tv FOX and Friends FOX News April 26, 2022 3:00am-6:00am PDT
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all. the democrats are worried if they aren't having such control over big tech or social media maybe truth will get out. if the truth gets out, maybe people will change the way that they vote in november and in elections to come. that's why they are shaking in their boat. >> todd: if the refs aren't on your side that could be scary. with that "fox & friends" >> bret: big deal for twitter elon musk has agreed to buy the social media giant. >> level playing field. that's all anybody wants. >> the white house rejecting russia's demand to stop sending weapons to ukraine. >> promising an additional $700 million. the u.s. secretary of defense lloyd austin meeting in germany with 40 nato defense ministers. >> in the room. >> newly released police video showing new light on rust movie
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set tragedy. >> we have did it two weeks right way every day. >> two years it does mean a lot to me. >> the supreme court is now considering arguments over a case involving a high school football coach who lost his job after praying with his players. >> i want to make sure that i understand the school policy. >> it is a form of pressure. a form of coercion. ♪ ♪ >> brian: a tweet about philadelphia later. opening mugshot was inspiring. >> ainsley: got your free speech back. >> brian: spirit of 1776. in that spirit i think going indoors and wearing a mask. that is the feeling in 2022. in philadelphia. where we once did a show live from there. >> steve: we did. university of pennsylvania. it was memorable. we are still talking about it.
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>> brian: right, joel. we didn't realize. >> ainsley: what happened. >> brian: we didn't realize they were going tomorrow brace us. >> steve: who knew you could spell fox that way. >> ainsley: was that the democratic convention? >> steve: we went down to embrace the students of the university of pennsylvania. >> ainsley: not well received? >> steve: i remember spending a lot of time in dunkin' donuts. nevertheless it's a beautiful city. a couple of my kids went to college there great town and great cheese steaks. >> ainsley: which one is your favorite? >> steve: pats. elon musk offered up 44 billion-dollar to buy out twitter and they sold it to him which was unusual. earlier the board of directors had essentially adopted a poison
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pill so that he couldn't do it. but then he picked up the phone over the weekend and started calling some of the people big stockholders and said hey, why can't i buy you? i can make you a lot of money. by the end of the weekend it was his. >> ainsley: they made it happen. it's going to be private. he want to take it private and take control of it in six months. he wants to add some new features. make the algorithms open source. >> steve: good. >> ainsley: no more spam bots great. he wants to fight spam. you will know if it's a bottom or not. >> brian: one of the biggest surprises i had after donald trump lost the election and they decided to take down twitter, i don't know what they were doing. 100,000. everyone lost like tens of thousands of followers. some people left twitter all together. when i got up today. 20 or 30,000 more followers i guess from the minute this walls added i know mark levin came back on. tucker carlson came back on.
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what he does now in getting, this he has got the 217 million users. significantly smaller than facebook and the other behemoth of social media this is arguably more impactful traditionally up until they became blatantly left wing because the briefness of it. the way political pundits use it news makers tend to go to it. hollywood celebrates tend to go there it got a lot of interest. it's not the hottest thing right now up until yesterday. but now it is. i'm just struck by the range of reaction from elon musk's purchase. first from his. he says free speech bedrock of functioning democracy and twitter is the digital town square. where matters future humanity and debate. twitter has huge potential. i look forward to unlocking it get rid of ads. i don't think he is looking to make a profit.
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>> ainsley: jack dorsey will receive $978 million in cash for payout because he owns 2.4% of the company. and he tweeted out an endorsement and he also says in principle i don't believe anyone should own or run twitter. it wants to be a public good at a protocol level not a company. solving for the problem of it being a company, however, elon is a singular solution i trust. i trust his mission to extend the light of consciousness. >> steve: here's the thing. is he walking into a hornet's mess. all hands on deck. phoning in from home. a lot of them are concerned hey, wait a minute, is he going to make us go back to the office? they don't like that idea. just wait until he moves their office to texas? how many of those people have ever been to a rodeo. >> ainsley: he hasn't announced he is doing that. >> steve: he hasn't announced anything, just that he is buying it. he made it clear to the investors he spoke to over the
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weekend, you know, can i unlock the value of twitter but the current leadership cannot. meanwhile cross billionaire rival jeff bezos who has been -- they have been trading barbs back in forth in the billionaire circle for a long time. he posted this yesterday fueling a conspiracy theory it says interesting question did the chinese government just gain a bit of leverage over the town square? what he's talking about is the fact that a "new york times" reporter yesterday mentioned that tesla's number two market is china and china makes tesla's batteries giving china leverage over musk he says. but then again, he is a rival. he also owns "the washington post." it's interesting, a former ceo of reddit called for regulations rich people from controlling our channels of communication that whereas written in an op-ed "the
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washington post" owned by that man jeff bezos. >> ainsley: musk paid 175 times more than jeff bezos paid in 2017. had this conversation with the employees. wondering if he is going to let donald trump back on the platform and what does this mean for our jobs. he said there are no plans for any layoffs. we really don't know which direction the platform will go. donald trump insists he told fox news that he is not going to rejoin twitter and is he going to stay on his platform which is truth. >> brian: i signed up for his last week i got on. talk to devin nunes the ceo of truth social. but donald trump is not really doing anything yet on it. >> ainsley: what does he write? >> brian: he says get ready your favorite president will see you soon. >> steve: he says he is going to start socialing -- truthing in seven days. >> brian: interesting. i found this part of jack dorsey's tweet yesterday the most interesting.
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elon's goal create platform trusted and inclusive is the right one. thank you for getting the company out of an impossible situation. this is the right path. i find this so interesting. it's almost like jack dorsey is sending us a message from a hostage situation. why couldn't jack dorsey when he was running the company make it more fair? what couldn't he do. >> ainsley: why is he supporting this now? because is he going to make a lot of money. >> brian: they are friends. a lot of money doesn't matter when he has that much. i'm wondering if there is more of a story there that he knew this was to the left and almost could not go to the center because he incident could not, you know, deal with his employees or the political climate. steve: you know, brian, to your point, jack dorsey has said that the people who work at twitter are predominantly from the silicon valley they go way to the left. jack dorsey is known for yoga
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and meditation and high minded person who never took the salary he took the minimum. jack dorsey make a billion dollars on this deal. his annual salary was 1.40 a year. i have a feeling perhaps the staff, the twitter team probably walls running the show and talked him into a lot of stuff that now he is going well, if anybody can fix it, it is mr. elon musk. dave portnoy also another rich guy he founded barstool sports. he and a lot of people have been waiting for this day when they just say, you know what, twit hadder? twitter? you have been in the ditch a if you pull it up and run down the middle of the road and give everybody a chance. that's all we want. tucker came back yesterday as you pointed out and dave portnoy says, you know what? this is what we wanted all along. here he is. >> the major thing whenever you look, why is one side all complaining and the other side isn't? that, to me, tells everything.
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give people a level playing field. that's all anybody wants. the ability to speak back and debate points. there is nothing fair. there is the allusion of fairness and whoa is me we are trying to be fair. anybody who has paid an ounce of each platform leans certain ways. do you know what the craziest thing is instagram or the facebook zuckerberg i feel like they censor 10 x what twitter does. they all do it. nothing wrong with fairness. you are idiot if you think these are neutral platforms any more so than certain newspapers lean certain ways. >> steve: that's right. if elon musk with strike a balance with content moderation that's what they refer to when they dick all the people on the political right off. if he is strike aen don't this will be a clear win. >> brian: he has a space company, a electric car company. and now he has got this social
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media monster. so, he is one of the most powerful, if not the most powerful person in the world. >> ainsley: richest man in the world. >> brian: took tremendous risk. modern day ben franklin. i saw that pbs special. he reminds me of that guy. one minute ben franklin fire department next minute wood burning stove next minute electricity. that's what this guy is doing. >> ainsley: the modern day, right? he said i hope my worst critics remain on twitter that's what free speech means. >> steve: ben franklin out in pennsylvania going back to fizzle out in the thunderstorm with the kite electric car. >> brian: good father-son bonding moment. a kite and son you might want to try it. >> steve: that might not last long, just saying. coming up on this tuesday, disturbing body cam video released from the scene of the rust movie set shows first responders desperately trying to
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save the cinematographer. >> ainsley: plus johnny depp's testimony in his defamation case ex-wife amber heard ends with stunning audio recording. we will bring you what was played out in court. ♪ just say it's time ♪ the clock is ticking ♪ so stay ♪ all you have to do is stay a second ♪ your hand on mine ♪ the clock is ticking ♪ so stay ♪ ♪ bonnie boon i'm calling you out. everybody be cool, alright? with ringcentral we can pull bonnie up on phone, message, or video, all in the same app. oh... hey bonnie, i didn't see you there. ♪ ringcentral ♪ from prom dresses
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tragic discovery in the rio grande as crews find the body of a texas national guard are rescuing two illegal immigrants. new details come to light david bonola shared hundreds of local news reports on youtube channel that focused on violent crime. other videos included tips on how to seduce women. he confessed to murdering had gotten off again affair with the victim set to appear in court today. johnny depp wraps up his testimony trial ex-wife amber heard with this audio recording listen. >> fair fight and see what the jury does think. tell them johnny depp, i, johnny depp i'm a victim, too of domestic violence. >> carley: also the actor's
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former house manager testifying yesterday he says he saw no injuries on amber heard after the excouple got into a blowout argument in australia. heard is expected to take the stand to tell her side of the story in the coming weeks. those are your headlines, guys. over to you. >> brian: who is benefiting from that story? >> carley: absolutely no one. >> brian: unbelievable. >> steve: the lawyers. >> ainsley: mediation always better. brian brian later make eye contact i promise. i am still tempted to look i know the professional thing. >> ainsley: double box. >> steve: just a little more. there you go. right over there. >> brian: now. >> steve: now she is gone. >> brian: see her at the christmas party. now the new evidence in the rust film set shooting. releasing a trove of body cam video and interrogation introduce. >> steve: it's an eye opener.
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todd piro joins ustles now with the latest on the investigation. todd? >> good morning. santa fay sheriff's office releasing more than a dozen videos of the aftermath. they include body cam fight damage like this showing first responders arriving at the rust film set in new mexico desperately trying to save cinematographer elena hutchins life as you see right there souza is rushed to the hospital. both shot by baldwin during a scene similar to this one. released video of the detectives interrogating baldwin. hollywood super star and director of rust defending operations on the film set. listen. >> oh. >> what's interesting not to digress commentary here is we have done this two weeks and we did it the right way every day. as the barrel clears, turn and congress the gun. i turn and clock the gun. the gun goes off. it's supposed to be a cold gun.
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>> baldwin told investigators he could not understand how a live round found its way on set and the film's armorer visually shaken when talking with police. >> what's your job there talking to them. >> i'm. >> the investigation into the movie set shooting remains open. back to you. >> i remember what he said after. i never pulled the trigger. i'm wondering if that story has changed from what he did said during interrogation. >> a lot more time to think about it than in the heat of the moment. >> steve: todd, i have a question to you the sheriff has turned it over to the first district attorney. what does that mean. >> todd: it means the evidence is in their possession. at this point the charges -- you know, obviously that's what we are all waiting for. we are expecting. buff we all know how this works in reality, there is behind the scenes negotiations between baldwin's lawyer and these
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authorities trying to work something out. at the end of the day, if somebody wants to charge alec baldwin for this they will. let's also not forget there is already a civil case at hand and this evidence did be used for that as well. this case is far from over. >> steve: new mexico already fined the production company $137,000 for not following the rules. >> todd: yes, but also there is the suit from the hutchins family against alec baldwin because again he is the boss. the boss gets sued in these situations. >> ainsley: watch this video it took a long time for him to find out that she actually was killed. he kept scght how is she doing? how is she doing? then you watch him just three hours of being interrogated with the police and he is making phone calls. appears to be like the babysitter maybe you all need to come out to santa fe, paparazzi imagine it will be. >> brian: another treason come out. >> ainsley: white house rejecting russia's demand to
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stop sending to ukraine and doubling down on zelenskyy. >> steve: administration launching new program to welcome ukrainian refugees here to the u.s. >> brian: jennifer griffin is live on the ground in lviv. you are in safe place in germany. what's up? >> here at ramstein air base and just to my right inside the officers club secretary of defense lloyd austin is host guilty 40 defense ministers, defense chiefs. they are here. they were brought together to talk about more military aid for ukraine. what's interesting about this meeting is that the conference came together in the last week alone. the invitations went out just a week ago. and since that meeting with secretary austin and secretary blinken in kyiv with president zelenskyy since those images came out, over a dozen more
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nations sent rsvps yes and sent defense ministers here. we heard remarks from lloyd austin here is what he said. >> the battle of iwo jima took 36 days. the battle of the bulge 40 days. ukraine has beaten back the russian military for 62 days. so, your resistance has brought inspiration to the free world. >> what's notable is that the ukraine definition minister who was at that meeting in kyiv with president zelenskyy and the u.s. officials just two days ago, he is here inside the conference with a delegation. he is going to be explaining, giving a battlefield assessment. general mark milley is inside. he will also give his assessment of how the battle is going. all of this happening at a time when russia is continuing to make threats. russia, as you mentioned, has said that the u.s. needs to stop
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sending weapons or it will be a target. that seems to not be -- that is not deterring the defense secretary and the others who are meeting inside. here's what defense secretary austin said just after meeting with president zelenskyy. >> see ukraine remain a sovereign country, democratic country able to protect its sovereign territory. we want to see russia weakened to the degree that it can't do the kinds of things that it has done in invading ukraine. >> the response from russia's foreign minister sergey lavrov he said in an interview that the world could be on the verge of a world war iii warning that there could be a nuclear conflict. those words sort of echoing through the halls here. but, again, 40 nations, defense ministers meeting right now to decide more military tied
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ukraine, what more can be done, and how to prepare their defense industrial bases so that this can be prevented in the long term. they are seeing the russia threat as a long-term threat. there are some nations inside the meeting hall who have asked not to be identified. again, a show of how sensitive this meeting is and how sensitive providing military aid to ukraine is at this moment in time. back to you. >> brian: it's amazing, jennifer, how this seems to be a lot less caution. i watch the opening, your remarks, you took a clip of, this is hey, we are in charge. we have got to help out ukraine what they have done is inspirational and it doesn't seem we would have -- this was possible or thought about. even a month ago. it seems like there is a sense of boldness among allies and now i germany has decided to send ukraine heavy equipped tanks designed for air defense. you talk about a turn around. >> it's incredible, brian, think of germany which had for decades
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a ban on sending lethal aid to conflict zones. that is a complete about face. sending those tanks into ukraine. i talked to one of the ukrainian representatives here. i asked him what he needs. he said multiple rocket launch systems. that is some of the long range in addition to long range artillery being trained on the howitzers. defense secretary austin said five battalions of artillery men, units using howitzers that they're training up. this is a very different mood, i would say, in the wake of the russian military being pushed back from the capital and also with so many nations, including the united states talking about reopening their embassies in the capital kyiv, a great sign of solidarity for the ukraine government. >> ainsley: absolutely. the president said is he returns diplomats to ukraine. the goal is to reopen the embassy in kyiv the next few weeks. you remember 62 days ago they closed down the embassy and
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moved it to poland so that is great news. >> steve: jennifer, i have a quick question four. that is regarding at the end of your prepared comments about what the secretary of defense said lloyd austin that is a much more aggressive soundbite we have heard from the united states. has there been a shift in u.s. goals or focus? because it seems like suddenly okay let's pull out all the stops. let's help them. >> it's really interesting. remember, steve, they have been sending weapons. the u.s. began sending weapons 24 hours after february 24th. the first weapons started flowing in. we did learn today that there was a plane load of weapons landing probably every other day in those first initialing days, now 8 to 10 cargo planes landing every day being off loaded immediately. i saw for myself the very high tech weaponry and lethal aid that was flowing in. they are not storing it outside of ukraine. they are moving it right.
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in in fact, we just learned today they have set up an operation center here with five ukrainian representatives and representatives of nato where they are coordinating these aid shipments so they are moving -- they are able to move and we reported this in the past president biden science off $800 million. 48 hours later those weapons r. avig arriving on the border being taken into ukraine. this is something we have not seen in terms of 9 speed at not only nato but the u.s. is providing these weapons. >> brian: next two weeks will be the biggest and we will see. jennifer. >> thanks so much. >> ainsley: thank you,s jennifer. >> thank you. >> brian: john kirby coming up in about 90 minutes. he is going to -- the press secretary. for the pentagon, will tell us the latest. >> ainsley: meanwhile the supreme court hears arguments over a case involving prayer and high school football coach. what's being said coming up. >> steve: plus, our top story elon musk vows to make free speech a priority at twitter. can he get it done?
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stuart varney joins us live with his reaction. he could tell you right now but we want you to watch this commercial. >> brian: and the music is too loud. ♪ ♪ before nexium 24hr, anna could only imagine a comfortable night's sleep without frequent heartburn waking her up. now, that dream... . ...is her reality. nexium 24hr stops acid before it starts, for all-day, all-night protection. can you imagine 24 hours without heartburn? (johnny cash) ♪ i've traveled every road in this here land! ♪ ♪ i've been everywhere, all-nighman. ♪ection. ♪ i've been everywhere, man. ♪ ♪ crossed the desert's bare, man. ♪ ♪ i've breathed the mountain air, man. ♪ ♪ of travel i've had my share, man. ♪
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death lawsuit. the park and ride operator failed to warn samson of ride and weight limit. the teen died after falling off the nearly 400-foot ride. investigators found samson was not properly fastened into his seat. top republican candidates for the u.s. senate in pennsylvania taking the debate stage together for the first time. dave mccormick and dr. mehmet oz ranging from covid to the economy. >> the mandates didn't work. we now know that we made washington drunk with powered what's happened is unprecedented in american history. we have got to pull back on the spending. >> carley: later this morning mccormick will join to us discuss last night's debate and his platform. the reno, nevada fire department is hiring someone who knows how to solve arson. boston the 2-year-old black lab
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bra door retriever. boston trained to sniff out 300 accelerants. using boston snout alone he does cut down the time and expense of investigations a very valuable dog, steve. >> steve: no kidding. thank you, carley. elon musk striking a deal to buy twitter for $44 billion vowing to make the platform, quote: better than ever. in a statement. the world's richest man says, quote: free speech is the bedrock of a functioning democracy and twitter is the digital town square where matters vital to the future of humanity are debated. here to debate this actually. he loves it. is stuart varney the host of varney and company on fox business. stuart, we love this story because essentially a week and a half ago, when there were rumblings that he would like to buy it the twitter board pretty much put out try it you will never get it. because we will put a poison pill in there to kill you off.
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now he is the boss. >> yes, indeed. i love this because it's an opportunity to remake what is a fading company twitter was fading before he came along. an opportunity to restore free speech. i think most importantly restore a level playing field for the elections that are coming up in november. i mean, before musk came along, it was a fading company. >> steve: sure. >> revenue from ads is only $5 billion. it's 270 billion at goal and 115 billion at facebook. twitter is nowhere in that deal. along comes musk, makes this strong bid, $54.20 per share. make it comfortable. dynamic and go places and restore free speech. when senator elizabeth warren tweets out this is a danger to democracy, you know musk is doing something right. he is not a danger to democracy. it's the possibility of
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restoring equality in political presentation right before the elections. >> steve: what's interesting stuart is yesterday jen psaki was asked about this at the podium at the white house. she said, you know, the white house is disturbed that big tech companies have so much power maybe they need to be regulated, funny thing is twitter could be one of the contributing factors for the fact that joe biden got eelected "new york post" story about the hunter biden laptop quashed everywhere thanks to twitter. enough to they don't like the fact that they can't control tnchts elizabeth warren says it's a danger to democracy and we better rein in these billionaires. we're going to tax them and pay more money. it's just not right that rich people should fool around like this sorry but you are wrong. >> steve: i love the fact that you are here fooling around with us it's such a big day. today is season two of the fox business prime kicks off this week with american built tonight mount rushmore. take a peek. >> they dynamited away over
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400,000 tons of rocks. >> a sculptor of unusual size. >> it would be for the whole nation. >> incredible engineering accomplishment. >> a sculptor larger than life. >> he was a genius. >> a guy like that doesn't quit. >> the danger. >> hanging in mid-air. >> and heart break. >> they had to i do might it head they already largely made. >> army of men managed to face the nation. >> you adapt, you overcome. >> carving mount rushmore. >> wait a second, can you imagine doing that today? that was built between 1927 and 1941. by a german carver i guess -- sculptor. did he have a permit for that? i mean, can you imagine all the permits you would need to do that today? that show is all about a can do america. the great achievements that we have in the past. stands this stark contrast to the president. i think it's a no can do america
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we can't get things done anymore. >> steve: so precise. one piece of rock, one mistake there goes george washington's nose. just saying. >> four presidents 60 feet tall faces a rock face in south dakota. who would have thought you could actually pull that off but they did. >> steve: stuart is the host of american built. check out season two of american built starts tonight 8:00 p.m. eastern on fox bills prime. stuart is also here 9:00 a.m. eastern time going to be the host of varney and company. >> you had to do the math all of a sudden. >> steve: i could say it's going to start in 90 minutes. >> 2 hours and 22 minutes. >> steve: that's the problem i was off an hour and i knew it you are on the business channel you are good with numbers. thank you, sir. meanwhile, hundreds of thousands of documents were apparently captured the nice u.s. forces killed usama bin laden. nearly 11 years later, we are learning new details about how plan to attack us again.
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the man who killed bin laden rob o'neill is going to join us live with reaction. one sheriff is sticking up for people's rights to defend their homes. he joins us live next. >> somebody is breaking in your house, you are more than welcome to shoot them in the center of the cabin. we prefer that you do actually. 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,
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and with rewards points that never expire, you get free nights fast! book now at bestwestern.com. >> ainsley: a florida community is safer thanks to one homeowner took on a burglar by shooting the. >> we don't know what homeowner. which homeowner shot at him. i guess they think that they did something wrong, which they did not. if somebody is breaking in your house, you are more than welcome to shoot them in santa rosa county we prefer that you do actually. >> he encouraged residents to take gun safety courses and he joins us now. welcome santa rosa sheriff bob
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johnson. good morning to you. >> good morning, ainsley. >> ainsley: good morning, sheriff. what led you to have this press conference. explain what happened. >> well, we had what we call a frequent flier break into four houses in a row. and we were chasing him throughout the neighborhood and he broke into one house and the homeowner fired at him. unfortunately did not hit him. and we ended up capturing him probably 15 minutes later. >> ainsley: he is 32 years old. arrested for breaking into homes. he has been arrested 17 times. first interaction when he was just 13 years old. went to prison for six and a half years. why do you call him a frequent flier? >> we just deal with him a lot. we sent him to prison like you said six and a half years for home invasion. and he just is not getting it. so he is going go back to prison again. and if he gets out again, we will deal with him again, i'm sure. he doesn't understand what the law is and he doesn't want to follow it so, we continually put him in jail. >> ainsley: you are being tough
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and you are standing up for the good guys and not the bad guys. you went on to say you praised ron desantis you said you will shoot better if you take one of our safety gun courses and maybe save tax payrolls money. what was the reaction from the deputies and the community? >> well, you know, i always talk like that. i ran on the fact that i'm a cop not a politician. and i will tell you right now, you know, somebody breaks in your house in santa rosa county and you shoot and kill them. the chances of them reoffending after that are zero. we like those odds. in santa rosa county if you break into a house you roll the dice. >> ainsley: are the residents supporting you? >> oh, yeah. they do. i tell everybody 99% of the people here love law enforcement and the other 1% are in my jail currently. >> ainsley: what about the guy who you don't know who shot this person? he is too afraid you think or she is too afraid to come forward? >> yeah. and as i said in my press conference. they are not in any trouble.
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but my deputies were chasing him yard to yard and then they called shots fired. and, of course, we didn't shoot at him. but shortly thereafter, he jumped through a wind dole and right into a deputy's waiting arms and he is currently in the milton hilton as we speak. >> what happens now to make sure he doesn't get out and do this again. >> we are hoping this will be his third strike and go to prison and not get out. we are tired of dealing with him to be honest with you. >> ainsley: yes, sir. sheriff, thank you so much from the great state of florida. >> thank you, ainsley. >> ainsley: i are welcome. thanks for what you do. god bless you out there. check in with janice dean for fox weather forecast. >> hi, good morning, ainsley. still a little cold in the northeast and across the northern plains. we might have set some record lows overnight last night and into wednesday. look at that grand forks 19 degrees. my goodness almost into may and still into freeze alerts parts of the midwest and the great lakes. even down towards the panhandle of texas frost advisories in effect. there are the current temps. # 5 in fargo.
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# 39 in chicago. 52 in new york. cold front it marching across portions of the eastern third of the country down towards texas. some of those storms could turn severe and we could see flash flooding. isolated flooding with those storms. not a big severe weather threat today. 61 daytime high. 71 in atlanta. 76 in dallas. 79 in los angeles. and we do have fire weather alerts for parts of the plain states from nebraska down towards arizona and new mexico. so we will keep you up to date on. that was there is the fire weather outlook. a lot of dry temperatures and some gusty winds. otherwise, i'm still wearing a winter coat, ainsley. i don't know when it's going to change. >> ainsley: come on inside, janice. >> janice: i will my friend. >> ainsley: football coach taken to highest court in the nation. will cain reacts to yesterday's hearing next.
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>> brian: supreme court now weighing arguments in the case of a high school football coach who lost his job for praying at games. >> it is a form ever pressure. we're worried that the students will feel he gets to put me into a football game or not. he gets to, you know, give me an a in math class, or not. >> if the coach, instead of
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taking a knee for prayer, took a knee during the national anthem because of moral opposition to racism, how would your school district respond? >> brian: interesting question, right? "fox & friends weekend" co-host will cain joins us how. how do you think day one went? >> i think it went well for the coach, coach kennedy who has been taking a knee at the end of the game in prayer and subsequently joined by students. i think it went well. i think there are several new justices, brian new as in the last several years who are sympathetic to religious expression that protected by the first amendment. justice gorsuch, justice coney barrett and you heard that question from justice thomas. it is an interesting question. would there be this opposition? would there be this lawsuit if like colin kaepernick students
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were taking a knee even under school direction in opposition to racism? i think we all know the answer to that. instead, this was a singular coach who took the act of a private prayer that then attracted others to come join him. i think that the -- i think the municipal court is probably going to not only approve of or not -- or let this coach continue on with his job. he was punished he think he lost his job because of this act but could roll back some of the press dent in the past drawn hard line between religious acts of expression and government employees. >> brian: what's interesting is obviously, you know, you have a choice to take a knee in prayer and they say what if i don't take a knee. if i don't pray. am i not going to get a chance to start or chance to play? he named two of his captains in opposition. two players in opposition to the prayer captains on the team. so, i mean, clearly he was going out of his way to say there is going to be no retribution.
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>> yeah. we had coach kennedy on "fox & friends weekend" this past weekend. he said you could ask every individual player whether or not they felt compelled or whether or not they were attracted to participate in the prayer. look, you are a big sports fan, brian, i am as well use example of professional football almost every nfl game midfield opposing players go and prayer. not because they are forced to part of culture and religious practices and who they are. why would it be so different if it came down to the college and high school level? it's not. players want to participate. they have want to join together in community, in celebration, in their religion. they are not forced to. and as you point out, this particular coach's actions reveal he was doing nothing to coerce these players to participate in this prayer. >> brian: if you go to nfl films and go to some of the great locker room talks. there is always -- bowing their heads, praying before and praying after. are we going to start banning
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some of those great games and coaches and moments in nfl's past because they pray? how many times did you watch players of the end of the game take a knee don't want to do any interviews so they join hands, opposition, and oftentimes they take a knee. not every labor. it's never a big deal. >> right. right. and, of course, they are allowed to because it is a private institution. the question for this and the question for the supreme court is what happens when a government employee in this case a public school teacher or a coach does it? does it amount to coercion as you pointed out? does a player feel like if i don't do this then i don't get playing time? i think what we heard yesterday from the justices, what -- because of their questioning, what we suspect we might be hearing from these justices, is that they think this was an act that was voluntary and it was protected by the first amendment. that coach's religious eggs pressure protected by the first amendment. i think the real question is will they roll back this hard line they have taken since the
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1970s of assuming any act by a coach or a public employee of religious expression by that coach or employee is coercion on the students? i think we are about to see not only a victory for coach kennedy but a rolling back of that hard line when it comes to religious expression. >> brian: right. you are not supposed to be praying for a win but it would certainly be a benefit to prayer overall if you pray and you do get the win. that would reinforce that behavior. we will examine that for another time. will, thanks so much. appreciate it: thanks, brian, you bet. >> brian: talk to you soon. federal judge temporarily stops the biden administration from ending title 42. is it enough to stop a surge? texas congressman brian babbitt reacts to that at the top of the hour. ♪ i don't just play someone brainy on tv - i'm an actual neuroscientist. and i love the science behind neuriva plus. unlike ordinary memory supplements, neuriva plus fuels six key indicators of brain performance. more brain performance? yes, please!
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released from the scene of the rust movie set. >> cold gun. >> detectives interrogating baldwin. >> we did it two weeks and the right way every day. >> case involving a high school football coach who lost his job after praying with his players. >> after seven years, it really does mean a lot. >> i was just thinking about that weekend ♪ ♪ ♪ >> steve: how pretty is that? ladies and gentlemen, looking live at nags head, north carolina sun comes up over the atlantic going for a daytime high of 77. look three people down in the foreground already out and about. can't tell if they're fishing or just looking but that's a lovely spot. we used to go down to north carolina and turn at nags head and go up the road to ducks and
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carolla. >> ainsley: how far away is that from d.c. >> steve: about three hours the way we took it. it is just south of kill devil hills where orrville and wilbur wright did their first manned piloting of an airplane. >> brian: next thing you know had jetblue, delta and america. >> ainsley: and no masks. >> brian: did they have to wear masks in the very beginning? >> steve: they did which was weird. >> brian: because they had no windshields. they just wore sunglasses. >> steve: brian, they were going 1 mile-per-hour. it's not like they needed to pick the bugs out of their grill. >> brian: first car started cover everyone's eyes. wait a second we can take the glasses off and put up a windshield. who came up with a windshield? too many people focus on the car and not enough on the windshield. >> ainsley: what do you have coming up. >> steve: speaking of windshield. >> brian: that was a little abrupt. >> ainsley: talking about windshields, carl's, good
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transition. >> brian: coming up in 15 minutes the f-150 goes electric. 200,000 reservations to get it you will see it with the ceo of fords who name is jim farley who is cousins with chris farley. >> ainsley: really? that many people want these scars. >> brian: amazing. >> ainsley: how many to get one. >> only rolling out 40,000 the first year. they got to get the chips from the rare earth the technology and the car fast and drives on its own. >> ainsley: brian went to dearborn, michigan. >> steve: f-150 the most popular vehicle in the world has kept ford afloat for many, many years. it's cool. we used to someone back in the day. 7:03 here in the east. let's start with the crisis at our southern border because republicans are claiming victory after a judge has granted a temporary restraining order to stop the biden administration from ending title 42 for now. >> brian: all right. also this morning we are hearing from the family of a national guardsman who drowned while
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rescuing illegal immigrants from the rio grande river. >> ainsley: mark meredith is live for the latest. >> federal judge in louisiana has issued temporary restraining order which will essentially block the government from lifting title 42 for now. we heard from the attorney general of missouri who is celebrating this ruling because he believes it if title 42 were to be lifted there would be a new surge in migrants crossing the border. here's what he had to say last night. >> about 50% of the expulsions are related to title 42. so if you get rid of title 42 right now, you are going to see about 18,000 people a day. that's an estimate. that's a massive number. certainly an increase. there is no good time to do it. certainly right now you will see a seasonal surge anyway. >> situation on the border already a matter of life and death. on monday, officials confirming the death of a texas national guard soldier specialist bishop evans. investigators say he died while trying to rescue two migrants who were crossing the rio grande river. >> a carrying, loving child.
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-- a caring,loving child. someone he could not see hurting and not help. even if he didn't have it, he would help to get it. >> the debate over border policies only becoming more intense away from washington after several house republicans visited texas on monday. they are urging the white house to devote more resources and time to the crisis but press secretary jen psaki, she is pushing back saying it was president biden who inherited this mess. >> does the white house feel any responsibility for his death? >> well, of course we are mourning the loss of his life. i would note that the national guard works for the state so he is an employee of the texas national guard and his efforts and his operation were directed by there. not by the federal government. >> just yesterday the president had a chance to meet with members of the hispanic congressional caucus. many of its members urge the president take executive action which when it comes to executive
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action. they believe something the president do because can't agree. look to see if the white house pushes back from the changes from the judge's ruling. back to you. i looked it up windshield invented in 1904. >> brian: right when the car came in. >> steve: by elon musk, right? >> i wasn't there. you may have beaten me there a few years earlier. >> steve: thank you very much he has google on the north lawn. >> brian: 1905 windshield wipers. one year you had to stick your head out. >> steve: i think back then they could just reach around. or it. >> brian: or it didn't rain back then. >> ainsley: bring in texas g.o.p. congressman brian babin into the fold here. good morning, congressman. >> good morning, ainsley. steve and brian, great to be with you. >> ainsley: great to have you here. holding the letter the signatures are more than the letter. 15 pages of signatures. so much support on this. a letter you sent to the department of homeland security secretary mayorkas and you are questioning whether or not is he
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suitable for office. 133 republicans signed this letter. what's the goal? >> the goal is to put him on notice that he has got to secure this border. it's really incredible when you think about it, ainsley, that you know, it tykes a lot of work to undo and dismantle a secure border because that's what we had under the trump administration. and in just a few short months we have a wide open border. he has dispensed and done away with some of the greatest policies that we have had before that were developed under the trump administration. and he simply has ignored these. he has defied court orders. he actually, give him credit. he came to visit. i'm the co-chairman of the house border security caucus. he actually came and sat down with us. i was very surprised and i admire him for coming because he was in a hostile room, because he has not done his job. and this letter was to put him on notice that you better get
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the job done. you better do what your oath of office is. you better obey the law, obey court orders or you are being put on notice that something you may be removed from office if this continues. >> steve: congressman. we heard and we detailed last week how axios is reporting that apparently mr. mayorkas is feeling frustrated. is he following orders from the head office, from the white house. is he doing what joe biden wants him to. you know, we just saw that soundbite of jen psaki talking about how the texas national guardsman bishop evans died, drowned when he was saving apparent lay drug smuggler and she said well, you know, he works for the state. not the federal government. she also referred to donald trump had a wall that was never gonna work. okay. it's never going to work if as soon as donald trump least office joe biden pulls the plug
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on it. >> that's right. and absolutely. and i will tell you, the way jen psaki distanced herself and the white house from having any responsibility for the loss of that national guardsman as a former guardsman myself in texas, they do bear responsibility for that because they have opened that border up. those national guardsmen wouldn't be down there right now if they were doing their job at the biden administration. it is disgraceful. we seeing people that are numerous bodies found. we have 200 -- excuse me, over 100,000 dead americans from overdoses drugs coming across the southern border. the man is not doing his job. i understand is he following orders from his boss. but, again, let me just say this. this border is out of control. and if title 42 goes away. it's going to triple, even
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quadrupled the number that are come across. we had 221,000 come across. unbelievable. >> i will tell you, congressman, one thing we know for sure when they keep saying the president is going to build a wall. high tech. high tech was part of the wall. cameras and everything was there the roads. it wasn't just building a wall as if the vikings were making it we paid for it already and we are allowing it to rust rather than being used and mayorkas knows how to fix it. he is choosing not to, maybe because he is not taking orders. it's not that he is incompetent. he is choosing to allow this to happen because it's the policy of the administration i'm convinced of it people that work with him know he can fix it but he chose not to if i was him i would just quit either that or he fully supports allowing millions of people to come here illegally. the other big story that's happening right now that jen psaki refuses to answer is what is going on with hunter biden during his years when hunter
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biden's company which joe biden was vice president of the united states. it turns out the ceo of rosemont seneca, his company. this guy visited 19 times. some were social visits. others weren't. here is jen psaki's reaction to the question of why was this guy coming to visit the vice president? >> >> on hunter biden, the "new york post" is reporting looking at white house visitor logs there were 19 visits to the white house while the president was vice president. meeting with business partners. do you understand why that business partner had access and what those meetings were about? >> i don't have any information on. that was i'm happy to check and see. >> brian: is that acceptable? >> that is totally unacceptable. brian. the american people deserve to know the truth. we have known the truth. i think everyone in this country that has half a brain knows what has been going on that there has been something fishy that has been going on under these
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democratic leadership, the obama administration, vice president was a part of, and why were they given access. these people given access to the vice president, to obama's, you know, administration personnel, and then big tech simply ignored it and now all of a sudden, this is my curiosity is aroused. why are we all of a sudden hearing this news? it make one wonder they are not happy with the biden administration reaction and results currently right now and they are planning on doing something, maybe a switch there. i have no idea what's going on there, but big tech, the mainstream media have covered this thing up and now all of a sudden we are seeing a little bit of the truth come peeping over the horizon and we want to have the entire truth and that's
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what we deserve and hopefully we will be getting that. i have no confidence at all that the administration and especially back to mayorkas are going to obey a court orders because he has defied them in the past we will see what happens there. >> ainsley: congressman, thank you so much for joining us. >> thank you, ainsley good to be with you. >> ainsley: thank you for your service as a national guards man and now a congressman. wrote the book with jocko. >> steve: already in the office he is answer constituent phone calls. call right now. he is there. he is the only guy in the office. thank you, sir. it is 13 minutes after the top of the hour carley, good morning to you. >> carley: good morning. police in san jose on the hunt for a man who kidnapped a baby boy. authorities releasing this surveillance footage of the abduction. you can see the suspect walking away with 3 month old brandon
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cuellar car seat. taken from inside the apartment unloaded groceries. cash reward for information that leads to the baby's safe return to the family. newly released police video shedding new light on the rust movie set tragedy. one clip alec baldwin defends praise operations on the set fog the accidental shooting that killed cinematographer helena hutchins and injured the film's director. >> we did it the right way every day. as the barrel clears, i turn the gun goes off. it's supposed to be a cold gun. >> carley: the evidence also includes video of the film's armorer visibly shaken while speaking with police. >> >> investigation into the movie set shooting remains open. golf legend tiger woods and phil
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mickelson will compete in the 2022 pga championship. woods will be back after making his major championship golf after the masters earlier this month and mychalson will defend 2021 pga championship. the golfer has skipped tour events after controversial comments about a saudi backed rival golf league that surfaced in february. so those are your headlines, guys, over to you. >> steve: stay tuned that will be great to see. >> ainsley: now that he has recovered. i'm sure he was sore after the masters. >> steve: doing better. >> ainsley: hundreds of thousands of files were collected from usama bin laden's compound the fight he was killed just now learning what he was documenting the man who killed the terrorist rob o'neill join us next. >> steve: stop supplying ukraine can kept we are life in germany as leaders come together to fight back against russia. but, at upwork, we found her.
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the white house is lease geneticked the white house's demand to stop sending messages to ukraine and doubling down on its commitment to president zelenskyy. joins us live from ramstein air base in germany. good evening, jen. hello steve we are here in ramstein we will have a sit down interview with defense secretary lloyd austin after this meeting in ramstein. just to my inside the officer's club 40 ministers of defense and chiefs of defense are meeting from 40 different countries. they are all being hosted by secretary austin and general mark milley. they are here in order to find ways in which they can increase
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security assistance to the ukraine government to change the course of the war and to push back against russian aggression. here's the secretary of defense just moments ago. >> the battle of iwo jima took 36 days. the battle of the bulge lasted 40 days and ukraine has now beaten back the russian military for 62 days. and so, your resistance has brought inspiration to the free world. >> what's notable about the group inside is that in the last 24 hours alone, about 10 different countries signed up to attend the conference. rsvping after seeing defense secretary austin and secretary of state blinken in kyiv meeting with president zelenskyy that seemed to motivate some countries that may have been on the fence before about providing lethal aid. non-nato countries inside who don't want to be identified. they are all here for one purpose, to provide more military security aid to
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ukraine. in fact, i have heard from participants inside the room, that general milley made an impassioned appeal to those defense ministers sitting in the room saying that the next four weeks are going to be crucial in terms of turning the tide in this war. the next few weeks will decide the fate of this war. here is secretary austin again. >> >> my trip to kyiv reinforced my admiration for the way that the ukrainian armed forces are deploying these capabilities. ukraine clearly believes that it can win. and so does everyone here. >> russia clearly feeling threatened by this group that is meeting here today. you heard from sergey lavrov, the foreign minister saying that the world could be on the verge of world war iii. a warning that nuclear war could break out. not clear whether that's hyperbole or a threat or whether it's simply a warning. but clearly the russians trying
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to say to the u.s. government that they need to stop providing weapons to ukraine; otherwise being targeted by russian missiles. the white house saying they are not going to stop and that these 40 countries here today seem to be sending the same signal. ainsley? >> ainsley: jennifer, thank you so much. next week marks 11 years since u.s. forces killed usama bin laden. hundreds of thousands of files were obtained from the compound where he was killed. including detailed plans for further attacks on american soil that involved chartering private jets and derailing trains. they also reveal his misstep. >> he thought that the american people take to the streets replicate anti-vietnam war protest and put pressure on the governments to withdrawal from muslim majority states. >> large miscalculation. >> huge miscalculation. >> ainsley: here to react is the navy seal who killed the terrorist ron o'neil himself.
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good morning to you, rob. >> good morning, ainsley. thanks for having meal. >> thank you so much for coming on and coming on to talk about what you found inside his compound. what did you find and what do these papers reveal? >> we found more than we thought we would get into in there. we were going to be on the ground for maybe, 20, 25 minutes there was so much stuff, everything from hard drives, big computers, handwritten papers, centers for disease control, we asked for additional 20 or 10 minutes. we actually stayed on the ground 47 minutes just the 32 that we wanted to be there. we stayed for a long time we found out that he was actually running al-qaeda from in there. he was finding out stuff that we responded differently than 9/11 than we thought. we disseminated al-qaeda and afghanistan. we found out usama bin laden was waiting to attack the united states again. he knew that once we attacked with going through security and hijacking planes that we would -- we are reactive we are not proactive. we adjust to that 15 and 19 hijackers from 9/11 from saudi arabia there is a lot of money
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in saudi arabia. we will charter jets that way there is no security there. keep moving and moving. they think outside of the box. as a country we can't decide which box we are in. take for example in 2001. richard reid the shoe bomber failed to bomb his own shoes light them on fire. he didn't succeed. we are still checking shoes at the airport today. >> ainsley: the lady we saw in "60 minutes" piece she studied line by line these papers that you guys pulled out of his compound and did that interview on "60 minutes." why is it taking us so long to find out what was in the papers? >> well, at first we had our intelligence agents who were incredible by the way manipulate we brought them back going over them. there is not just a different language. different ways once our our intelligence agents go through them declassify them and release them to the public. arabic speakers on our team
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start go through it took a long, long time. she was reading them for years. she did a great job. it's very important that she tells the american people al-qaeda is still out there. they are out there. they haven't forgotten about us. our problem is the only thing about never forget is we keep forgetting the never forget. >> ainsley: you are right. 42 terrorist watch list individuals have come across the border since president biden took office. do these papers prove they want to try to attack us again. >> they are coming again. one of my favoritization we have the clocks but they have the time. they see how open our borders are. they are sending them across right now they are not just migrants are a trying to find jobs. when they hit us why weren't we securing the border? this is why pee need to do it. it doesn't need to be a democrat or republican thing. al-qaeda doesn't care who we are or what we look like. they want to blow us up because of the way we think and act and that is it. >> ainsley: and we are giving them open envy occasion with open border. i can't believe it's been # 1 years. thank you for your service.
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>> any time, thank you. >> ainsley: good to see you. elon musk strikes a $44 billion deal for twitter promising big changes. hes also have big challenges. ford introducing the newest electric vehicle the f-150 lightning. what does it take to make the iconic truck go electric? brian went to talk to the ceo, that's coming up next. ♪ ♪ your record label is taking off. but so is your sound engineer. you need to hire. i need indeed. indeed you do. indeed instant match instantly delivers quality candidates
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protect him with all your heart. simparica trio. >> carley: back with your headlines, starting with this president biden is granting his first three pardons in commuting the sentences of 75 prisoners serving time for nonviolent drug crimes. one pardon is for the black secret service agent who served on john f. kennedy's detail. he was convicted of federal bribery but always maintained his innocence. the other two pardons issued to people convicted on drug-related charges. the top republican candidates for u.s. senate in pennsylvania taking the debate stage together for the first time. david mccormick and dr. mehmet oz criticizing the left on issues ranging from the economy to the pandemic.
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>> the mandates didn't work. we now know that we have made washington drunk with power. they believe they can actually microrule everything. you are seeing the manifestations of that with our school systems. >> republicans, democrats alike over the decades have not been prudent on spending. what's happened over the last 18 months under joe biden is unprecedented in american history. we have got to pull back on the spending. >> later this morning mccormick will join us to discuss last night's debate and his platform. a new york supreme court judge holding former president trump in civil contempt for failing to turn over trump organization documents to comply with state attorney general subpoena. the former president being ordered to pay $10,000 each day. he does not adhere to the summons in the financial fraud probe. a.g. letitia james celebrating the ruling on twitter saying, quote: justice prevailed. those are your headlines, guys, down to you. >> in the race to go electric
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ford is launching all new f-150 lightning pickup truck. >> brian: able to get a firsthand look at how they are being made in dearborn, michigan. of course you haven't seen it yet because they are not out yet. here is jim farley the ceo give us an inside look. ♪ ♪ >> so i'm about to tell that you ford is coming out with a new pickup truck yeah no, kidding they are synonymous. news worthy but not necessarily the biggest story. however this pickup truck is a big story. it's called the lightning. ♪ ♪ yes, fully electric. and after $22 billion worth of investment. ♪ first ever pickup from a major auto manufacturer ready to go. ♪ ♪ jim farley where are we right
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now. >> we are in the red sea center where we are building our new f-150 lightning. america's best selling vehicle for 40 years. we are electrifying it. >> how many reservations have already been made to buy this vehicle? >> 200,000. [laughter] still blown away by the interest in the truck. >> brian: the response from the government has been? >> president biden came here and drove it himself the day before we launched it i mean, they are excited about what we are doing here. >> this sucker's quick. >> brian: jim, any new innovation challenges they say the nickel, the cobalt, lithium needed to make the batteries. are you convinced you can get it? they are not in everybody's backyard. >> we can get it but the most important thing is the transition to a local supply chain here for those raw materials we have to extract them and process them locally and not send them to africa or
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asia proper processing and mining. >> brian: did you express that to the president. >> yes. what we need is fast permitting and support from the government to allow us to do this kind of mining and processing here. >> brian: i also heard, too, laymen here but need a bunch of chips for this car? >> yes. >> everybody knows there is a problem with chips? >> yes. >> how are you guys at ford attacking? >> what we are doing is prior tiding this production. >> there is about 3,000 clips in every lightning. >> people don't understand how technically advance cars are these days. we want to build our ghints u.s. we need to invest in ford. we need help from the person who government to do it. >> brian: american people explain we are bringing production back here it's going to cost a little bit more. >> yeah. if you buy a ford. you are betting on a company that's bet on america. we make 100 percent of trucks in the u.s. it's really important for our independence as a country moving from kind of energy independence like we have had to raw material
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independence. >> brian: when you start doing and this start seeing the improvement, the other question for the outsiders is the country ready for it? because a lot of truck drivers like the feeling of that v.a. engine. foot on the gas and the reputation with electric cars knows electric trucks it's not going to have the power. >> i'm one of those people. the reality is the 0 to 60 probably 6 seconds. this thing is four. if you want to have a fun ride, just put your foot into this vehicle. >> brian: what's next? >> a whole fleet of new electric digital vehicles. >> brian: jet packs one day are we going to fly? is that going to happen. >> we will figure out this one first. >> brian: came up with it and ready go at 320 miles per charge now it's up to 3400. cost between 40 and 80 if you want everything done. the whole screen. i don't know how common it is. it almost looks like a television the screen in front
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of you. and it's self-driving, too. i was able to take a test drive and you will see it in the fox nation special. you have to take a test drive. wasn't touching the wheel the chief engineer. they come up with this thick in a year and a half. they commissioned it. had a series of meetings. athletics thing you know they have it saw the hood totally empty. the whole base of the car you can't see the battery. that's where the battery is and you could turn around and use that as a power source and if you are camping or if you lose power to your house, you could power your whole house. >> ainsley: light up your whole house for three days. >> steve: that's really crazy. the other thing because it's electric vehicle wind up with gas credit at the end of the year. >> ainsley: don't have to go to the gas tank. >> brian: give a kit do convert to your house give you rec tuition to do it. 110 in your house go up to 220. it's going to be out next month.
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>> ainsley: that's chris farley's cousin. >> brian: he has a '72 bronco and tesla. i got to find out the competition and see what it's like. >> ainsley: what did you say? >> steve: good trip. >> brian: dearborn, michigan. no problem. >> ainsley: the man accused of brutally murdering a new york city mother is back in court today. nancy grace joins us with her take on this case. ♪ a landscaper and a hunter. that's why you need versatile, durable kubota equipment. [narrator] this is steve. he used to have gum problems. now, he uses therabreath healthy gums oral rinse with clinically-proven ingredients and his gum problems have vanished. (crowd applauding) therabreath, it's a better mouthwash. at walmart, target and other fine stores. to be clear, we have never been accused of being flashy, sexy or lit.
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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, or considering pregnancy. some of the most common side effects include injection-site reactions, fever, and tiredness. if you switch to cabenuva, attend all treatment appointments. every other month and i'm good to go. ask your doctor about every-other-month cabenuva. steve: handyman and former lover accused of murdering new york city mom gaal is heading back to court today. police say david bonola confessed to her brutal murder twice. once on camera, stabbing her 60 times and dumping her body in her son's duffle bag and dragging it it five blocks away he is being charged with murder
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and criminal trespass and weapons charges. nancy, good morning to you. >> apparently is he back in court and this is just after a late night arraignment last week. at that time he did not enter a plea. maybe he will enter a plea today. and, if he does not enter a plea, the court will enter one for him. it will be a plea of not guilty. not only that we know that he has been on suicide watch. i think it's a very strong possibility his lawyer will want to move him to some type of medical facility, may or may not work. here is the tricky part. there has been no bond. he is being held without bail. i guarantee you his lawyer is going to want a bond. and in new york, it could happen. now, the judge knows this case is being watched and they may back off and wait until we are not looking. because in new york, it's a revolving door. even killers get out on bond. >> steve: here's the thing, nancy, wouldn't he be a flight risk? it's been revealed apparently this guy was in the country --
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this is somebody nobody talks about him. this was a big story until it was revealed on friday he has been in the country illegally for something like 20 years. >> 20-plus years. he is married with children. he has been here all this time on a visa violation. so i'm sure that ice will be. >> steve: oh, yeah. >> hanging in the background waiting to see if they will get their mits on him. a lot of evidence has developed since he was first arrested. anybody can find this out by going online. he had one creepy play list about how to attract women that say no or they are confused. how to break the loom of obsession. plus, hundreds of videos about gory crimes and rapes. >> steve: it's just disgusting. and, apparently, he very non-chalantly, he went back and we talked about this last week. the cops were able to pick him up because they were in the neighborhood of the murder looking for more ring doorbell video and there he was and they say hey we want to take you
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down. took him downtown and he nonchalantly confesses it. do you mind doing this again for the camera for the prosecutor he? said sure i will tell you the story again. >> after that he gobbled up a bagel. >> steve: cream cheese. >> didn't affect his appetite describing how he murdered her. there is going to be a move for bond. another thing is i wonder if she ever looked at his online activity because take one look at his videos and you would run for the hills as if you had seen a monster. one more thing everyone at starbucks great a guy they said that about ted bundy and scott peterson until they murdered somebody. >> pete: what are you doing -- >> steve: what are you doing today on fox nation. >> please join us. going live on the johnny depp as it is called trial. depp has finished his testimony.
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he started with a bang i think he went out with a whimper. now the show moves on. there has been a blistering cross-examination. but we're waiting to see what comes next. >> steve: and that's just it. it just is more jaw-dropping by the day. check it out today at noon on fox nation. nancy, thank you very much. >> thank you. >> steve: check it out at fox nation.com. meanwhile, let's go ahead and check in with senior meteorologist janice dean look at the fox weather forecast and she has got that yellow umbrella out. >> janice: i do i have my mostly sunny umbrella out because got a little bit of light mist. cold front moving through. take a look at the temperatures because we have record-setting cold across portions of the northern plains and the great lakes. 52 in new york yeah it feels chilly. warmth return for the plain states, omaha, kansas city into the 60's. warm things up by at least 10 degrees tomorrow and then into thursday as well. a little cooler.
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around the northern plains, the upper midwest, that's where we have the coldest air of the season right now. and then we have that cold front that's moving through the northeast down towards texas, you could see the potential for stronger storms today and maybe some flash flooding. so just keep that in mind there are your daytime highs today. so the south still very warm. but it is cool for the northern tier of the country. mostly sunny. over to you, carley. >> carley: all right, thank you, janice. it is time now for your news by the numbers. sponsored by xiidra, of course. $25,000 that's the starting bid for a lunch date with warren buffett the billionaire ceo launching final fundraiser for glide. an organization that supports the homeless in california. 2400, that's how many chick-fil-a populations are now serving the cloud berry sun joy drink. cloud berries and cherry blossom sun joy drink.
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cocktail of the chain's signature lemonade and signature ice tea. if you are counting calories customize it with diet lemonade or unsweetened ice tea. how about that? and finally $4,400, that's the highest bid offered so far for a football signed by several performers for the 2022 super bowl halftime show. signatories include eminem. dr. driveway mary jane biological. bidding will close on may th. steve, over to you. >> steve: like the halftime ball? >> carley: the official halftime ball. >> steve: all right. thank you, carley. >> carley: you are welcome. >> steve: come up elon musk strikes a $44 billion deal for twitter and big changes. he is also going to have big challenges. vivek ramaswamy has thoughts on how musk can boost and still protect free speech. he is coming up next. ♪ don't let me down, down, down
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free speech or priority over there tweeting "i hope that even my worst critics remain on twitter, because that is what free speech means." >> ainsley: here to react to this. this is great news. what do you think? what is your reaction? >> i think it is great news. i think that conversation is going to turn to how elon is going to accomplish a herculean task. you want to take down spam and bots and other kinds of speech that is technically constitutionally protected. he needs to make a free-speech platform. that is a difficult question. there are some ways that he can do it. i'm expecting him to step up big to be able to deliver. i can help in any way i can. >> brian: what role does being a private company have? is taking it private. was that mean? >> you're not beholden to near-term revenue which drives
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public stock. here's the thing that elon can focus in the private company. this is a path out of the dilemma that i mentioned before. he can restore the power back to the user. twitter has claimed for years that it's protocols and content moderation protocols are actually part of creating a better user experience, that that is good business. he can leave that intact is say that anyone who wants it taken up into it. anyone who doesn't want to opt into the censorship regime is free to decide whatever they want to decide. the key to the future social media and even the future of twitter. rather than centralized decision-making, decentralize the decision so that the users have more power. i expect that will be the path that he takes. more detail on some of these ideas. these are going to be the questions that the conversation quickly turned to after the celebration at twitter is indeed in their right hands, the
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celebration no doubt i endorse. >> steve: the people that actually run it, twitter with a content moderation. when you look at a 2-year study done by the media research center, and shows that big tech censored criticism of joe biden 646 times -- clearly makes it looks like he wanted him to be elected president. everything else, keep him up and up. 140 cases involving new york post hunter biden laptop stories. and those all certainly could have led to somebody deciding whether or not to vote for joe biden. >> this is the biggest change we can count on monday 1 that elon musk owns twitter. historically what these big tech companies have done it served as the censorship arm of big government. government is able to use these private companies to censor content through the backdoor that government could not censor through the front door under the u.s. constitution under the first amendment. that is not going to happen
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under elon musk. this is a good step forward to say that now the alleged private company behind closed doors is actually operating as a private company. it's in the hands of that company to decide what being a free-speech platform actually means. >> steve: after donald trump won, the big social media companies got together and said, how did that happen? we can never let it happen again. that is how we got where we are. thank you for joining us live today. >> ainsley: thank you. still to come come up, pentagon press secretary john kirby will join us. the united states refuses to bow to russia's demands. >> brian: waving farewell to tinseltown. he's moving to nashville. he tells us why with his foundation in just a moment.
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to treat 16 types of advanced cancer, and is being studied in hundreds of clinical trials exploring ways to treat even more types of cancer. it's tru. keytruda from merck. see the different types of cancer keytruda is approved to treat at keytruda.com, and ask your doctor if keytruda can be part of your story. >> steve: extra, extra, read all about it. >> and i must striking a deal to the buy he could now redo that company, make it profitable. >> the white house rejecting russia's demands. >> ukraine clearly believes and so does everyone here. >> the serbian body cam video released from the rest movie set. >> detectives interrogating
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baldwin. >> the illegal immigrants charged on the murder of a queens mother of two. her body was found in a duffel bag. and in new york, -- >> i've never spoken to my son about his overseas dealings. >> made at least 19 visits between 2009 and 2015. >> i don't have any information on that. >> the american people deserve to know the truth. ♪ ♪ >> ainsley: that is myrtle beach, south carolina. the weather looks nice they are. it's eight: 901 here on the east coast. >> it looks like there's a bug on that camera. >> ainsley: it does. our state flag. >> brian: it looks great.
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merely an amusement park. i want to go into that building that's leaning. what is that about? >> ainsley: there are all kinds of amusement parks. >> steve: i went to the right. crazy. >> time for a road trip. if you have some comments about what we just said, hop on twitter and tweet about it especially if you have been kicked off twitter or are boycotting twitter because it was leaning predominantly to the left. things have certainly changed. it cost $44 billion but elon musk is secured the financing to make it happen. suddenly there's been a change from a poison pill do let's accept our fate. twitter is owned by elon musk. he's got a tunnel. he's got a tunnel company. he's got john kirby based company. he's got tesla, an electric car company. now it's got one of the most powerful social media platforms in the world. >> ainsley: the wealthiest man in the world pretty plans plans to add new features and no more
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spambots. he wants to fight spam and all humans will be authenticated. >> steve: and will be interesting to see if more people actually do it. when you look at twitter and the numbers of the content, 10% of twitter users create 90% of the content. why is that? now that he is opening it up, will more people get involved? we know that after it was announced that he would be buying it in the board said yes, we are going to have to select, they were a number of users. you might actually make it last spoke. they refer to his purchase is dangerous for democracy. one writer says musk is behaving like a movie super villain. >> brian: by buying it? because then it won't be the safe space for them anymore. >> ainsley: they won't be able to censor all the stories. >> steve: that noise from the
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ride, turn it off. >> ainsley: "free speech is the bedrock of a functioning democracy. and twitter is the digital town square for matters vital to the future of humanity are debated. twitter has tremendous potential. i look forward to working with the company in the community of users to unlock it. i hope that even my worst medics remain on twitter. he wants everyone to stay because that is what free-speech means. >> brian: 37,000. this is really about me. i've had 37,000 followers in a day. why am i suddenly so appealing? >> steve: they could all be bots. >> ainsley: checking yesterday how many followers you have. >> brian: ad 563. i wake up and i've got 593. the number one -- devin nunes coming up later today. the number one after the download is truth social. number 2 is twitter. >> ainsley: i think people are
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going back on twitter. >> steve: here's the thing. as the curved board heads out the door, and there are a lot of twitter employees that are freaked out because it is, like, we don't want this guided takeover. is he going to make us go back to the office? apparently, the company has frozen any plan changes to this service until monday, but does know where he is some rogue employee heading out the door might try to screw things up to leave a mark. and it certainly would. essentially, there was an all-hands-on-deck meeting yesterday and the current ceo said, you know what? everybody's job is safe for six months. after that, we have no idea what's gonna happen. >> ainsley: they were saying, am i going to lose my job? he said we don't have any plans for that right now. are you going to let donald trump come back on the platform? he says, i don't know. that's at the elon. the trop insist that he's not
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going to rejoin twitter because he is going to stay on its platform which called truth. brian is on that one. >> brian: he hasn't started doing is truth or whatever reason i call it. >> ainsley: telling the truth. >> steve: i signed up for it. i'm still on a waiting list. i've been on a waiting list for two months. >> brian: space got to accept you i guess. i think so much less than this is an interesting question. did the chinese government gain a bit of leverage over the town square? because elon musk buys somewhere earth for cars in china. it is interesting conspiracy. >> ainsley: they are competitors in the billionaire world. >> steve: they both have rocket companies. hello. stuart varney joined us an hour or so ago and had this observation about the impact on the big picture. >> it is an opportunity to remake what is fading company. revenue from ads is only
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$5 million. it's $270 billion at google and $115 billion at facebook. along comes musk makes the strong bid, $54.20 per share, takes the company. he could now redo that company and make it profitable. make it dynamic, make it go places. at the same time, restore free speech. elizabeth warren tweets out "this is a danger to democracy" you know musk is doing something right. it's not a danger to democracy. it's a possibility of restoring equality and political presentation right before the election. >> that is why some on the political left don't like the fact that elon musk is talking about turning it into a virtual town hall. >> cannot take control in six more months. >> 8:07 here in the spirit rejecting russia's demand to stop supplying ukraine with weapons doubling down on its commitment to
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president zelenskyy. speech of the russian foreign minister of fighting back claiming needs nato is essentially at war against his country. >> pentagon secretary john kirby joins us now. thanks for joining. admiral, thanks for joining us. i appreciate it. what could you tell us as a marriage from your coordination meeting led by the secretary of defense today? >> it is ongoing right now, brian. just a few feet from where i am out right now. 40 nations. most of them actually present here. coming together to make a powerful statement about the importance of the international community support for what ukraine is going on. it is not just made up of their country literally from around the world including the indo pacific region all of them are interested in making sure that ukraine wins this war and their sovereignty is respected. we will have more to say at the end of the day. some things and more details to put on in terms of what we've learned and what is come out of this meeting.
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it is an impressive group of attendees with a very, very strong agenda talking about ukraine's immediate needs, helping then went win today as well as what they are going to be talking about this afternoon as a long-term defense relationship that ukraine is going to need going forward. >> ainsley: russia says that western military a -- what is this mean? >> this has been the russian playbook since even when the invasion was brand-new that this was really the west against russia and nato against russia and the united states against russia. adage is not the case. this is about russia's unprovoked war inside ukraine and the fighting is going on between ukrainian soldiers. make sure the ukrainian soldiers of all the tools and capabilities, the weapons and the support that they need to continue to prosecute this fight against russia. they've been very successful today. russia has achieved none of its strategic objectives.
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the comments, we have our this rhetoric out of russia also and just the early days of this invasion. it is unhelpful. it is not constructive. quite frankly, it's irresponsible for nuclear power like russia talking about even the potential of escalating this into the nuclear realm. no one obviously wants to see that. obviously, we are taking it seriously. we look at this every day. there is no reason we don't see to change our strategic deterrent postures at this point. >> steve: you know every time russia gets back into a corner. ukrainians have done a pretty good job fighting back. every time russia gets pushed back, russia plays that card. hey, we've got nukes. that's next. >> ride, since the very early days when i was talking to you guys and we were talking about escalation management and being mindful of russia's nuclear and unconventional capabilities so that every decision we make, we got the factor that in and we still are. yes, that many, many nations are
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going to be giving more weapons and more systems to ukraine. we are always thinking about the potential for escalation management. the war between united states and russia is not ours and not rush and certainly not ukraine's. >> brian: mr. secretary, no doubt about it, secretary of defense alston made headlines when they came out and said he would like the co a weakened russia that would no longer be able to do invade countries like they did ukraine. i expected that in a classified setting. i certainly hope that would be an objective. saying it out loud. it does not allow the russian people to rally against nato -- more against ukraine because it does seem as though our goal is made it to weaken their nation. was that a mistake? >> not at all, brian. the secretary is perfectly consistent. russia has weakened itself as a result of this invasion. we don't want to see them be
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able to do this kind of thing in the future. we don't want to see a russian capability that is persistent and an ability to invade another sovereign nation and destabilize the european continent more than they already have. we have all been consistent about not wanting to see russia emerge from this able to do it again. >> brian: one is ukraine's sovereignty. number two is a weakened russia. you want both. now you have two objectives. >> we have always wanted one singular objective, brian. that is that ukraine's sovereignty and territorial integrity is fully respected by russia. quite frankly, everybody else. that is with a meeting in germany is all about. so many countries. well into the future. that has been the gold from day one trend for that is not change. >> ainsley: that's amazing that 40 countries have come together with you. united states is hosting this.
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ukraine clearly believes that it can win. so does everyone here." when we look at what is happening, ukraine not a part of nato, don't have nuclear capabilities. they are fighting back. they are pushing back. it makes russia look a lot weaker than we thought. >> certainly russia has not performed as well as they thought they would. they suffered problems from the very early goings on this war. command and control, unit cohesion. they invested a lot of money in advance capabilities. they did not invest a barely any time and trying to integrate those capabilities and actually use them effectively in the field of battle. we don't think that it is going to be easy for them to overcome those challenges going forward in this new phase in the south. i will tell you this, ainsley. we have to call it like we see it. they are certainly trying to learn from the mistakes they made in the north. ukrainians are mindful of that and watching that. you can see just for yourself what's going on in the donbas.
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ukrainians are fighting back skillfully and adapting to russia's adaptation of their own operational concepts and maneuver. >> steve: one of the other things that offend secretary said a couple of days ago was that as united states gives ukrainians more stuff, military stuff, they want to make sure that it does not fall into enemy hands. which kind of suggests, maybe we are not giving them the old stuff anymore. maybe we are giving them the first generation stuff. we don't want the russians to get one of the little ghost drones or something like that and reverse engineer it to figure out how to do it. are we giving them the new stuff? >> absolutely. they are getting top-of-the-line capabilities. it's not just from the united states. they're getting weapons and systems from more than 30 other nations. accountability is something we are mindful of pretty fair that secretary say that is what we talk of the crane is about that. they share our concerns. i don't want to see and of the systems end up in russian hands.
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they know that they have to be mindful of accountability going forward. the focus right now as you might imagine, she's helping them win this war. getting them to stop as fast as much as we can. that's happening is happening certainly today. it has been happening now for weeks. the president just find out another $8,100,000,000. it's already in ukraine. now the first class of ukrainian trainers on those howitzers are back in ukraine as well to train their teammates on this. this process is moving very, very expeditiously. the focus is getting it there so they can use it there. >> brian: admiral, we saw the vladimir putin video. he looked really say key. some speculated that he might be suffering from parkinson's. he might have counterpart that had a heart attack pretty looks shaky. what can you share with us about the intelligence of
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vladimir putin's mental and physical health? >> we are as they don't have a lot there, brian. we don't really know what their physical and mental well-being is. but i think what we're doing is we are assuming that from everything we are seeing that they still have command of their forces. they are still making these reckless dangers decisions in ukraine which we have since before the invasion began. we are mindful of that. our focus right now is making sure that the ukrainians can win. >> brian: i understand that he thinks he's winning. your intelligence according to "the new york times" as your intelligence -- our intelligence here in america says of vladimir putin feels as though he is winning. is that true? >> that could be because he could be but that is not getting an honest assessment from his commanders. nearly if you just look at what they have not been able to do and now six weeks or almost two months this war, it's clear that they have failed on the battlefield thus far.
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look, they're going to try to learn from the mistakes that they made. they made a lot of them. they are going to try to adapt and overcome those same challenges in the donbas and the south. they will have more numbers then ukrainians in shorter supply lines than they did in the north. as donbas region backspread up against russia. they will try to adapt and overcome those difficulties. at the same time. that is why we are here in germany. we want to ensure the ukrainians can adapt to now a smaller geographic area, a larger concentration of russian forces in that smaller area, and to revise operational concepts of air to ground and maneuver. armored maneuver. >> ainsley: thank you so much for joining us. >> my pleasure, ainsley. good to be with you guys. >> ainsley: let's give it over to carly. she has some headlines. >> big news at the border. republicans -- stop the biden administration from ending title 42 next month.
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meanwhile, a tragic discovery in the rio grande as crews find the body of a texas army national guardsmen in eagle pass. specialist bishop evans drowned while rescuing two illegal immigrants. johnny depp wrapping up his testimony and then defamation trial against his ex-wife with this wild audio recording. listen. >> and a fair fight. the jury -- tell them johnny depp -- i'm a victim, too -- >> also testifying yesterday, he says he saw no injuries on amber heard after the ex-couple got into a blowout argument in australia. she is expecting to take the stand to tell her side of the story in the coming weeks. a no-nonsense florida share promoting a gun safety course advising residents to be prepared to pull the trigger if confronted by home invaders.
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santa rosa county sheriff bob johnson joined us earlier to discuss his line of thinking. >> iran on the fact that i am a cop, not a politician. i will tell you right now, somebody breaks in your house and you shoot and kill them. the chances of them reoffending after that are zero. >> that recommendation coming after a resident fired multiple shots at a man accused of breaking into several different homes. in santa rosa county. the suspect was arrested and faces several felony charges. that sheriff does not take a soft on crime approach. >> ainsley: if they, in your house, shoot them. save the taxpayers a lot of money. >> brian: coming up on this tuesday, the actor is packing his bags and leave in california. he's going to join us live and tell us why he's saying goodbye to west coast and hello to music city.
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made-up family decision then after -- after so many decades and some great successes here in california and in movie and television business, we wanted to change. i am basically started looking at other states. you know, places where i might want to relocate. and i made a decision to relocate the family to nashville, tennessee. >> steve: okay, gary, a lot of people looking and say, okay, a no tax state. nashville is great. did you look at other states? i'm sure you look at texas. i'm sure you look at florida. ultimately, why did you decide on nashville? >> i look at all those no tax states. i looked at every single one of them. but i have a lot of friends in the entertainment industry in
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the nashville area. i have a band. i've been playing for, you know, over 20 years. many, many friends in the country music business and filmmaker friends. there's all kinds of production going on in the nashville area. it is a great no tax state as you mention. it will be good for the foundation. the gray sinise foundation. we've been here. we lost 11 years ago in california. it has been great. always looking this something new. tennessee has plopped there right in the countries around about seven different states. he had military bases and veterans in the area. a lot of those places i played and have been to. i think it will be a great place for us and it will be centrally located for me. easier to get to the west coast. easier to get to the east coast to try to continue the mission to serve and honor the men and women who continue to serve and
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honor our country. >> ainsley: it with forrest gump and your music career and everything you do with your foundation and your veterans. what percentage of your foundation is able to move to nashville? what was the reaction of your staff? >> well, yeah, we have several -- several people are actually making the move without spirit there where a certain number of people that didn't want to make the move from california. they have left. most of the folks are out of california now and operating in the new space in the nashville area. we have had to repopulate the staff with a group of -- a great group of new people. so we are rebuilding. we've got a great new ceo. we've got a great leadership team. every one of our directors is repopulating the staff's. we are in renovation right now and nashville. we just this past week started
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dismantling the offices here. we've got 19,500 square feet. artifacts that have been collected over the years from the military. i have been doing this for several years. we have a lot of things to back up. a lot of things to transport. we are under way. everything moving right now. >> brian: 11,000 pieces of a essential equipment that you have given out. 640,000 different meals to nations defenders from law enforcement to military. and that is just going to continue. and i believe you are also moving the "forest comp" bridge? >> there is an exhibit space in our offices that we build that tells the story. i wrote a book a few years ago. you remember, brian, grateful american would still sort of the story of going from focusing on acting to focusing on service
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work. we built this exhibit in the offices and part of the exhibit is the replica of the "forrest gump" bench. it is about 450 pounds. it is a big deal to move that. we are moving it. it's going to be part of the new space along with so many things that i've collected over the years from the military. i have been given wonderful gifts from members of the military and our first responders. it has been a lifelong mission. it's can it continue on the foundation is very strong right now. >> brian: tired of paying for hotels. at least we have some place stay now. >> steve: life is like a box of chocolates. you never know when you're going to wind up in nashville. >> ainsley: enjoy saving the money. >> thank you. i'm looking forward to it very much. >> ainsley: coming up to much of a new video shows a desperate attempt to save the life of "rush" cinematography.
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>> steve: elon musk vows to bring back free speech. it is one big user refusing to return. devin nunes on the challenge twitter still faces despite new leadership. at booking.com, finding perfect isn't rocket science. kitchen? sorted. hot tub, why not? and of course, puppy-friendly. we don't like to say perfect, but it's pretty perfect. booking.com, booking.yeah. when tired, achy feet make your whole body want to stop, it's dr. scholl's time. our insoles are designed with unique massaging gel waves, for all-day comfort and energy. find your relief in store or online. from prom dresses to workouts find your relief and new adventures you hope the more you give the less they'll miss. but even if your teen was vaccinated against meningitis in the past they may be missing vaccination for meningitis b. although uncommon,
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"rust" evidence being released on the "rust" film set shooting including vatican video and interrogation interview cherry new light on the tragic incidents. joining his latest on this investigation. >> the santa fe sheriff's office releasing more than a dozen videos of the aftermath of the october 21st shooting. they include body cam footage like this showing first responders arriving at the "rust" film set in new mexico desperately trying to save her life before she's rushed to the hospital. both were shot by baldwin during a scene similar to this one. the evidence release also includes video detectives interrogating baldwin for the hollywood star and executive producer of "rust" depending operations on that film set. listen. >> well, what is interesting, not to digress into some commentaries we've done is for two weeks and we did it the right way every day. the barrel clear, the turn and
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talk the gun. the gun goes off. it is supposed to be a cold gun. >> waldron told investigators he did not understand how a live round found its way on set and the film's armor visibly shaken as well while speaking with police. >> and your address. >> the address -- >> brian: police say they investigation into the movie set remains open. back to you. >> ainsley: thank you, todd. >> brian: sorry for accepting early. 25 minutes before at the top of the opera to twitter takeover deal threat to democracy. many conservatives are returning to social media platform. i don't feel that way about president trump is not. donald trump tells fox news he's not going on twitter but will use his own social media platform truth social. instead hoping musk would buy the company because he will "make improvements to it" and
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he's a good man. ceo former congressman from california devin nunes joins us now. congressman, i can still call you congressman. >> you can call me devon, brian. >> brian: your thoughts on twitter's new ownership? >> we are very excited about it, brian. i have to start with this. our watching you guys at the beginning of the hour. we are excited that you are on true they getting followers very quickly. you need to send some troops out if you want to get more followers. we open this thing wired up a couple of days ago on saturday. we moved over to the rambo cloud system. we cannot be canceled by any tech tyrants. also, brian, you are on truth. i got to talk to him. he's got to turn his phone on and let on the out purity has been let in or he may be about. we are trying to keep the bots off. they might be concerned about his legitimacy.
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>> brian: you do have to's -- you have to accept -- >> i will talk to president trump this to make sure. we may or may not want to mount. i will make sure. >> the president is not sending out truths yet. >> remember, we just opened up. we have been beta testing. we opened up with his new rambo cloud system so it cannot be canceled. that is the key. we built this in the matter of months. president trump had no choice because he had been booted off of all these social media platforms. we are already getting more engagement not only on twitter but also even instagram. that is really the key here is, you know, where are the eyeballs? the real competition here is instagram and tiktok and even facebook. we already do what twitter does. what we're trying to do now, we have really good video and really good photos. we are trying to be also like instagram. we are trying to take the best
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of these and put it all in one place. the president has no reason to go back to twitter. why would we want to be reliant on anyone? we are excited that elon musk is on this. president trump has sat over a year without having any access to social media. he was forced to build this company. i left congress that would be going to take on these tech tyrants. thankfully, elon is done when he is done. he's probably got a long way to go. we are all for it. yesterday was one of the greatest days for this country for free speech. we're just happy right now. it is amazing. we are number one in the app store right now. you can go there and download it and get right on. over the course of the next month, we are going to be opening up so you can access it from any device anywhere. >> brian: do you also think the president should not join twitter? >> the point is we don't want to
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be in a situation where we are ever going to be canceled again. we have no need to, brian. if you look, there's just not the engagements just not there. that place is a ghost town. there's a lot of bots. elon musk is said that anyway. when you post on truth today, you get more engagement. it is across the board. it is not just the engagement difference between twitter. we also have several great people that are on that actually get more engagement than even instagram. i think that is telling. so we are building something here. it's amazing. we are building a community. we are trying to do something that has not been done. an open community with no censorship except for peter doocy. >> congressman, and looking, i just signed on. and it says, i have been created successfully. due to massive demand, we placed you on a waiting list. i'm 621,000 still.
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>> that is because we are not letting you on. we are not going to let you on. we are nervous about you. we think -- we're just not sure if you are a bot yet. we are going to accept him. but there is already -- we are trying to keep the fake people off. is actually a steve doocy on. we are pretty sure it's not you. we're trying to make sure whoever it is is the real person. >> ainsley: my handle is going to be @realstevedoocy. >> brian: he's not going on twitter, but he has his truth social but he is not putting out any truths. will soon. >> it's coming soon. devin nunes, thanks so much. i appreciate it. now the ceo. the critical -- up for grabs in
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the midterms. the republicans faced off on the debate stage last night. they have one goal. keeping this seat read. hear from one of them. dave mccormick next. allergies don't have to be scary. spraying flonase daily stops your body from overreacting to allergens all season long. psst! psst! flonase all good. at adp, we use data-driven insights to design solutions to help you manage payroll, benefits, and hr today, so you can have more success tomorrow. ♪ one thing leads to another, yeah, yeah ♪
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>> trumaine washington drunk with power. with the believe that they can my cruel rule with everything. you're saying the men expectations. they have not been for not spending. what's happened over the last 18 months under joe biden is unprecedented in american history. we've got to pull back on the spending. >> steve: it is one of the most critical senate races in the country. the leading republican opals whether pennsylvania u.s. senate seat are dr. oz and david
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mccormick taken a stage in affairs debate together. the other people running for that job. dave mccormick joins us live from pennsylvania. how did it go last night? >> i think it went well. we've got about 21 days to election day. voters are focusing. last night was a real opportunity for us to show contrast. i talked to the voters about myself as a battle-tested guy. i grew up in pennsylvania and work in the summers bailey hale and trimming christmas trees. i went to west point and served in the 82nd airborne division. i went to iraq and we came back to pennsylvania and ran a company that created 600 jobs to pennsylvania. that is the track record that i bring to this opportunity and the stakes are so high. i try to contrast that with my primary opponent. an tv doctor, and tv personality for the last 20 years.
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in that capacity has spoken out on a whole range of issues where he has taken liberal positions, pro-choice, antigun, anti-fracking, pro-obamacare, pro-gender transitions. last night was an opportunity for me -- you know, the problem is there is no miracle cure for flip-flopping. that was the nature of the conversation. i think it was a good revealing opportunity for the voters of pennsylvania. >> steve: you mentioned west point and you attended there. before the debate, i think there were 50 west point grads. signed the letter. in the last week, mike pompeo actually traveled and rallied with you. mike pompeo i said to adjust your year gizmo there. about the big one was, the big endorsement i'm sure you wanted as well was donald trump.
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last week, he enjoys them. are you surprised at that? >> you are right. i've had great endorsements from everybody from mike pompeo to ted cruz to mike huckabee. many of my west point friends who we all took to -- took the oath and pledge duty, honor, country. proud to have that. i was a little surprised by president trump's endorsement. he is very popular in pennsylvania. the problem is, he's not popular in pennsylvania for the reasons i said before. people see him as a phony and not someone who represents pennsylvania values. only lived in pennsylvania for four years while he was a graduate student. that case he has to make is that all the positions he's taken all the ones he really believes and he has had this transformation as he is but, senate candidate. that case i have to make is listen, those experiences that i
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have had as a veteran, as a business leader, and someone who has grown up and been very connected to my family farm that i can take those experiences and really convert them to change in washington. everyone i talk to want someone who's going to fight for america first agenda for energy dominance for pro-growth economic policies and the regulation. and for a secure border. those are the three issues i hear over and over again. i'm making my case everywhere i go that we need to return to the america first agenda that president trump and in place. i have a lot of confidence that he was taken in the country in the right direction in terms of taking those policies and i'm the guy who's going to go to washington to make a difference. winning this race is on the objective. winning this race and making big change happen in washington, that is the objective. this is the opportunity for all the candidates to make that pitch to the voters as we go down the home stretch year. >> steve: david mccormick, we thank you very much for a
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very late last night. >> great, thank you. >> steve: good luck to you. it's 10 minutes before the top of the hour. joining us with a live fox cast found the streets of new york city. >> a little chilly in new york went across the northeast as well. let's take a look at the temperatures, and low temperatures. north dakota. 19 degrees, i know it's almost may. below freezing temperatures. when is a going to change? we are going to see that sam called air kind of in place while the rest of the work week. her temperatures 62 in new york. 50 in chicago. 84 beautiful degrees in miami. 76 in dallas. there is your forecast. we have a cold front that's gonna sweep across the east coast. that's going to bring some showers and thunderstorms down toward the mid-atlantic. back into texas. keep that in mind.
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foxweather.com. i know you've got that downloaded, steve doocy. >> steve: right here. >> we accepted you. >> steve: thank you very much. i am not a bot. meanwhile, let's go up a couple of floors to check in with bill hemmer and a preview of coming attraction. >> elon musk about twitter in 12 days. the world is still spending. imagine that. thank you for that. the president says he still has a story to tell for midterms. karl rove will address that. we've got kellyanne conway coming up momentarily. there is new video of alec baldwin from the dead directors cameramen. you can see that coming up. seth dillon from the babylon bee is here. it's going to be a fun show. it's going to be a fun show. >> yes, yes, sir. >> back to you guys downstairs. >> tell her eye said hello. billionaire businessman is traveling across the country in
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search of the next billion-dollar idea. look. >> when i use a strainer, i'm going to dump it all out. invariably, there is something left in the strainer. what do i do? hitting it against the garbage can. i go back to the sink and i wanted out. it's not going back down the drain. >> can i give you the honest to try yourself? >> in the middle. it is stripping a little bit. >> give it a tab there. >> if i were to guess if i turn this thing over i will see a bunch. >> we will see. >> ainsley: one lucky entrepreneur will win $1 billion. joining us now, hey, you are the perfect person to host this show. it is called "billion-dollar idea per tell us about the show. >> it is my search for the next big idea. more importantly, the entrepreneur behind the idea. it's important as the idea itself. i go to 15 cities.
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i see 15 different entrepreneurs and literally knock on their door. they meet me for the first time and invite me into their basement to show me their idea. i get to know the idea in the entrepreneur. i get to know the family. that support system comes with you on this journey. we narrow it down in six of those entrepreneurs get to come to my basement in new jersey which is this underground speakeasy which is an ideal lab that sits under my entrepreneurial journey which is the zero sugar ust organic alcohol which is being worn right above the basement. i'm taking my own advice and that business as well. >> ainsley: you sold your business. they bought it for $1.7 billion back in 2017. the drinks we see all over the store. the basement in new jersey. you wrote the book called -- what is that? >> the basement plays a very important role my whole life. if they sell, i make some money.
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if they don't, i don't make money for their plenty of times i went up to the atm machine to kind of hope that 20 bucks came out with it along this journey. basements have always been a starting point for me. it is about being scrappy, motivated, tenacious, humble beginnings, no distractions, right? the noises just to have been for a moment. get tampered to a vision that a lot of people don't see that time. the entrepreneur's job is to make that vision come to life and to convince other people to see it and do things that they normally wouldn't do in order to make it. >> ainsley: the top six contenders out of the 15 that you have chosen are going to come to your new jersey basement and you're going to help them invent their product and make it better. the winner at the end of the show you're going to invest money. >> they are coming to compete. the challenge is based off of different base mentalities. i'm measuring their mind-set. quite frankly, that journey they are about to go on, nobody really cares about their product. there is a point in time where you are pivoting all the way to
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hopefully a point where your product can meet up with the consumer. these brands including everyone that i have created are perfectly imperfect. they don't come out perfect. they are like babies. they come out upset. you've got to teach them how to crawl, walk, and run. that's what i'm trying to gauge. who is entrepreneur that can take an idea to a billion-dollar idea in a period of time where you're not going to get the support from the consumer or the retailer or the distributor. >> we saw a clip of the show. that is the drain where all those products i guess you dump it in the trash can end it all comes out and you don't have to worry about it coming down the sink. what are some other products we are going to see? >> they do have a better version of a mousetrap. the question is, does the strainer need to be reinvented. that is what we need to find out. there are other really interesting ideas. some of them are no more than ideas. some of them have started their journey and they are a little bit more about business. they all kind of are headed in
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the same direction you're going to have all the challenges that i think you have seen before or maybe i can help them kind of repair. >> ainsley: i can't wait to watch it. it's gonna be on fox business network tonight at 9:00 p.m. more "fox & friends" just moments away. let's go on the open road with a safe stay! now get double best western rewards points on every stay. and with rewards points that never expire, you get free nights fast! book now at bestwestern.com. so what's going on? i'm a talking dog. the other issue. oh... i'm scratching like crazy. you've got some allergic itch with skin inflammation. apoquel can work on that itch in as little as 4 hours, whether it's a new or chronic problem. and apoquel's treated over 10 million dogs. nice. and...the talking dog thing? is it bothering you? no... itching like a dog is bothering me. until dogs can speak for themselves,
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you have to. when allergic itch is a problem, ask for apoquel. apoquel is for the control of itch associated with allergic dermatitis and the control of atopic dermatitis in dogs. do not use apoquel in dogs less than 12 months old or those with serious infections. apoquel may increase the chances of developing serious infections and may cause existing parasitic infestations or pre-existing cancers to worsen. new neoplasias were observed in clinical studies and post-approval. most common side effects are vomiting and diarrhea. feeling better? i'm speechless. thanks for the apoquel. ahh, that's what friends are for. ask your veterinarian for apoquel. next to you, apoquel is a dog's best friend.
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texas. sally doocy, this is your 8:00 a.m. central time wake-up call. time to get up and go to work. >> that's texas. good to know. i think in a short time we'll have as many illegal immigrants coming into texas as dallas. >> have a great day. see you tomorrow, everyone. >> bill: thanks, guys, good morning. the deal is done. elon musk set to buy twitter for $44 billion and big changes are on the way and we will see that bill. i'm bill hemmer,. >> dana: i'm dana perino. this is "america's newsroom." tweet the new boss. what would you buy and fix if you could? >> bill: i got two hours to think about it. that's not a dodge. i just want to have a good answer. >> dana: i have an answer. >> bill: go. >> dana: i'll wait until you do it. everybody is talking about it. musk calls twitter the
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