consequence to have them dropped into all these small towns in texas and all across. >> ainsley: we can't afford it arizona says we can't afford it we will have to ship them elsewhere because we can't keep all of them. >> will: still ahead it's awoke world after all disney execs admitting on camera targeting quote queer gen z's because it is house. >> brian: that was a shocking
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read. tiger woods is back. i'm not kidding. why the process he is where he needs to be. maybe the best ever after his return to the masters. ♪ ♪ i'm mark and i live in vero beach, florida. my wife and i have three children. ruthann and i like to hike. we eat healthy. we exercise. i noticed i wasn't as sharp as i used to be. my wife introduced me to prevagen and so i said "yeah, i'll try it out." i noticed that i felt sharper, i felt like i was able to respond to things quicker. and i thought, yeah, it works for me. prevagen. healthier brain. better life. ♪ we could walk forever ♪ ( ♪♪ ) ♪ walking on ♪
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>> carley: we are back with a fox news alert. we warn you the images you are about to see are graphic. 30 people are dead and at least 100 are wounded as a russian missile hits ukrainian rail station packed with civilians trying to flee the fighting. the head of the railway says this was a deliberate attack on the railway and the residence that were there. the governor of the region says thousands were at the station at
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the time of the attack. we will continue to update throughout the morning on any new information on the story. president biden, vice president harris and judge ketanji brown jackson were set to deliver remarks from the white house south lawn today following judge jackson's from the supreme court. vice president kamala harris presiding over yesterday's vote on the senate floor. the final tally was 53 to 47. judge jackson will become the first black female to sit on the high court. she will be sworn in after justice stephen breyer's retirement this summer. listen to this. the academy of motion pictures arts and sciences is reportedly split on the idea of stripping will smith of his best actor oscar as punishment for slapping comedian chris rock the odds of that happening are 50/50 heading in today's meeting. smith's effectively eliminated suspension and expulsion from the lift of potential
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punishment. opening day is in the books for a number of major league teams and it was not a good start for the defending champion atlanta braves who dropped their home opener to the cincinnati reds for a final score of 6-3. new york mets pete alonzo was drilled in the face after -- against the washington nationals having to exit in the ninth inning. the mets went on to beat washington 5-1. and in chicago, the cubs take down the brewers, nic can a horner blasts the first home run of the 2022 season in their 5-4 win at home. and saturday the yankees make season debut boston red sox. the long time rival goes head to head in the bronx at 4:00 p.m. eastern on fox sports 1. those are your headlines, guys, over to you. >> bill: billy crystal threw out the first pitch. >> ainsley: really. so glad it's back. have you been to a yankees game before ains. >> carley: i haven't. this is a refusing that just struck knee me that is now on my
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to do list. >> brian: that's solvable with all will's connections in sports i don't think you will be paying for a ticket. >> will: the heat is on can i come through for carley. >> ainsley: butler tells his assistant and his assistant calls the stadium. >> brian: be quiet when you are by will's corner office he is. >> will: napping. i got you, carley. you have to check out this story. it's absolutely fascinating. first of all, we have seen various videos coming out from a disney internal meeting leaked by chris rufo at the manhattan institute. he has done great work on critical race theory in our schools. he has now gotten ahold of all of these video internally at disney. this is karrii birx the president of general content talking about this is part of a business strategy for a disney taking the gender position.
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gender content towards these issues. and here is what -- she said this is a quote. >> got a zoom link. leaked zoom video but we have the quotes from that video. >> will: she said i think nobody stopped us because we were targeting gen z and millennials now we know as my son he texted me this morning gen z is 30% to 40% queerer than other generations because disney better get with it, mom is what her son told her. >> brian: what her son takes a figure not backed up by any fact and now it's diz any policy yet mickey continues to dance. >> will: i would say this, brian. there was a gallop poll just a couple of weeks ago it said one in five gen z identify as lgbtq. now, what does that mean first of all is a great question. what does that mean to identify? what does it entail?
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what does it encompass? is more interesting to me is why? is it because, you know, they are truly of this persuasion or is it because it's a chicken or egg theme. they are being fed these messages over and over from places like disney and now the numbers are going up? >> ainsley: if you are gen z born between 1997 and 2000 12. the ceo of bob chaffetz has been criticized for his handling of lgbtq issues. so he apologized. he is begging for forgiveness now. he said why now i hope you have all read my most recent noted in which i pledge to be a better ally for the lgbtq plus community. apologize for not being the ally you need me to be and committed to ensuring that our company lives up to its values and i know that our silence wasn't just about the bill in florida but about every time an individual or institution that should have stood up for this community did not i and the
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leadership team am determined to use this platform as a cat columbus for change. >> brian: if disney gets its way finally your kids can talk about gender studies in cirnted. stop focusing on coloring and counting. disney wants you to get in touch with gender identity between k and 3rd grade. i hope he continues on this brilliant mission. so inspiring. they say disney will have 50% of character's content will be from under represented groups by 2022 good luck with that i have never heard more people say they are changing their plans this summer. mostly orlando. i'm sure california and other cases. a lot of people want to stay away from there than i have heard since disney came out with their ridiculous stand on this noncontroversial bill from governor desantis. >> will: really is shocking to see how many corporate leaders and politicians within the democratic party say you know what? we should be talking to 7-year-olds about sex.
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>> brian: new jersey is. it's in their curriculum. >> will: we should be talking to them about gender identity and feeding them cartoons. it wasn't long ago where this was a controversial thing to say hey maybe strangers shouldn't talk to my children about sex. >> ainsley: that's what the issue is. i want to talk to my child. if my child is questioning her or his identity, i want to be the one to answer those questions and seek help and try to figure out who this person wants to be. that is up to me as parent. it's not the teachers. >> the teachers views might be different than mine and what i want to teach my child. >> brian: when it comes to the human body what do you want k through 3 to talk about and point out. in new jersey now, one of the objectives with second graders have children be able to identify at least four body parts from female and male genitalia and students to describe why it's important for them to note correct names of genitals. that's in your second grade class. if you are in new jersey, pack up your things, get a luggage
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rack, get what you can and run for the border. if you are a parent of young children. meanwhile, let's talk about something uplifting and that's what happened yesterday. >> ainsley: tiger woods. he i back. he played yesterday. he did a wonderful job. the commentators asked him how painful was it for you to walk the 18 holes? and he said on a scale of 1 to 10 it was past a 10. he said i knew my adrenaline would kick in. i have been talking to my team. my adrenaline will kick in and can i do that. if you could see the picture and a lot of my friends have come to my house and seen the pictures of what my leg looked like 14 months ago. then you would not have believed this to get from there to here is no easy tank. >> will: tiger on his performance on the first round in the masters. listen. >> i forget what i did on the range and play shot for shot. hit the ball in the correct spot. commit to what i'm doing. aim myself in the right angles. hopefully make a few putts and hopefully get after this thing. i was able to do that and then finish it in the red.
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i'm only 3 back and right where i need to be. it did not get easier put it that way. i can swing a golf club. it's the walking is not easy. and it's difficult. and as i said with all the hard work my leg, it's going to be difficult for the rest of my life. it's just the way it is. but i'm able to do it. and that's something i'm very lucky to have this opportunity to be able to play and not only that, to play in the masters and to have this type of reception. i mean, the place was electric. i hadn't played like this since '19 when i won. in '20 we had no one here and i didn't play last year. so, to have the patrons fully out and to have that type of energy out there was awesome to feel. >> brian: eighth place overall and he looked great on the course. you would have no idea. i couldn't even see a limp.
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>> will: numbers moving going into tournament i don't know if i have it exactly right i believe tiger was like 75 to 1 to win the masters. people understood and people seem to sense be careful here. he understands this court. he has pulled off a miracle before just three years ago. and here we are. admittedly just one round into the tournament but he is 1 under trailing the leader by 4 strokes. >> ainsley: i'm telling you don't put anything past tiger. he is such a champion he has the surgeon piece back his leg and foot with rod, plate, screws. that was 14 months ago. look at him still three more rounds to go. he knew he would be sore and he is in pain but can he do it. >> will: really cool to watch. >> brian: hopefully he will get to saturday. >> ainsley: if he wins, this will be his sixth green jacket and tied with jack nicklaus for the most wins. >> will: texas law enforcement bylawsing for mass migration event as the white house preens to lift title 42 the president is creating a public health and
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i need indeed. indeed you do. indeed instant match instantly delivers quality candidates matching your job description. visit indeed.com/hire >> will: as border towns brace for a surge of migrants waiting for title 42 end. the texas national guard is now training and running drills designed to respond to a, quote, mass migration event.
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done mcglaucoma lynn jr. is the mayor of it is good to talko you again. impending sense of a crisis mounting at your doorstep. i'm curious, do you already see indications of it? do you already see it unfold. >> we have been dealing with this crisis the last year. it's just going to be -- i mean, what's coming on the 23rd of may won't even be describable. you are talking about thousands of people that are going to hit that border that are just waiting to cross the border. and there's nobody is prepared down here for it. the federal government is not prepared for it what does it mean for your community those watching might not know uvalde is not directly on the border. maybe 100 miles. maybe a less than 100 miles.
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this impacts everybody. sitting on the border or not. what does this surge mean for uvalde. >> what will happen just like the federal government did the other day, they will get so overwhelmed at the border. they will put all their border patrol agents out in the field. they will make them processors and be doing paperwork and all of a sudden they will say we are overcapacity and start shipping them to downs like uvalde or springs or crystal city and they will dump them -- they won't to dump them at our local and we have to deal with them. >> will: talking about dealing with social service issues, law enforcement issues. you have dealt with that in the past. talking about a massive surge right there coming in may. what can you do about it? what can the governor of texas do about it? you see these pictures about texas national guard preparing for what looks like a riot. is there much you can do in lieu of the federal government? >> well, no. not really. the federal government ties your
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hands at every turn. every time the governor tries to do something the attorney general tries to do something, the federal government files suit or puts a stop to it and tries. what the governor has done, bufersing them to washington, d.c., i mean, one thing everybody was talking about in the united states yesterday was the governor sending these buses to washington, d.c. these major media networks, thank god for fox because they have been covering it regularly. but nobody else has. now yesterday the governor had everybody talking about these buses going to washington. so everybody is going what's going on on the southern border. >> will: really quickly, mayor, by factor of what do you expect this surge to increase? i know you have been dealing with this for a year. title 42 goes away. by a factor of what do you expect this flood of illegal immigrants? >> 75 to 100 percent. >> will: oh man. >> it's going to be that bad. >> will: mayor of uvalde text don mclaughlin, thank you for joining us this morning. >> thank you. i appreciate it. >> will: 30 people are dead and
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dozens hurt after russia strikes ukrainian train station packed with people trying to evacuate. general jack keane on the horrific tragedy is up next. ♪ ♪ there's a different way to treat hiv. it's every-other-month, injectable cabenuva. for adults who are undetectable, cabenuva is the only complete hiv treatment you can get every other month. cabenuva helps keep me undetectable. it's two injections, given by a healthcare provider every other month. it's one less thing to think about while traveling. hiv pills aren't on my mind. a quick change in my plans is no big deal. don't receive cabenuva if you're allergic to its ingredients or taking certain medicines, which may interact with cabenuva. serious side effects include allergic reactions, post-injection reactions, liver problems, and depression. if you have a rash and other allergic reaction symptoms, stop cabenuva and get medical help right away. tell your doctor if you have liver problems or mental health concerns, and if you are pregnant, breastfeeding,
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>> brian: 30 dead and 100 wounded as a missile hits a rail station and packed with civilians trying to evacuate. that is not something you do with a sophisticated army. griff is live in lviv with more. hey, griff. >> brian, good morning. that death toll appearing to rise. the governor of the area now saying 39 dead, more than 100 injured. and they expect the numbers may grow even more after two russian missiles strike a busy railway station in the eastern part of
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ukraine. and we want to warn our viewers these images are disturbing and they are graphic. you seeing them, bodies lying among luggage. many of these people looking to evacuate ahead of what is likely to be the donbas region. we can show you on the map this is where the pentagon was assessing the russian forces already beginning to amass for a new offensive. it comes, brian, after the u.n. yesterday voted to remove russia from the human rights council after the world saw what happened in butch challenge. the mayor there now says three new sites of mass graves have been discovered qui were in the basement for 35 days shelling all the time. sometimes there is no water. sometimes there is no food. i explained to them how to fall, how to run, how to defend. show me. close your ears with your hands.
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that's right. they fired very hard. >> griff: brian, up the road from bucha rescue teams searched the road for bodies. the site of more russian atrocities. president zelenskyy called scarier than anything we have seen yet. it comes as ukraine's foreign minister yesterday pleaded with nato's leaders for heavier weapons and harsher sanctions asking them simply how many more buchas have to happen after days to get evacuees out nearly 35,000 penal were able to get out from various cities although new strike from railway station hitting likely evacuees trying to get out. brian only underscores the challenges as we wait for the second phase of the war to begin after 44 days of fighting. brian? >> brian: right. of course, the nato does not believe they can even -- they can given up on taking kyiv given up for now. thanks, griff. bring in general jack keane
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retired four star general fox news strategic analyst and study of war if you want to know what's going on get their email. they are unbelievable. that's what's happening. general, first off, as we look at this map here. it looks as though we used it for the longest time talk about kyiv. the first time you and i are talking about this area right here. do the ukrainians have enough to push back the russians as of right now? >> well, what they have been doing, brian, quite successfully in the donbas region in those two break away provinces. they -- the russians have been attacking and trying to penetrate the ukrainian lines for two years and repelled them every single time. russians brought in a unit from georgia earlier in the week and they failed miserably. and actually, they eventually became a combat refusal. now, what is really going to happen here in the next few weeks, obviously the russians are consolidating everything that they have to put into the
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donbas region. that is really what is going on. most of those units that were in the blue area up there on the map that you pointed to in the kyiv area, and the chernihiv area, those units are so badly damaged and somewhat combat ineffective, it will likely take a number of weeks to reconstitute them. nonetheless, the russians are moving troops down south of kharkiv to the donbas region and to attempt to try to encircle the ukrainian forces which are essentially involved in trench warfare which they have been forth last 8 years. this is very different than the rest of ukraine. this has been embattled area since 2014 ukrainians know this
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is happening. they nor fools. they will attempt to block that from taking place. and if they successfully block it, i don't believe the russians are going to take complete control of the donbas region, which is what their intent is over the next couple of weeks. >> brian: some things are telling. the germans have picked up the intercepts. the russians felt totally overwhelmed by the ukrainian numbers. and their organization, number one, and number two it is clear they are aiming for civilians, though intestify septemberers saying shoot, just shoot the civilian one on a bike and intimidate the ukrainian soldiers and kill them on the spot and they just said slay them all. so it shows disorganization and shows disenchantment. the morale, believe it or not, general, according to this is getting worse among the russians. they don't understand the mission. having said that they need weapons. the ukrainians show they can fight. they need more than javelins to win. if i was to give you a sheet and
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i said fill that out for what the ukrainians need to win. what would general keane put on it? >> yeah. i would put long and mid range air defense systems. i would give them combat aircraft. the migs that we have been talking about for weeks. it doesn't make any sense. there is no logical argument for not providing them. certainly our arrogance that was suggested in testimony by some people in the defense department and intelligence agents saying that they really don't need those airplanes. >> brian: how dare they. >> i think that's up to the ukrainians and also combat vehicles is what they need and artillery. these are all very different systems in addition to the javelins and the stingers because the ukrainians want to be able to punch through, conduct offensive operations against the russians. not just defensive operations. and this is what has changed here. zelenskyy and his generals want
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to get the russians out of their territory. they want to drive them out. and they believe it is the only way, brian, that they can stop the killing of innocent civilians. the only way that's going to end in their mind is to drive the killers out of ukraine territory. >> brian: general, the numbers are high enough that the russians even admit they have high casualty numbers and the the ukrainians say they have 7,000 unclaimed russian bodies. the russians have no interest. you take the bad attitude, the terrible strategy. the antiquated equipment. the lack of commitment and understanding of what they are fighting for. and this might be the right combination if the west is smart enough to arm the ukrainians. and that's why the pols in the baltic states are so exercised. if they can keep all this, they are going to look at that at as a win. next stop poland, they're going to rattle the cages of eastern europe for the next 10, 15, 20 years as long as vladimir putin is in power. do you agree?
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>> yeah, absolutely. what better way to protect nato from a future russian encroachment or invasion than to destroy the russian army in ukraine. doesn't that make sense? >> brian: yes. >> that is in nato's interest. >> brian: got it. >> give these guides everything that they need and destroy this russian force right now, which is so vulnerable. >> brian: good and evil, pretty obvious. general keane, thanks so much. appreciate it. >> great talking to you, brian. have a wonderful weekend. >> brian: you too. and thanks for breaking everything down. our carley shimkus has the other news. hey, carley. >> carley: certainly do. good morning, brian. we will start with this. attempted murder suspect released from jail through a blm support fund is back behind bars. authorities say brown walked into a louisville mayoral candidate's office and opened fire back in february. luckily, no one was hurt. black lives matter louisville spent $100,000 to cover his bail
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but brown's lawyers say the civil rights activist is back in custody in connection with to a warrant that remains sealed. a federal appeals court reinstating president biden's vaccine mandate for all federal workers. the 2 to 1 decision reverse as lower court ruling that put the policy on hold. president biden issued the executive order back in sent. the administration argue was the constitution gives him the same authority as the ceo of a private corporation. lawyers for those challenging the mandate pointed to a recent supreme court opinion saying the government cannot force private employers to require. >> emily: employees get vaccines. two pro-football coaches are joining former miami dolphins head coach brian flores in his class action racial discrimination lawsuit against the league. former arizona cardinals head coach steve will and long time nfl assistant ray horton both alleging discrimination. in a complaint obtained by fox
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news digital, will claims his former team did not give him an opportunity to succeed. horton claiming he was part of a sham interview only conducted to meet league requirements. those are your headlines. now, let's check in with senior meteorologist janice dean for our fox weather forecast. hi, janice. >> hi, carley. take look at the temperatures across the northeast. area of low pressure that has been spinning over the great lakes, the midwest, and bringing cooler temperatures to the region, not only today but through the weekend. can you see where we have got that area of low pressure that brings the wet weather and the snow, the wet snow to some of these regions as well. going to kind of be stubborn and hang out today and tomorrow across the northeast. so there's the future radar. the snow as far as south as the appalachians and it's going to kind of be a nuisance for the next 24 to 46 hours across the northeast. meanwhile, we are tracking the big storm system that's going to start developing this weekend across the rockies. eject out into the plain states, gather all of this moisture from
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the gulf of mexico, and bring the risk of yet another week of severe storms for parts of tornado valley. this is what we talk about when we talk about that area of, you know, extreme weather that hit the plain states in the south and there is your forecast highs across california, especially warm where we are going to set some daytime records today. close to 100 degrees. we will continue to bring you the very latest, brian kilmeade, i'm inside today, i'm very grateful for that the humanity will not effect my hair. >> brian: right. it is all about your hair. and it's never looked better. in fact, if i got closer, i would say gee, your hair smells terrific which was a fantastic shampoo. >> janice: i remember that. >> janice: i will allow you to do that once. >> brian: we senses in the 70s. i can't believe it is not butter. okay a lot of things we will talk about later. the media outright admitting hunter biden jt wasn't that interesting. >> i didn't think the hunter
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bidens business relationships have anything to do with who should be president of the united states. so i didn't find -- i don't find it to be interesting. >> brian: we do. will evita duffy was at the event and she is next. to debt ie and, no matter how much i paid, it followed me everywhere. between the high interest, the fees... i felt trapped. debt, debt, debt. so i broke up with my credit card debt and consolidated it into a low-rate personal loan from sofi. i finally feel like a grown-up. break up with bad credit card debt. get a personal loan with no fees, low fixed rates, and borrow up to $100k. go to sofi.com to view your rate. sofi. get your money right. ♪♪ to be a thriver with metastatic breast cancer means... sofi. get your money right. asking for what we want. and need. and we need more time. so, we want kisqali. women are living longer than ever before with kisqali... ..when taken with an aromatase inhibitor or fulvestrant in postmenopausal women
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>> ainsley: since journalist can no longer deny the authenticity of the hunter biden laptop. one writer says she dismissed the story because it is not interesting to her. >> i didn't think the hunter biden business relationships have anything to do with who should be president of the united states. so, i didn't find -- i don't understand it to be interesting. >> ainsley: my next guest is a university of chicago student who attended that event and says she doesn't buy this elitist narrative, managing editor of the chicago thinker evita duffy joins us now. good morning, evita. >> good morning. >> ainsley: good morning. do you believe her? do you think she doesn't believe it's an interesting story or is she just trying to shut it down. >> absolutely not. the media has been trying to shut this story down from the moment we heard about it but, you know, the person who actually asked that question is daniel schmidt who is a college reporter for the chicago thinker, a student publication that i co-founded and we
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students we got together, we came to this disinformation event at the university of chicago to, one to listen, to ask tough questions, and to report. what we discovered is that the event speakers like anne apple baum who is atlantic reporter and brian stelter and jonah goldberg is that they don't actually care about roading out disinformation because though talked the whole time about taking back power. they said they need the corporate mainstream media to take back the gate keeping power that they had before social media. the social media, you know, it democratized information in the way that they want to take that to take back that power. that social media took away from them is to give government the ability to have algorithmic control over what we post on the internet.
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obviously that is so concerning because we know what they consider disinformation isn't actually disinformation. it's information that's inconvenient to them like the hunter biden laptop story. >> ainsley: this conference was based on it was called the disinformation and the erosion of democracy conference yet they are not interested in talking about this information about hunter biden's laptop. if we want fair elections in this country, which americans deserve, shouldn't democrats and republicans be treated the same? if you have wrongdoings in your past and you run for office and are a democrat the media went report it shut it down. the media will censor and won't allow that to be on until after the election takes place. if you are the republican they will dig up so much dirt and sometimes even make up false stories. >> yeah. i mean, that's exactly right. that's why it's been so interesting to watch that clip that was a question asked by a college student go absolutely viral and has millions of views on the internet.
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and all it took was a couple of college kids to get together and to turn this entire farce of an event into a national conversation about the corporate liberal media's disinformation. and their bias. so it was really quite amazing to see. >> ainsley: yeah, well you and daniel schmidt, kudos to both of you for bringing this to light. thank you much, evita. >> thank you. >> ainsley: don't miss the moment item tis jump into action saving a man seconds before it engulfed in flames. ♪
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♪ ♪ my garden is definitely my passion. my garden is my creative outlet. find more ways to grow at miracle-gro.com >> how can you say president biden was not in close contact with speaker pelosi? >> it did not meet that bar. >> that's why no one trusts what is coming out of this white house. >> i'm daniel schmidt. >> during an event about disinformation a college student asks journalists why they ignored the hunter biden laptop. >> the laptop, i think is totally irrelevant. >> it's an example of how the elite ruling views about what americans care about. >> the texas national guard running drills. >> move back. >> designed to simulate how they would respond to a mass
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migration event. >> what's coming on the 23rd of may won't even be describable. you are talking about thousands. >> 39 dead. more than 100 injured. >> after russia strikes a ukrainian train station. >> russians are moving to attempt to try to encircle ukrainian forces. >> pulls back. gets there fly ball. right field. it's national beer day. good night, everybody. be ♪ ♪ taking to the limit ♪ take it one more time ♪ be the ball of fire at the finish line ♪ put the pedal down ♪ and don't look back ♪ the key to -- >> brian: ted montana is going to be on in one hour and 50 minutes. he is going to be on -- i foregovernment the time. so he is going -- really two hours. >> ainsley: at the end of the show. to cse out the friday edition
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just to get will pumped up to do 8 or 10 hours over the weekend. >> will: you forgetting what time it is isn't my favorite confusion of yours of the day. it was an all time moment for brian kilmeade sentences in the 70s he come up with one. >> brian: gee your hair smells terrific was the name of a shampoo. who would ever market that and go with that? competing against head and shoulders and prell and breck and the other one i can't believe it's not butter. >> ainsley: changed all of our lives back then. healthier version. >> brian: better than margarine. >> ainsley: so they said. yellow container now they have the spray one. >> brian: can you pass the spray bottle i have new potato. i do want to come up with more
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sentences. >> will: so many drops they are going to pull for "saturday night live." >> brian: for next time sunday. >> ainsley: said so you know what i will just go to break. >> will: nancy pelosi just tested positive for covid-19 days after coming face-to-face with president biden. >> brian: everybody in that picture must be quarantining i guess, no? according to jen psaki it wasn't close contact. it was just a kiss. >> ainsley: jacqui heinrich joins us live from the white house. jacqui? >> good morning, ainsley will and brian. that is right. that picture, pretty mind-blowing according to cdc guidelines the president is not considered a close contact of house speaker nancy pelosi even though she has since tested positive after planting a kiss on the president's cheek tested negative yesterday the president did. but the white house evidently has tallied up pelosi's time around biden and it fell under the cdc' threshold.
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>> how can you guys say that president biden was not in close contact with pelosi when there is video of the speaker kissing him? >> well, peter, the way that it is defined is by the center for disease control the cdc and their definition of it is 15 minutes of contact within a set period of time and within six feet. it did not meet that bar. >> the white house is closely following cdc guidelines to determine who is and isn't a close contact of the about the appears not being quite as stringent. cdc says if you are exposed to covid-19 and updated on evacuations supposed to wear mask around others for 10 full days. kamala harris was spotted maskless for the confirmation vote for the next supreme court justin yesterday all of this after her communications director jamal simmons also tested positive. >> i haven't seen -- eye i have obviously watched most parts of the vote. i know she was alone kind of on
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the dais for the vast majority of that and of course she has been wearing a mask otherwise. but, beyond that i haven't done any further analysis. >> gridiron dinner last saturday is now into a number of positive cases including simmons, two democrat members of congress, one republican senator, two cabinet members, the president's sister valerie and half a dozen journalists according to the "the washington post." despite covid ripping through the d.c. area, the white house is still moving forward with an event today to celebrate the confirmation vote of the next supreme court justice ketanji brown jackson even though the former president trump got a whole lot of push back when he did the same thing celebrating amy coney barrett's confirmation. the difference now the white house says is vaccine availability. >> brian: really and the vaccine is doing such a great job helping nancy pelosi not get it two boosters and double vaxxed. everyone has got double and triple vax and because of the vaccine. is this the event outdoors.
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>> it is outdoors. it is on the south lawn. >> ainsley: jacqui how are we coming along with the monoclonals i know people tested positive for covid and monoclonals. it's tough to find. are the ramping up the companies making monoclonals. >> that's all of the reason they have been pushing covid funding. they have been saying they are having a tough time sending out treatment of shipments. that's one of the areas we have already seen purchasing scaled back. that's how they are pushing to get more funding out of congress. >> brian: the pandemic is over because that's why we have to lift title 42. right. so this is fun. you have a great job. >> thank you. >> will: brian makes a pointed when we are watching that clip. it's funny, that's a point. loot of this is funny. i don't think we can simply make light of it according to the cdc and jen psaki apparently you have to make out in brian's words for 15 minutes. i think that's continuous making
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out. >> ainsley: not necessarily making out. you can be next to someone. >> will: the point is if you are making out, but it's only for five minutes, you are cool. >> brian: i don't know anyone that's made out with anyone for 15 minutes, if you have email will. >> will: it is funny, it is funny to watch this unfold. >> brian: because they change the rules all the time. >> will: this hypocrisy on your screen is funny. more than two years this has been a self-righteous, condemnation of anyone who doesn't wear their mask or anyone who is in close contact and now because covid is not at the top of your news cycle, poof, it's gone, kamala doesn't wear a everything that, these two are trading, you know wet kisses and four times, four shots, the vaccine supposed to get one. four shots. firefighters and cops and nurses, jobless because they didn't want to get vaccinated. these politicians get vaccinated, make up the rules as they go along and are able to not even have to quarantine.
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the president doesn't have to quarantine. remember that? because he only made out for her only kissed her for four seconds. so this is a joke. at the same time, where is all the money we gave you? they got $6.7 trillion on covid relief, all right? 6.7 trillion. you didn't even prepay for the therapeutics. it's not even -- not only monoclonals they have therapeutic pills now kind of like a z pack. if i test positive we now have pfizer and another company has come up with a way to, you know, just like you have a sinus infection. z pack. you are back in action. guess what? they invented it. they came up with it but they didn't mass produce it because he didn't want to do warp speed which said we are betting you do it when you get it enough to use it monoclonals done during trump and used now they don't have enough mysteriously now you have a cure didn't premake ahead of time. haven't heard about the cure and tell us the vaccine works and now you stop talking about it everybody testing positive for
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it like jen psaki four shots. you wonder why people are having doubts about this whole two year torture condescending talk that we have been experiencing from that white house. >> ainsley: nancy pelosi vaccinated and boosted. we do wish her well. hope she is okay. i wonder if she will get the monoclonals. >> brian: asymptomatic. >> ainsley: a lot of times i have an elderly couple friends with down in florida they got covid. they were trying to find monoclonals but they felt fine what will happen is sometimes if you have covid on like day 8 or day 10 you start to feel really bad, really sick sometimes and then it's too late to get the monoclonals. we need to ramp up monoclonal treatment and need to be able to have it. to everyone who has covid. steve. >> will: this is not disconnected from the conversation about covid. play book for the last two years tell the truth about covid first dismissed as conspiracy. then disinformation. then admitted as the truth and
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then ultimately unimportant. that's the playbook before us when it comes to hunter biden laptop just in the last couple of days. the atlantic put on a panel seminar where the university of chicago. they were confronted by some students. >> brian: regret this by the way? >> will: yes, i do. >> ainsley: panel on disinformation. >> will: the internet and fox only people that will ever show this kind of hypocrisy. i don't know if they regret it, brian. but you get to see it here's where the university of chicago freshman confronted anne applebaum an atlantic writer about the hypocrisy, the propaganda and the censorship on hunter biden's laptop. watch this. >> i'm a fraternal at the university of chicago. my question is for ms. apple baum in 2020 you wrote those who live outside the fox news bubble do not, of course, need to learn any of the stuff about hunter biden referring to his laptop, of course. a poll later found out if voters knew about the content of the laptop, 16% of joe biden voters
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would have acted differently. the "new york times" confirmed the contents of the laptop are real. do you think the media acted inappropriately when they disdismissed the laptop is russian disinformation. >> my problem with hunt's laptop is irrelevant. not whether it's disinformation. i didn't think hunter biden's business relationships have anything to do with who should be president of the united states. so, i didn't find -- i don't find it to be interesting. i mean, that would be my problem with that as a major news story. >> brian: so think about this. you could say i'm a columnist and i focus more on domestic issues or i really don't do politics that might be an appropriate answer. if you are the editor of a magazine and you don't think this is news worthy that the president's son flying around to controversial countries like ukraine, romania, russia and china doing international business deals with no experience, and one of his business partners told a national television audience
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that joe biden knew about it and you, as the atlantic don't think this is interesting or anything to do with the joe biden being president of the united states? you are not worthy of that job. >> ainsley: the "new york post" did this exclusive story back in october of 2020, a month before the election. they were censored. they were shut down. if you tried to put it on twitter. if you tried to put it on facebook, you were shut down. the "new york post," the whole article was deleted and censored. you couldn't even read about it. they didn't want this to come out. if you are a democrat and you run for office now. and there are any wrongdoings in your past, they will not report it they do their best not to report it until it comes to light and then they finally report it that's what we are seeing now with the "the washington post." that's what we are seeing with the "new york times." if you are a republican and running for office. you are doomed. they are going to scrounge up every piece of dirt that has ever happened in your life. sometimes they will actually make it up. look at russia, russia, russia with donald trump. >> brian: all right. >> will: again, it goes from conspiracy to disinformation to
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ultimately not interesting. brian, it's not true by the way that she finds it uninteresting. she spent years tweeting about potential corruption with the trump administration. >> brian: she lied. >> will: she was all interested in corruption when it was potentially donald trump. she is not interested when it comes to the president or the would be president of the united states and being corrupt and influence peddling. that student daniel schmidt was on "fox & friends first" talking about this hypocrisy. >> this was at a conference as you mentioned on disinformation and, yet, the story that was probably the greatest example of disinformation, the hunter biden laptop, the way the media treated it, she totally ignored it and, frankly, i think it's just an example of how journalists, the elite ruling class views what americans care about as irrelevant to them and as, you know, not worthy of any attention. and, you know, i find it interesting how at one point she claims it's irrelevant but then at the other point her and other journalists spent months on months trying to discredit it, trying to get rid of it.
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what happened last year was the media instantly claiming it was russian disinformation is a huge disgrace and something that seriously needs to be studied into how the media can get away with this. >> brian: gives me great hope that freshmen are like this. david axelrod people inside the obama administration were concerned that joe biden, who had the ukrainian portfolio had his son take a job on burisma. that's a fact. so that's -- we weren't concerned in the administration someone trying to put on a conference that is supposed to accomplish anything. then never questioner gets up and asks a question to brian stelter being surprisingly he still has a job. he says this: meaning you at cnn you push the russian collusion hoax. you push the jussie smollett hoax. smear justice kavanaugh as a rapist and nic sandmann as a racist and dismilsd the hunter
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biden laptop as russian disinformation. becoming more apologists and cheerleaders for the. is it time to dead and no longer operative. all the mistakes of the cnn anda and cnn in particular seeming to go in one direction are we expected to believe that this is all just sort of a random coincidence? and stelter comes back and says too bad we don't have time. let's have lunch. this kid, this other student nailed another question that we have been discussing on the couch that you will never hear outside our company. >> ainsley: brian, the irony here it was called the disinformation and erosion of ill will accuse others of what which you are doing. >> ainsley: house republicans sent a letter to the ceo of twitter and congresswoman claudia tenney. twitter's action undoubtedly suede the outcome of the presidential election she says because they would not run the laptop from hell story. >> brian: i had william barr on
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for an hour on yesterday. the by far the suppression of the hunter biden story had much more effect on this election than anything with any type of voting machines or mail-in ballots. >> will: we had polling on that to back that un. >> brian: that to me is the biggest story. he personally said the most disturbing as i do. i have never seen a story from a legitimate newspaper suppressed by 99% of all media and 51 experts in intelligence many of which work for republican administrations come out and say yeah, this is russian disinformation. they put all their credibility on the line. >> will: obvious propaganda. obvious misinformation. >> brian: huge movement on this 150 transactions with james biden and hunter biden being looked at in u.s. banks already international deals. how long can they shield the president from these transactions and actually call yourself an investigative journalist? >> will: let's go over to carley shimkus who has additional
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headlines for us this morning. >> carley: cnn front fiery but mostly peaceful protests as well that has become quite the conference that we have been covering. absolutely. got turn to some headlines here. starting with this. chicago police staffing hit a new low not seen in more than half a century. the city losing 300 sworn officers so far this year. cpd's officer count dropping below 12,000 as the city sees its highest crime rate in five years. the mass exodus follows mayor lori lightfoot slashing of the budget by $59 million last year during the height of the defund the police movement. elon musk says he will hold a town hall meeting for twitter employees after becoming a majority shareholder of the company. it comes as twitter staffers are reportedly voicing outrange on internal message boards over comments made by musk appearing to disparage the trans community in the past. but no date has been set for that town hall just yet. more to come on. that was meanwhile, in texas,
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elon musk celebrates tesla's future products at their new headquarters in austin. the ceo firing up the crowd at the cyber rodeo party. watch this. >> calvary -- we are continue california. but, we ran out of room. and so we need a place where we can be really big. and there is no place like texas. [cheers and applause] >> carley: rocking the cowboy hat and glasses. next year musk's factory will be pumping out the futuristic cyber truck which he refers to as tesla's magnum open. and it's also some dough for historic spacex launch for private astronauts to the international space station in just a few hours of the falcon 9 rocket will blast off from kennedy space center and crew dragon vehicle is expected to dock on the international space station tomorrow. the mission will last 10 days and eager astronauts say they are ready to fly. how about that?
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those are your headlines guys, over to you. >> ainsley: thank you so much, carley. we were just talking about, have you ever ridden in a tesla. >> carley: i have not. you are exposing all the things i have never done. >> ainsley: drive a tesla to the yankees game. >> will: can i say something on that? don't ride tesla sedan two hours to new york not much leg room as it turns out. >> carley: that's very specific. >> will: i wouldn't know much about it. >> ainsley: pretty on the inside like a huge spaceship. brian ted would you stretch will's ham strings in the break. >> will: please come over here. >> ainsley: flight was canceled this morning he had to drive from philadelphia and sleep in his office for two hours. >> brian: meanwhile, still ahead, 39 people are dead. 300 are hurt after russian missiles strike a packed train station. form everywhere new york governor george pataki just returned are from bringing humanitarian aid from eastern
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europe he joins us next. >> ainsley: deputies cut into a car to save a man. one of those heroes is going to join us later ♪ ♪ walk this way ♪ you told me to walk this way ♪ talk this way ♪ walk this way ♪ talk this way ♪ where do you find the perfect developer? well, we found her in prague between the ideal cup of coffee and a truly impressive synthesizer collection. ...but you can find her right now on upwork. better? better. when the world is your workforce finding the perfect developer, designer, marketer, or whomever you may need, tends to fall right into place. f♪ we could walk forever ♪can start today on upwork.
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>> brian: fox news alert now. 39 people dead and 31 wounded as a russian missile station evacuate the war zone which is the entire country. griff jenkins is in lviv, ukraine with more. griff, again, targeting civilians with impunity. >> griff: yeah, brian, good morning. you are right. the governor of the area where
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this strike happened says at least 39 are dead and president zelenskyy just told the finish parliament 300 injured and we're told these are preliminary numbers and the numbers could rise. this after a russian strike, two missiles hitting a busy railway station in the eastern city of. we have to warn our viewers these images are graphic and disturbing you see bodies lying among luggage. where many civilians were waiting to evacuate because they are anticipating the fighting to escalate in this eastern donbas area where the pentagon has said russian forces are amassing for a new offensive coomsz after what happened in bucha, the whole world saw it the world there says three new sites have been discovered. one survivor describing what happened. >> we were in the basement for 35 days. there was shelling all the time.
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sometimes there is no water. sometimes there is no food. i explained to them how to fall, how to run, how to defend. show me. close your ears with your hands. that's right, they fired very hard. >> griff: brian, up the road from bucha rescue teams searched the rubble for the site more russian atrocities. meanwhile ukrainian officials report after days of solid efforts to get evacuees out nearly 5,000 have evacuated new strike clearly complicates evacuees getting out and, of course, aid come in. the railway system very important mode of transportation all across ukraine. not just from the eastern side and from that region but all the way through the western area and where i'm standing in lviv, finally, brian, just a note we are seeing from the russian media the kremlin denying any
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involvement in this latest attack. brian? >> brian: yeah, of course. why would they? thanks so much, griff. appreciate it. 26 minutes now after the hour. among the many people working tirelessly to bring crucial humanitarian aid to the ukrainian refugees is former new york governor george pataki who just returned from eastern europe and joins us now. in fact, governor, you were in ukraine. >> we were there this week. we were there a few weeks ago and we are going to be going back. they need help and we are going to be doing everything we can to provide it. >> brian: what did you notice when you got there. >> tremendous courage. they are committed to winning this war. they know it's not just about independence, it's about their lives. and a resolve that they are going to get through this and help every person in ukraine get through this. >> brian: you say people in poland and hungry and these areas they're doing unbelievable stuff. in ukraine, there is no help in ukraine. and as the russians pull back, showing this carnage, the people that are surviving want to go back. there is no food. there is nothing. >> that's exactly right, brian.
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you cross the border into hungary and poland and being well-taken care of by the people in those countries. we went into ukraine and no help at all from the west. just what the ukrainian government can do. we have been sending in food. sending in medicine, in fact, we built 20 houses this week. housing structures for people who are refugees. they are sleeping in a closed -- >> brian: getting houses building them here and sending them over. >> building in hungary, taking them across the border and putting them up in ukraine. talked with zelenskyy's top guys today we are sending 10 more housing units put up in bucha because they want to show that they're coming back. so, we're doing everything we can to help. >> brian: so, yeah. by the way if you want to help the governor donate to george pataki.com. shame not between nato eug 7 no one thought about how to take care of the iraqis -- excuse me, ukrainians, rebuild ukraine as the russians continue to suffer defeats and recede, i hope.
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president obama has come out to take a bow from obamacare which is interesting thing to do. come out and has new view of what he did with russia. remember, it was under president obama that vladimir putin took crimea and took the donbas region. here's what he said yesterday. >> as somebody who grappled with the incursion into crimea and the eastern portions of ukraine. i have been encouraged by the european reaction. because in 2014, i often had to drag them kicking and screaming to respond in ways that we would have wanted to see. >> brian: guy leaned over and told medvedev i will -- tell vlad i will have more freedom. >> in second term and cut off all military aid to ukraine. we had been providing military aid. >> brian: he gave them blankets and mres.
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>> and socks cut off all military aid. when they were fighting we cut off military aid to ukraine. so i think that's revisionist history. and even now, you know, we are providing help. we need to provide and i hear this from every person i talk to. >> brian: what are they saying? >> better military a sense. you talk to a woman with her three kids sleeping on a factory floor she doesn't worry abouter hadself she worries about her husband we need surface to air missiles. torpedoes to go after the russian navy. we need more advanced weapons. s-300s they're all available. for whatever reason, i think primarily the united states is preventing ukraine from getting these weapons the polls and slovakia and others want to send them but they haven't gotten them. that's the overwhelming issue i hear. >> brian: right. for you personally, there has been talk, governor, you were a two term governor of new york about running again. might you do this? >> three term. >> i have a cause right now.
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a mission that i think is very important that's to provide as much humanitarian aid to the estimated 6 million ukrainian refugees in ukraine who literally have nothing. and we're going to do our best. >> brian: new york state has the same size economy as the country as russia and that's what they're fighting on and that's why they are hallowed out military. they have to be cut down to size. >> exactly. >> brian: these people need help. governor, thank you so much. appreciate the work you are doing. hopefully you will come back and keep us up to date. >> thank you, brian. >> brian: still ahead another governor joins us live. glenn youngkin is back and backing the blue. his fight to support our police by donating his entire salary to first responders. but, first, this family restaurant survived the pandemic but not inflation. the owner closing her doors today. she tell us how rising prices crushed her american dream. ♪ up to 12 pounds.
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martha, thank you so much for being with us to make it two years through the pandemic and then be hit with inflation. what does today feel like for you, your family, and your restaurant? >> >> it's a sad day for us and our customers we tried our best. with the rising cost of eggs and milk and meat, it was getting to a point where less people were dining out. the last three or four months, which took our sales down 50%. and then 30 to 50% increase in product. it got to a incident to where it was kind of a no-brainer for my husband and i to say now is the time to let's just start over and try to regroup. >> will: take a look by the way and put some stats to what you are experiencing, what you just described. sugar is up 31%, canola oil 32%, flour 63%. coffee 77%. i would have to imagine, martha,
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after you make it through two years of lockdowns and closures and fear and the pandemic, you thought probably you were seeing some sunlight on the other side of the clouds, and then this. it's just -- i have to imagine you thought you had made it. >> we did. we really did. the surge last year i think with a lot of restrictions being lifted and restaurants as far as dining, people had extra stimulus money, we were starting to climb that hill and almost get to the top. and then all of a sudden between supply delays and increase in supplies, lack of supplies, it kind of hit us in the direction we didn't think we were going to be affected by. affected by so many things on an economic level, on a global level. if you look at what has happened to your restaurant really over the past three years now, what is your take away? what would you say to those that create policies and conditions to what was a restaurant that was successful before this all
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hand? a loot of it is have to think the little people mom and pop restaurants in a small community are the staples of the community. they are the ones supporting little leagues, fundraisers when people get sick. we get affected differently than bigger chains like mcdonald's or arby's or burger kings. it's harder for us to really make a go of things. >> will: yeah. that's the story of the american small businessman small business woman, the entrepreneur in the community and we're sad for you today, martha. and the closure of your cafe, but we wish you the best of luck in whatever comes next. i'm sure there will be an exciting reinvention. we can't wait to see what it is. thank you. >> i appreciate it. thank you. >> will: all right. still ahead, lessons in wokeness. this fall new jersey will teach first and second graders about gender identity.
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my fellow "fox & friends weekend" co-host rachel campos-duffy and pete hegseth are both new jersey parents will join us next with their reaction ♪ still like that old time rock and roll ♪ that kind of music just sooths the soul ♪ , man.♪ ♪i've been everywhere, man.♪ ♪of travel i've had my share, man.♪ ♪i've been everywhere.♪ ♪♪ (music)
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allergies don't have to be scary. spraying flonase daily stops your body from whose resumes on indeed match your job criteria. overreacting to allergens all season long. psst! psst! flonase all good. ♪ >> bill: big league shot of the morning. big league is helping promote the upcoming baseball season starts tomorrow only on fs1. >> ainsley: to mark the event we all scored a custom bucket of big league chew with our faces on the wrappers. >> brian: i think mine is going to be the best seller, i believe. i like to take this time to bring in my only friends. pete, rachel, carley and janice with their own big league chew and all their paraphernalia that surrounds it. >> you know it hi guys and
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ladies. >> ainsley: aren't those cool? >> janice: bucket list is to have a bucket. >> pete: these are cool. >> ainsley: have some fun. go ahead, pete. >> pete: i have always loved big league chew now i can eat myself. it's amazing. >> ainsley: they are partners with fox sports to promote the mlb season on fox. here is something interesting. the original concept samples were produced by taking huge sheets of gum and ran them through a standard office paper shredder, it was produced by the portland maverick left hand pitcher rob nelson and the bat boyed tofield and jim, the fellow maverick and new york yankee all-star he pitched the idea to the wrigley company that owns the cubs. >> brian: pretty much off tobacco. people are spitting bubble gum chew. >> will: pete and carley filled
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their cheeks with big gum chew. >> brian: everyone watch baseball this year starts fox sports 1 the best coverage by far. >> will: already started. tomorrow yankees red sox fs1. pete, rachel, bring you back in. you are both new jersey parents several times over by the way. and new jersey is going to require rachel, first and second graders to begin to learn gender i'd. at this time let me show you this i believe this is for first graders. it's a book titled purple, pink and blue and says gender identity is that feeling of knowing your gender. you might feel like you are a boy, you might feel like you are a girl. you might feel like you are a boy even if you have body parts that some might tell you are a girl. you might feel -- i'm getting confused by the way. even if you have parts that other people tell you are boy parts and might not feel like you are a boy or girl but a beloit of both. no matter how you feel you are perfectly normal. that is for first graders in new jersey, rachel. >> brian: you okay with that?
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>> rachel: no, i'm not okay with this. if i recall, they just locked down and masked our kids and set them back two years academically and this is what the state of knowledge came up with to catch your kids up after two years of being set back. it's so outrageous and confusing. i have a second grader. this stuff is not based in science and it's actually dangerous. you know, my child goes just like pete we took our kids out of the system. and, you know, that's, i think, the lesson here in a lot of ways is that there are some school systems in some blue states where, you know, i commend those parents who are fighting school boards and fighting systems. but there are some that are so rotten and so entrenched in this ideology by the time you even get close to reforming it, your kids are grown up. so, i say my advice to parents is get them out of this system and simultaneously fight for school choice because that money, those education dollars belong to you. this is outrageous and can i just say one little thing? ainsley, when you were a little
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girl, i imagined that you were a girly girl. so was i. but lots of girls go through a phase where they are tom boys. i have lots of friends who are my age who say you know what? i'm afraid when i was a tom boy growing up that my school might have put me on pursuant blockers without tell my parents if i was growing up right now. this is dangerous stuff. it's confusing and it's wrong. >> brian: it's insidious and evil and that's why people our governors in ohio, florida and texas are moving against it. i think most sane parents feel the same way. here's a statement from westfield public school superintendent, quote: we made it clear at the meeting, subsequent meetings that these are resources only. they are not state mandated and that the district is in the process of developing its revised curriculum to meet state standards. pete, you are a knowledge guy on a military base i don't know how you feel about this. >> i will tell you this. first of all, it's creepy. these are first and second
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graders. let's not forget this i have first and second graders. they have no business trying to dissect the difference between identity and actual physical sex. it's -- there is no way they can comprehend it will, i heard you reading it no way to comprehend you reading it my wife and i saw those state standards. that statement is not true. these are state standards. we saw this coming in public schools first and second grade. we got out of there. it's now public but it's been known for a couple of years and parents need to be aware this could be in your backyard as well for sure. you mentioned it, guys, you mentioned the sign behind me that ranger. we are out here at fort benning and at the best ranger competition. it just kicked off. it's all going to air on fox nation for america's top ranger. i will tell you guys, i think we can flip the camera just for a second. there are guys doing pull ups and going up ropes right now, on the obstacle course.
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you guys have been doing the show this morning. they have already ran five miles in weighted vests carrying 80-pound sandbags, swam across the lake entire fitness test. now we have guys going up ropes right now. rangers you will see it this is the very, very beginning of a 33 event 58 hour grueling test over three days of who america's top ranger is. you know, we celebrate disney and oscars and golden globes. forget all of that garbage. these are the real heros that we should be showcasing. army rangers who defend our country. and we're going to do it on fox nation and this weekend i'm going to be hosting from the national -- museum outside of fort benning honoring and covering these guys. it's a privilege to be here just to see it and friends and family out to see it it's the best of the best, guys. >> will: we talk a lot about our military budget and where we are making cuts. i for one want to stand in solidarity making sure of the
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military gets ordering shirts bigger than smalls. if all they have is smalls then we end up in this situation. >> pete: come on, i do it for you, will. >> rachel: watchest toughest guys in america climbing those ropes and you are putting on makeup standing in front of lights in your tiny t-shirt. >> pete: that was one too far. i gave up my military man card a long time ago. i'm doing what i can. >> ainsley: you look great. >> rachel: he does look great. this is a sign he has been living in new jersey for along time. >> will: can i say this on the way out, pete, you wouldn't see it but the audience could. brian and i looked at each other because gavin our executive producer and said small t shisht joke and i stole it. >> pete: i'm wearing the joey jones, dan bongino smedium. dan bongino will be on this show
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as well as mark levin this weekend on "fox & friends." >> ainsley: thank you all so much. >> brian: meanwhile fox news books history two top ten titles on the best seller list the mothers and daughters of the bible speak number 2 and the inaugural the women of the bible speak makes a return to list at number 10. >> ainsley: congratulations shannon bream. >> will: more "fox & friends" comingre up. t me. by hitting eczema where it counts, dupixent helps heal your skin from within keeping you one step ahead of eczema. hide my skin? not me. and that means long-lasting clearer skin... and fast itch relief for adults. with dupixent, you can show more skin with less eczema. hide my skin? not me. don't use if you're allergic to dupixent. serious allergic reactions can occur that can be severe. tell your doctor about new or worsening eye problems such as eye pain or vision changes,
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>> we are back with headlines and listen to this, walmart is giving out new salarys to truck drivers to cope with supply chain issues, the new starting salary for truckers will be between $95 and $110,000. walmart revving up salaries after 4900 people in the trucking industry quit their jobs since march of last year. >> and tennis star, serena williams has a new hype man. take a look. >> aaron rodgers here and we've been talking about my comeback and he's been hyping me up and getting me ready for wimbledon. >> hype man? wimbledon? what about u.s. open. >> wimbledon is before the u.s. open. >> she's back! >> carley: how about that, rodgers and williams appears together at bitcoin conference thursday with williams appearing
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to announce a comeback at the wimbledon championship. those are headlines, let's check in with janice dean. >> janice: happy friday, colder temperatures colder than average across great lakes and the northeast. an area of low pressure you can see on satellite imagery, spinning around the midwest bringing wet snow and inclement weather, rain for the ohio valley through the northeast. it will be lingering until it exits on the weekend and then we have a big storm behind this one, we are starting to talk about now, it will bring threat of severe storms and snow and blizzard conditions from the rockies through the plain states, big deal. sometimes it happens in april, it happens monday, tuesday and wednesday. severe threat on wednesday, some area hit hard by the tornados not going anywhere quickly on tuesday.
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that is a big deal. fox weather.comto get the latest details and we'll give you watchs and warnings as they come. we have high heat across california, we will set daytime high records, as well. fox weather.com, best thing that happened in a long time. >> carley: thank you, janice. florida deputies cut free a man trapped inside his burning car secretary seconds before the drivers seat engulfs in flames. one deputy at the scene, garrett parish joins us now. good morning, officer. >> how is it going? >> >> carley: we're doing well, thank you for everything you do and for save thanksgiving man's life. tell us what happened. >> basically i got a call around 1 in the morning, there is a single-vehicle crash, i respond to the scene. i got on the scene, front of the car was in fire. i got out to help this guy, i
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hear him screaming for help, hey, i'm on fireplace, that is not something anyone wants to hear. i got to the vehicle and he was launched inside the car with the seat belt wrapped around him in the process of trying to get him out, i became aware i wasn't getting him out without help. backup showed up, deputy vasquez showed up and helped me. the vehicle fire was getting steadily worse and i couldn't get him out. i tried to take the seatbet off. i pulled my pocket knife out, i can't get to the seatbelt, it is too hot. i went for the fire extinguisher and we both basically moved as fast as we could. i grabbed my fire extinguisher and got back to him and the deputy went for his.
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i had to one arm the fire extinguish sxer pull him out with the other hand. i got him out about the time the fire extinguisher ran out and we got him off the side of the road. the video footage you can see, it is everything. we watched the whole thing start to finish and does not feel -- >> i never got around to that, i went to get the fire extinguisher, i only got so many hands. >> carley: what did the man say after he realized you saved his life? >> we didn't have much of a conversation, he was in a lot of pain. he kept repeating, help me, help me, we're down there trying to get his clothes off to check for injuries. i'm trying, man. >> carley: was he burned? >> the ambulance is coming, he was burned, burned pretty good.
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>> carley: but he is going to be okay? >> yeah, he should be okay. what was that? >> carley: i said, he's going to be okay and you said yes. i want to thank the other receive that was with you, bryant vasequez? >> yes. >> carley: thank you for what you do, you face danger everyday. please say prayers for officer parrish. you are shedding good light on what you do everything. god bless you. final hour of "fox and friends first" starts now. >> good morning. >> nancy pelosi tested positive for covid-19. >> after planting a kiss. >> according to jen psaki, it did not mean close contact. >> how would they respond to mass migration event? >> what is come will not be
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describable. >> 39 are dead and 300 are injured after a russian strike. >> busy railway station, they need help and we'll do everything we can. >> i'm daniel eric schmitt. a college student asked why they ignored the hunter biden laptop. >> the laptop is irrelevant. >> what americans care about. >> tiger woods back at the masters in it to win it. >> this is spectacular. >> he shot one under par, 71. >> have that type of energy out there, awesome to feel. ♪ >> why this song? >> he is a survivor, tiger woods
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has three rounds to go. he looked good yesterday. said he was in a lot of pain. am i taking over the segment? why do you think they are taking over this song? >> will: i was supposed to do this segment and "eye of the tiger," tiger is on the prowl, one you should after first round of the masters. everybody loves a come-back story we are watching unfold after tiger woods hits the course one year after the horrific car crash. >> brian: 14 months, biggest story yesterday around 5:00, who steve harrigan, so glad he has a happy story to report after the horrific things. he said tiger played within himself, that is what i say everyday, play within yourself and steve harrigan put it into effect. >> will: maybe tiger watches
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8:50 eastern to hear, stay within yourself. >> brian: he tried to play his game. he played his game and stayed within himself. >> ainsley: he said, i'm sore, as i expected to feel. he told his team last week, my adrenalin will kick in and i will get into my own little world and stay within myself. he said, if you would have seen the pictures of my leg, what it looked like before, i've show today to my friends who have come to my house, to get from there to here, no easy task. >> brian: like back injuries and the good old day. >> ainsley: a reporter said scale 1-10, how bad it your pain? he said over 10. >> will: nancy pelosi tested positive for covid-19 after shaking hands, some say kiss withing president biden. >> ainsley: according to jen psaki, does not qualify as close
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contacts, longer than 15 minutes. >> will: that is the bar apparently. jackie ibanez is live from the white house, have you to make out for longer than 15 minutes to be close contact from the cdc. and wear a mask. >> jackie: i don't set the bar, i just talk about the bar. kate bedingfield just said it is entirely possible president biden will test positive for covid. she said because he is double va x'ed and boosted he is protected from severe illness. there are not planned to ratchet protection they say are pretty stringent. this week showed how close of a call he's had, the white house tallied speaker pelosi's time around the president and fell under the threshold by the cdc. biden is not considered a close contact during that bill on wednesday. >> how can you say president
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biden is not a close contact when there is video of the speaker kissing him. >> press sect. psaki: the center for disease control, cdc, their definition is 15 minutes of contact within a set period of time and within six feet. it did not meet that bar. >> jackie: while the white house is closely following cdc guidelines to determine who is and is not a close contact of the president, they are not being as strangent with the vp. cdc guidance says if you are up to date on vaccinations, you are supposed to wear a mask for 10 full days, kamala harris was spotted maskless in the confirmation hearing for ketanji brown jackson yesterday. all this after her communications director simmons tested positive. >> >> press sect. psaki: i haven't seen, i've watched most parts, i know she was alone on the dias for the vast majority of that
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and been wearing a mask otherwise, beyond that, i haven't done further analysis. >> the gridiran din ser linked to a number of cases including the vice president's staffer, two democratic members of congress, one republican senator, two cabinet members, president biden's sister valery and half a dozen journalists, according to the "washington post." despite all that, the white house is moving forward with plans to celebrate judge ketanji brown jackson confirmation here with an event at the white house despite former president trump doing the same thing with amy coney barrett and president biden calling that a super spreader event, the white house says the difference is now vaccines are available. >> will: vaccines, thank you for the reports, the >> jackie:s protected nancy pelosi. >> ainsley: right, exactly. >> will: she had four, not five,
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she left herself exposed, need five and six. when confronted with arbitrary silliness of your own rules and hypocrisy, respond with as much condensation, as well. lpeter, you see, as though peter doocy it incapable of understanding the cdc's rules. it changes depending on the party in power and depending upon the news cycle. at this point, the biden administration is not up to living up to the rules and ones they condemned you for for the last two years. maintenance what drives me crazy, the monoclonal is supposed to work. you feel okay the first few days and eight or 10 you don't feel great and too late to get the monoclonal. they are extremely difficult to get your hands on and find. you can go to doctor, to doctor, to doctor, they are saving them
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for the elderly, we need to focus on getting monocolonals out. >> brian: take your time, what is the rush? this is sub-variant, it becomes less and less virulant, if you get it, it might be easy to gets, you will walk through it like you walk through a sinus infection, uncomfortable, but ready to go. make the announcement we will ignore it, then okay, but same time, fire, the cops and firefighters out of a job, tell kids if you don't get double and triple vaxed, you can't go to school. you can't have it both days. talk immigration, border crisis over, get rid of title 42, the pandemic is over. really? everyone in the white house tested positive, but it is over. if you look at title 42 which
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disappears may 23rd. >> ainsley: and toddlers have to wear masks here in new york. they say it is time, title 42 needs to be dropped on may 23rd. so now texas is preparing for this massive influx of all the illegal immigrants, saying up to 18,000 per day, more than double what they are seeing right now. yesterday the national guard in texas is seen running training exercises involving the riot gear and the rgv sector. >> will: they shouldn't have to do this, this is state stuff because the federal government will not provide resources and rules to protect the border. we spoke to the mayor of uvaldi. he is expected thousands to flood the border in anticipation of repeal of title 42. states like texas attempting to do something, as you see on your screen, national guard of texas
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donns riot gear. texas governor greg abbott says we might send illegal migrants to washington, d.c. and park on the steps of the capitol. peter doocy ventured to ask jen psaki about that, as well. >> the texas governor is saying he will bus border crossers to washington, d.c., when they get hering, will you help them find a place to stay and find something to do? >> press sect. psaki: this is clear this is a publicity stunt, his offense office admits a migrant would voluntarily have to be transported. listen, i don't know, i know the governor of texas or any state does not have legal authority to compel anyone to get on a bus. >> brian: like you do in
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washington and you don't send anyone down there, you have embarrassment of secretary mayorkis to explain to border officers, you get no more aid if you continue to allow your people to flood our border. or if they want to apply for asylum, first country they walk into, guatemala, honduras, you tell it in the country closest to you, we can work it out with mexico, we incentivize mexico to enforce the southern border. instead, he is allowing, the president allow thanksgiving country to be invaded. i don't know if they are doing it for the votes, 11 democrats are urging the president to keep title 42 in place, including mark kelly, kyrsten sinema, john tester, i'm not sure, manchin is impervious and maggie hassan,
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desperate to show she is being responsible. they don't have enough to stop it right now. >> ainsley: senator warnock said it is the wrong time to end the order and senator maesto said -- they are both in tight democratic races. not just ones sponsoring this bill, the warnocks and maestos, if they vote no, there is a chance they could extend title 42 for 60 days, they have 57 votes, anyone who spoken against ending it and they need 60. >> will: we spoke with the mayor of uvaldi, texas and he said, you have no idea the explosion we're about to see and talked about the move by governor abbott is effective.
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watch. >> come in on the 23rd of may, won't be describable. you are talking about thousands will hit that border, just waiting to cross the border and there is nobody prepared, the federal government is not prepare for it. thank god governor abbott is trying to get prepared for it, it will be just the wild, wild west and crazy down here. with what the governor has done bussing them to washington, d.c., i mean, one thing everybody was talking about in the united states yesterday is the governor sending buses to washington, d.c., everybody is going what is going on on the southern border. >> everybody talking. >> better pay the price to democrats, the american people are indifferent, they will keep dog it. are you okay with increasing population we have no idea, no admission policy, 10% every year? that is what is happening, 2 million. >> ainsley: trafficked and cartels and drugs coming across the country. town hall reporter went to
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mexico and talked to the migrants they are looking forward to ending title 42, if enough migrants come at once, border patrol will not be able to stop them. >> brian: they found eight small children by themselves, picture sent out, human smugglers left them on the texas side of the border, nothing against the kids, reason the parents spent money, they know they will stay and get in there and find out where the parents are and send for the parents. >> will: so dangerous, how many kids died along the way. there are toddlers being found on the banks of the rio grand all alone. >> brian: don't tell me the president has empathy, every time he ignores the border, think about eight kids sitting by themselves, who will not file
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for status, coming to southern border rather than going through refugee process. think about that. charles payne has additional headlines. >> carley: i do, begin with fox news alert, the images are graphic. 39 people are dead and at least 300 wounded as russian missile hits ukrainian rail station packed with civilians trying to flee the fighting. the governor says thousands at the station at the time of the attack. we will update you throughout the morning with new information. breaking, 15 people hospitalized, including nine children in a missouri apartment fire overnight, two children are in critical condition and five adults are seriously hurt. officials say the flames broke out in a three-story apartment build withing people jumping from the second floor to escape the flames. the cause of the fire is still under investigation. a strong
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showing at augusta for tiger woods on day one of the masters. the golf superstar finished a few strokes behind the leader. woods spoke about managing pain after suffering devastating injuries during last year's car crash, listen here. >> lots of ice, ice bathss issue getting the swelling out as best we can and getting mobile and warmed up and explosive for the next day. >> carley: woods ended first day of play one under par. he told reporters he was satisfied and right where i need to be. those are your headlines, right where he needs to be. >> ainsley: three more rounds. no more peach ice cream at the masters, supply chain issues, pimento cheese sandwiches are to die for. >> will: i've had pimento
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cheese, not down there. >> ainsley: the pimento cheese drizzling out, they are flat and great. >> will: order some up here. >> brian: subway, she just gave you the recipe. >> ainsley: i think you can only buy in the south. >> brian: i'm sure subway can come up with it, they are innovative people, have you met them? and dismissing questions about hunter biden's laptop. >> hunter biden's business relationships have anything to do with who should be president of the united states, so i don't find it to be interesting. >> brian: geraldo rivera says no justifiable reason to ignore this story. he is always interesting and montana is here, live with a special performance with a brand-new song, "goodbye me," that is the name of the show, i am not saying goodbye to you.
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>> do you think the media acting inappropriately when they dismissed hunter biden's laptop as russian disinformation? >> my problem with hunter biden laptop, it is totally irrelevant, not whether it is disinformation. i didn't think the hunter biden's business relationships have anything to do with who should be president of the united states, so i don't find it to be interesting, that is my problem with that as major news story. >> ainsley: atlantic reporter ann applebaum dismissing the hunter biden story as irrelevant
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when pressed during a recent conference on disinformation. here geraldo rivera. what is your reaction to this? >> she's a pulitzer prize winner, for real, this is biggest case of media prejudice, bias, they decided eshg lite in the media, including ms. applebaum, this is not a story, the effect, it was ideological political decision to ignore the hunter biden laptop story at a time it could have affected the presidential election. this choice that the media elite made was damaging to fairness, to public discourse, to knowledge. i mean, i feel sorry for the biden family that hunter is the rogue son that he is. you are only as happy as your unhappiest child, i get that.
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this is a man allowed to do deals with the biden name and implication his father would back everything with countries like china and others that have interest an thettical to the united states. i believe this was a big story, the "new york post" was ranked out, was really criticized for doing the story in 2020, when it could have countd and they turned out to be exactly right. look at hunter biden. he's a junkie whore mongering low life, maybe his life has improved since. here he's doing business using monker of biden and flag of the united states. i really do believe when you look at how facebook issue twitter, "washington post," "new york times" and the network ignored the story this was intentional political story.
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this was not editorial decision, this was political decision to ignore a story that could have affected someone they wanted to be president. i really think it stinks. this kid really, that daniel eric schmitt really did an excellents job. >> ainsley: he is a student at university of chicago. he was on "fox and friends first" earlier, here is a piece from the interview. >> on disinformation, yet the story that was probably the greatest example of disinformation, hunter biden laptop, the way the media treated it, she totally ignored it. it is an example of how journalists, the elite ruling class views what americans care about as irrelevant to them and not worthy of any attention. i find it interesting, one point she claim its is irrelevant, other point, she spent months trying to discredit it and get
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rid of it. >> that kid is great. >> ainsley: he is great, we should hire them. spent months and months and years talking about russia, russia, if shoe was on the other foot, one of donald trump's sons what would it be like? >> if this was don jr. and they had photos of him smoking crack and mocking the process. >> ainsley: and have hard drives. >> i would have had a party. special edition with inside cover, really -- now i get that and we have to be fair about this, various cable news networks and outlets see the news differently, we see it differently than cnn, cnn, the january 6 riot is all they want to talk about or certainly before the war, we talk about imdpragz more than they do, they are editorial choices various media outlets make issue the
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hunter biden story is different. this was absolute intentional ignoring of major story with deep political implications for political and ideological reasons. ms. applebaum, what she said, it reeks of kind of elitism, i know better than you, if i say it is news, it is news. you have no right to have an opinion and now grudgingly the "new york times" says the story is legitimate. okay, maybe now we'll look into it. "washington post" says it is legitimate, grudgingly, dragging, kicking and screaming at point where politically it is less relevant than when it happened. this kid and the journalist schools will definitely keep us on the straight and narrow if we go down this dissembling course where we pretend that we are superior to the average person. >> ainsley: right.
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blows everyone's mind when you think how they protect the democrats and press, wipe today clean from facebook and twitter, a month, the story broke month before the election, americans deserve the rights to know the information about both caneds so they can vote accordingly. thanks, geraldo, have a great weekend. we are handing over to will. thank you, will. >> will: thank you, ainsley, turning to fox news alert, ukrainian president zelenskyy says 30 people are dead and 300 hurt as russia missile hits rail station packed with civilians trying to evacuate. alex hogan has more. alex. >> hi, will, the president zelenskyy says thousands were at the railway station when russia attacked. the images we are about to show are quite graphic. s
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town 40 miles outside of the capital. residents are slowly starting to return home after this territory has been regaind and officials are clearing out the area of weapons that are scattered around their once peaceful town. kremlin spokesperson dmitry peskov says russia suffered significant losses that statement comes ark midincreased reports of low moral and russian troops and soldiers disobeying orders that were given by the kremlin. brian. >> brian: thanks so much, that is unbelievable, dmitry peskov admitted they have lost a lot of troops, this story, thanks alex. virginia governor youngkin keeping his programis to donate his salary to charity. $43,750. they will go to the virginia law enforcement assistance program, organizations that helps first
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responders deal with trauma. governor youngkin joins us now along with ark dam blevins, why is this your first stop in giving up your salary to a worthy organization? >> brian, good morning, thank you for having me and ark dam, great to see you again. from the minute that i started campaigning and interacting everyday with law enforcement heroes it is clear there is no tougher job in america today, the work that virginia leap does is to help them heal after traumatic experiences. the first lady and i were humbled and honored to be able to support them. this is most important work, top of our agenda to support law enforcement. >> brian: adam, how will you use money like this, what families benefit? >> families of law enforcement
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officers, other first responders, dispatch professionals, any donation goes toward our responses throughout the commonwealth of virginia following critical incidents and personal related trauma in their lives our donations go toward running the seminars where we provide conjunction of proven support methods and clinical mental health services to help them with trauma and personal trauma. >> brian: quick to jump down the throats of law enforcement in controversial situations, do you get the sense this governor is different? >> absolutely. absolutely on behalf of virginia leap, everything we served those we will serve in the future, thanks to governor youngkin and first lady suzanne for their support to this program. >> brian: what is your need?
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we watched 300 officers resign in chicago. new york, they are not backed up in words or deeds. in virginia, what are you doing to back the men and women in uniform? >> well, we need a budget out of our legislature that will provide much needed raises and much needed funding for equipment and training and community relations programs. it is time to support law enforcement, what we see over and over again is law enforcement heroes run to trouble and we are running away from it. these folks keep our community safe. it is time to pass a budget that supports them and time for all of us to recognize we need to support them, too. at virginia leap.org, people can come and understand the great work this organization does and support it, as well, virginia leap.org, folks can make a difference for virginia law
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enforcement. >> brian: governor suppose to be service, and now you are taking the money and giving to people who are serving. it is an ap t move. governor youngkin, thank you, adam blevins stay safe and say hello to everybody wearing the uniform and the badge. >> thank you. >> brian: all right. thanks, guys for joining us and sharing that moment. i want to share your weekend with me at 8 and 11:00 on fox news, our guests peter, dana perino, martha maccallum, lenny curry, mayor of jacksonville, tristan harris, you may have known him when he talked about the social media dilem ahe'll talk about that, as well as social media in general now that somebody named elon musk could be in charge. meanwhile, this story celebrating good folks who do good deeds, tim montana joins us live with performance of his new
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why is guy fieri in the neighbors' kitchen? it's slider sunday! sliiiiiiiiii-der sunday! these chicken parm sliders on king's hawaiian rolls are fire! slider sunday! i want that. everything's better between king's hawaiian bread. mmm! >> ainsley: researchers are predicting above average hurricane season this year. >> brian: forecasters say there could be more than 19 named storms. i hope they are wrong, here to break down what this means is meteorologist janice dean and fox weather specialist brian norcross, hey, you two. >> janice: so exciting to have brian norcross with us, been doing this a long time. you started in tv and know how this works and then you went and became a meteorologist. >> i decided meteorology was confluence of broadcasting and science, i went back and studied
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at florida state and here we are today. >> janice: i love it, fox weather is blessed to have you. colorado state is predicting and bram it down for us. >> 19 named storms, nine becoming hurricanes, four category three and above. this is when damage is done, we haven't had many hitting the u.s. of this kind of storm, this is what we pay attention to. last year we were at 21. so these numbers are really about the same, remember last year, some of them were weak and only lasted a day or so and didn't cause much. think of it as about the same as last year even though numbers are a little different. we said, above average, average is 14, 7 and 3, average goes back to 1991, when the technology was different. we were not detecting the storms as normal. real average is 16 or 17 range, somewhat above average.
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>> janice: it only takes one bad storm to make a terrible year. >> in 1983, there were only four, one hits houston, alecrashingcia, andrew. we look for el nino or lanina. el nino means warm in this box of water and lanina means cold. when there is la nina, that makes atlantic hurricanes it affects wind over top of the storm. less wind, the storm can grow. more wind, el nino, storms topple over. >> janice: last year what was it? >> trending toward it, week la nina, weak cold, same as forecast this year, that is why numbers are pretty much the same. this driver is hard to forecast in the spring, spring forecasts are tough. >> janice: yep. >> in the atlantic, how warm is
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the water, warmer water fuel for the hurricane. and coolish out here average. look around the u.s. coast. so it is very warm here. >> janice: warm temperatures around the mid-atlantic and into the gulf. storms will have more fuel if this continues and thinking is it will. that is boosted the number of storms. bottom line from colorado, busier than average, not crazy. >> janice: i love that. that is what fox weather is all about. go ahead. >> in other words, not 30 storms like we had two years ago, where everything was warmer in the atlantic and cooler in the pacific, therefore more conducive. >> janice: i love that you are here, brian norcross break its down so we understand the science. starts june 1, can happen any time. >> ainsley: you said florida state. >> florida state. >> ainsley: me, too, i
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transferred to another journalism school. was bobby bowden there then? >> absolutely. >> most substantive news talk between weather and news since 1984. will and i could have left. >> we want to hear about tennessee straits. >> brian: thank you brian and janice, don't go anywhere, country superstar tim is coming up with goodbye me. check in with dana. >> dana: love the show, special pete down there, funny tochlt go or not to go back to the office. friday money team is here and is covid health emergency over or not? look at super spreader event in d.c., dr. fauci says prepare for waves does this give biden administration what is needs to keep the title 42 border policy? dr. segall is here. i get to read sports today, wish
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♪ california. eastbound on rainy nashville -- >> brian: country music star tim montana releasing hit new song called "goodbye me," and -- >> celebrates good folks doing good things. >> will: joins us with more on the new song and in a few moments, a special performance, good morning, tim. >> ainsley: good morning. >> good morning, how are you, guy? >> will: good. tim, heart and soul of country music is americana and the common man. i know that speaks to you and i know that is a big part of your new song. tell us about the inspiration. >> yeah, i had a buddy, brian
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bowen smith traveling around the country, famous photographer in los angeles and taking pictures during the pandemic and raising money for people who lost family members due to covid-19 and he came by to take a foety of me and i started writing a song about him, in the moment. it fell out and i finish today with a couple buddies. the world needs more positivity, let's highlight people doing good stuff, that is where the idea came from. >> ainsley: what people love about your music, it is beautiful music and gets us through tough times issue good times, also you don't forget the working class man, the soldiers, the first responders or the farmers. what comes into that? >> man, just the way i grew up in montan ai admired blue collar military and got my cdl, and to the truckers, that is not easy, much respect to truck drivers. people that work hard and grind
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and chase their dreams, whatever that may be issue salute them. >> brian: i know we will hear it, when are you going on the road and when can we see you, now that efb -- everybody is full plast again? >> we are on our first headlining tour right now, i don't know what town, southern oregone. i got to the hotel an hour ago, haven't slept yesterday. reno, los angeles, to colorado, first headline tour, i will not see my kids for 27 days, but i'm bringing music to the people. >> brian: that is why god invented facetime. >> yep. >> will: talk about bringing music to the people, it is a consistent theme and we asked how it applied to your new song, the tie that bind system people, common man doing good things in a time of need. truly that he is what we've come to expect from the american people. i know that ties into the album,
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artwork, cover everything is what it comes back to with you. >> yeah, absolutely, man, celebrate good folks doing good things with as much divisiveness and chaos going on in this worlds, can't forget good things that happen. and i wanted to write my peace love song, i will lock out after this one. >> ainsley: tim, where are you raising your kids? >> my kids are in nashville, we're trying to get them back to montana, my mom's place, she is off the grid. the kids are in nashville, four now. >> ainsley: congratulations. >> will: off the grid, i just got back this week. >> ainsley: now in a total room by yourself, you will get sleep and your wife is home with the busy. >> with the time difference we facetimed and i said hi to everybody. >> brian: tell the drummer not to make too much noise. >> brian: out may 6th, let's
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listen. ♪ ♪ they pulled out of california. eastbound on a rainy nashville day. ♪ saw a couple with a kid broke down. ♪ just good folks doing good things and by god, that is how goodbye means ♪ that kid grew up to be traveling kind never left that good deed behind ♪ ♪ stranger on the street needed help
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right back on their feet. ♪ ♪ one of them good folks doing good thing and it is all goodbye means ♪ this old world goes dark you can let it break your heart you can be dark and never see what the hell do i know i'm just a one man show riding on the breeze ♪ seeing good folks doing good things and that is all goodbye means ♪ ♪ we've all been down and out but that circle of love knows no bounds.
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i know people hurt and treading water out there off their feet i know there is good folks doing good things and by god, that is all goodbye means this old world goes dark you can let it break your heart or you can be a spark what the hell do i know i'm a one man show riding the breeze seeing good folks doing good things that is all goodbye means ♪ ♪ this old world goes dark, you can let it break your heart or
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you can be the spark and help them see what the hell do i know, i'm just a one man show, bumming around and riding on the breeze. ♪ seeing good folks doing good things and by gosh, that is all goodbye means. that's all goodbye means. that's all goodbye means. that's all goodbye means. ♪ [cheering] [ bee buzzing ] your happiest spring starts at lowe's. experience all the deals at springfest.
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where you can hang out with me, pete hegseth and others. look, somebody is not done. brian kilmeade. >> talk about what's coming up at 8:00 on saturday. exclusively except the time i promo a half hour ago. >> we'll watch you both in the morning and you saturday night. >> first listen to radio. >> bill: facing and bracing for a brutal summer at the border. dhs projects 18,000 illegals cross the border every day coming up. more than double the current volume as we say good morning. that bit of news is how we begin. hello, partner. >> dana: i'm the dana perino, this is "america's newsroom." stunning to think about how much the border patrol says we already can't handle it and know there are not enough judges in order to process, not enough facilities and add 18,000 a day is a lot. texas national guard preparing for what's to co
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