Skip to main content

tv   Outnumbered  FOX News  May 16, 2022 9:00am-10:00am PDT

9:00 am
you just got the news. your proud, but it's hard. just yesterday i stood at the united states capitol for the national police officer memorial service to pay tribute to hundreds of fallen heroes. i was joined by the president of the fraternal order of police, who is here today. i don't know where patrick is, but i know he's here today. thank you for yesterday and thank you for today. we pay tribute to all law enforcement officers and their families who understand what it takes, what's at risk, to save and protect all of us. that includes paying tribute to the buffalo police officer, aaron slater, who gave his life trying to save others when a gunman shot and killed ten innocent people in the grocery store in buffalo on saturday. he was actually able to shoot
9:01 am
the assailant twice, he had on a bullet proof vest and he lost his life in the process. no one understands more than all of you here today the pain and anguish those families in buffalo feel. when it happens, at least in my experience, it feels like you're pulled into a black hole inside your chest, and everything -- everything. you can't. it's hard. but you know you are part of a special community, because the firefighters and police officers will always be there for you. i know it's a small consolation, but they will always be there for you. and your family and children and grandchildren and the whole family. to talk about law enforcement being a family, and firefighters being a family, it's a real. just like being a military family, it's unbreakable.
9:02 am
there is a headstone in a cemetery in ireland that reads, "death leaves a heartache no one can heal. love leaves a memory that no one can steal." families of the fallen, no one can ever steal the memory of your loved one. i hope the day will come when the memory of your lost dad, son, husband, brings a smile before it brings a tear to your eye. i promise you, it'll come. my prayer is that it'll come sooner than later. you know... i want to say a special thanks to you all for being here, because i know it's hard.
9:03 am
understand all the people in this room, they understand the sacrifices. not only that your spouse made, that your son made, but that you make every day. and all the families that are here. like i said, when that alarm goes off and the bell sounds, you wish them well, but you know, and you worry. thank you for all you do. i'd like to conclude with this. there is an incredible group of 15 heroes. i know you don't do this work for recognition, the best part is who we are as americans, these medals are in profound gratitude from our nation. it's the highest medal that can be honored. god bless you all. may god protect our firefighters
9:04 am
and law enforcement officers and their families everywhere. it is my honor now to award these medals and to read the citations. thank you. [applause] >> assistant chief ryan sprunger. of the east wayne ohio fire department district, was off duty when he responded to a call about several individuals who fell into a frozen pond. without any thermal protection and equipped with nothing but a throw rope, assistant chief sprunger jumped into the water to rescue the victims, a
9:05 am
grandfather and his two grandchildren. he pulled the grandfather and one child out and medics arrived for the second child, demonstrating extraordinary courage to save lives. [applause] officers ryan smith, vincent mendoza, and robert paul. officers ryan smith, vincent mendoza, and robert paul the third of the california highway patrol were caught in a gunfight with a violent assailant who had
9:06 am
shot and killed their colleague in an unprovoked attack during a traffic stop. the officers went to incredible lengths to protect each other, even as officer smith and officer paul each sustained multiple gunshot wounds to their legs. officer mendoza engaged the suspects of his wounded colleagues could evacuate safely. all three of them demonstrated bravery and composure while enduring a deadly rampage. [applause]
9:07 am
[applause] firefighter abraham " " aid" "
9:08 am
miller. firefighter abraham miller of the new york city fire department rappelled down the roof of the burning residential building without a solid anchor for his rope to rescue a 5-year-old girl being held out a window by her grandmother. firefighter miller smashed the glass, reached through heavy smoke, and save the little girl as they were lowered six lawyers to safety, demonstrating brave and decisive action to save lives. [applause]
9:09 am
[applause] >> emily: that was president biden honoring public safety officers who have shown incredible bravery and committed to service with the middle of valor in the east room of the white house. 15 total, nine police officers and six firefighters. it includes two police officers who died in the line of duty. meanwhile, president biden will visit buffalo, new york, tomorrow after saturday saw the worst shooting in the city's history. the fbi is now investigating the tragic mass shooting as a racially motivated hate crime. this is "outnumbered." hello, everyone. i'm emily compagno here with my cohost, kayleigh mcenany, and also joining us today are julie banderas, kennedy, and pete hegseth. the 18-year-old suspect he reportedly discards himself as a white supremacist has been
9:10 am
charged with one count of murder after he allegedly opened fire at a grocery store, killing ten. he remains in custody without bail and is set to return to court later this week when he will likely face more charges. among the victims, pillars of the local community. a deacon, local food pantry chef, the mother of the city's former fire commissioner, and he retired buffalo police officer. salter jr., who retired from the police force and was serving as a security officer for the grocery store, is being hailed a hero after sacrificing his life to try to stop the advances. they commended salter's bravery. watch. >> one of the individuals inside the story was a beloved security guard who is a retired buffalo police officer, a hero in our eyes. engaged with the suspect, shot the suspect, but because we have iron plating on, that bullet had no rounds. the suspect engaged a retired officer and he was ultimately shot and deceased at the scene.
9:11 am
>> emily: a true hero. >> kennedy: those are the kind people's names you have to remember. aaron salter jr. what an incredible person. we should all hope that if we are in peril, watching the firefighters and police officers get those incredible medals for their bravery, and you hope that someone like that shows up when you are in your hour of need. there is evil on this earth. there are evil, horrible people, and it's a terrifying time. with all that we've got going on, we have to find ways to come together, to respect life, and when i see this i think, engage in three acts of kindness today. just try and improve someone's day, because we have to have goodness in the face of this horrific evil and racism. i look at the list of people, the victims who were gunned down in cold blood because of their
9:12 am
race, and i thought about it -- if they were older americans, what they've been through, the scope of racism they've seen through their lives, and still holding onto the kind of optimism that frederick douglass had. some little turd bound for like this, it'll be met with something, maybe not in this moment, but ultimately it will. >> emily: that's right. and we hope for accountability, pete, in this lifetime. he recalls to me the trial of dylan rooff, he faced both federal and state charges and the first one in history to face charges on both. republican lawmakers have been asking to reinstate the death penalty specifically for this case but we hope we will see accountability for this absolutely tragic shooting. >> pete: you are of course right. i hate the fact that i even know dylann roof's name and i hope we
9:13 am
don't learn the name of this evil kid. not kid, 18-year-old who did this, who was confronted by good, by courage, by aaron salter jr. and others. that law enforcement officers save lives and that grocery store. so many were tragically taken at the hands of an evil racist. but he saved lives. watching that ceremony with joe biden in the white house, juxtaposing that alongside what happened in buffalo, it just gives you a staggering reminder of the risk that men and women take on behalf of us every single day. because you cannot eradicate evil. there are policies pursued, investigations that need to happen. who knew what and when, what warning signs were there, he was in a mental facility for a day and a half and threatened to shoot up his own graduation at his high school. so they were warning signs. we will get the who, what, and where, but ultimately when evil rears it head it takes people like aaron salter jr. and those whose names were read at the white house moments ago. >> emily: and the fbi are
9:14 am
conducting an investigation. they have executed search warrants including his digital footprint and profile. we learn more as it develops and the result comes through, the timeline and his footprints and more behind this absolutely tragic event. julie, when the president goes to buffalo, what can we expect to hear from him or probably the right question would be what should we hear from the president? >> julie: i would like to know why the laws currently in place here in new york failed these nine victims, because there are a red flag laws that were actually enacted in the state of new york, which gives the power to adjudge to determine whether someone suffers from a mental defect. that's what it's called. this kid was actually brought up in police circles, because he made a threat against his high school last june that he was going to create some sort of violent event. it wasn't necessarily shooting, but something violent was going
9:15 am
to occur by his hands at the graduation. they spoke with the family and him and they didn't continue to follow up on him. so he never got mental health analysis. whether he would have been deemed a red flag and actually been determined to be a mental defect by a judge, that was never seen because it never got that fire. these are the problems in the state where it these things could have been prevented. i wonder if the president will talk about the mental health state where he will go on the te whole gun-control rampage. because i think that's a lot of those on the left like to blame this on. really it is mental health and the loopholes that are preventable. this is a preventable act of horror. >> emily: kayleigh come at a minimum we hope to hear from the president honoring those victims, saying their names. >> julie: i correct myself. i said nine. >> emily: what can you tell us about those victims that were absolute pillars of the community? >> kayleigh: before i get there, i want to echo what he said. we've been through troubling statistics on the show about the
9:16 am
number of people who communicate their threats before hand or articulate specifically their intent. remember the michigan school shooter? he drew a picture before he did it. this young man communicated violent intent. >> julie: they were red flags. >> kayleigh: there are in every one of these cases. sometimes right before the atrocity transpires. the wall street editorial board called him another young man possessed by inexplicable hatred. that's exactly right. and these victims, beautiful men and women, amazing men and women. we talk about aaron salter jr., but also pearly young, described as a missionary. every saturday for 25 years went to central park and ran a food bank. also heyward patterson, he was helping someone load groceries in their car when he lost his life. he also get people discounted rights to the grocery store. he was a public servant. ruth whitfield, she had just visited your 88-year-old husband in a nursing home before she, at 86 years old, lost her life. and andre mackneil, he was there
9:17 am
buying a surprise birthday cake for his grandson. these are people, because of inexplicable hatred, and racism, went to the grocery store on a saturday afternoon doing ordinary things, like buying a cake for a grandson, and losing their life. beautiful people and we should member their names, not the name of the shooter. >> emily: part of what is so shocking, pete, when lives are just ripped from your family, when they are running to the store to get a cake, engaging in usual activities, all of the sudden families are shattered and absolutely gutted by this one senseless terrible act that took the lives of 10. >> pete: yeah, there's almost no way to explain that. he read the stories, and it sinks in even deeper. and we had david bellavia on over the weekend, he's from buffalo. he talked about how amazing response has been from the city of buffalo, people who went to pray in the name of jesus over
9:18 am
the families and the victims. at times like this, you can't explain it. why these people, why this moment, why this evil, why those labs still underway. there isn't a great answer for that. when you go there, what i hope we can avoid is the politics of this. it's a quick reflex inside our media often. instead, just to remember who these people were, throw the book at the guy who did it come and get an understanding that what was missed. without reflexes and easy political answers that don't fit the actual story. there's a story of what happened. a radicalization of racism. how did it happen, who knew about it, and what could have been done? steel in my family prayed for the victims. we will continue to do so. it's a horrible tragedy to watch the press conference, i believe it was saturday. there are their menu offered prayer for this community and that makes a difference. thank you to all of those who have been praying for those families who lost so much life. the biden administration is placing the blame game on the
9:19 am
infant formula crisis as parents across the nation struggle to feed their babies. transportation secretary pete buttigieg points the finger at the nation's largest baby for formula manufacture. he said it's the fed's job to 19 supply levels. speak of this has been ongoing for months. supply chain issues already, then the issue with this one plant. a whistle-blower in september, february the recall. it's made. why has it taken so long? speak of the administration acted from day one after the recall, but fundamentally we are here because a company was not able to guarantee that its plant was safe, and that plant has shut down. >> kayleigh: blame game, indeed. habit is pushing back after white house press secretary jen psaki accuse the company of killing two infants on friday. the company treating this: "the press secretary mistakenly said
9:20 am
that our formula was tainted and killed two infants. these are tragedies. the facts, however, are critical. an investigation by abbott, the fda, and cdc found no evidence that our formulas caused infant illness, specifically the cdc concluded its investigation with no findings of a link between our formulas and infant illnesses. we conduct microbiological testing on products prior to distribution and no abbott formula distributed to consumers tested positive for bacteria or salmonella." pete, i want you to listen to the sound bite, another from the press secretary who swore they'd been working on this for two months, but maybe it's a bit different. take a listen. >> we have to subject these companies to some scrutiny about the safety of this, and how if we got to a place where we have babies crying in our country because they are hungry and the shelves are bare, we have to fill them immediately. >> we have not waited to take
9:21 am
action. what we have done, since the day after the recall was announced, we actually took steps working with these producers. >> if you had taken a step sooner, before parents got to the shelves and couldn't find formula? >> i guess if we had been better mind readers, lee could have. >> kayleigh: that was triple, we got it from pelosi, as well. >> pete: number one rule of leadership, blaming other people doesn't make a problem any better. in this particular case, we showed three tweets. i think there were 11 of them laying out the case, that ultimately it wasn't necessarily definitively their problem. we don't know that for sure. whether it is or is not the case, when it comes off line, i believe it came off line in the facility for other reasons. if your job is to look at the supply chain and transportation and the needs, you need to look around the corner. it's not mind reading, it's just planning. and being willing to identify what additional options there are. elise stefanik sent a letter
9:22 am
about this to the fda in february. people saw this. it wasn't our job. i didn't know this plant had shut down. but if you are in leadership in government and the most vulnerable people, new mothers with kids, are relying on a specific formula and you know that, in light of the supply chain issue, that failure is on you. >> kayleigh: margaret brennan pointing out to pete buttigieg that they were whistle-blowers in september, so they knew this for a while. jen psaki told us there would be a website that could help parents. we know how well democrats do with websites -- see obamacare. this one didn't go so well. they said on hold for 72 minutes, apologetic, customer service are presented as testing resources on the new website for parents looking for baby formula not working. >> julie: first of all, i want to address the fact that, had they been better mind readers they could have started working on this sooner? they are blaming inflation. inflation didn't just happen. we've been dealing with this for months. he didn't have to actually mind-read.
9:23 am
you don't need a medium to tell you that we've got a shortage and a supply issue in the country. so obviously baby formula that comes in from other countries -- and leave it to pete buttigieg. they got their transportation secretary, who is now supposed to explain this all away, which is classic. why i think he's a good speaker and very intelligent, nobody can correct the wrongs of this administration. and now the white house releases a statement today basically saying that they are on it, they're going to work with all of these manufacturers to try and speeded up and figure out which parts of the country are at the lowest supply chain. why didn't they figure this out months ago so he wouldn't be here? because they were in good mind readers? well, i mean, neither am i, but i could have told you. steele and emily, going back to pelosi, we got to a specific place where we got babies crying in our country because they are hungry. you guys control everything. the white house, senate, the house. they control it. >> emily: that's right. i think the delay is inexcusable on behalf of the fda when, knowing that the entire market is, the lion's share, there are
9:24 am
three or four labs that make this. your point about the vulnerable population, then why did it take them for months to investigate with our tax dollars once they did get the whistle-blower information about that? and pelosi is not wrong, but it's just, why are we hearing this now? it's too little, too late. i know we will get into it a little bit, a woman who is donating her breast milk to help others, but a mother's milk bank -- remember, the president pointed new mom towards food banks and pantries to obtain any type of baby formula. well, in the donor shortage, they need more than 300 donors at any time just meet the needs of their local community, and there's a donor shortage because of everyone looking for formula. by the way, hundreds of women volunteered to donate today, it would still take months for the bank to meet the demands because of the ripple effect. there is no shortage. >> julie: they are still playing catch-up. >> kennedy: but don't worry, bette midler has the answer. >> kayleigh: tried breastfeeding, it's free and
9:25 am
available on demand. >> kennedy: and i'm a huge proponent, i think it's a wonderful and perfect thing that you can give your baby, but when you're infant is four months old and you haven't been breastfeeding, you can't just start breastfeeding. it's not like a spigot you can will into action. for some people it's too painful and for some people it just doesn't work. it's not the time to demonize moms and shame them into choices that are sometimes outside of their control. adoptive parents. there are plenty of reasons for people to choose to give their children formula. but in the united states of america, they should have access to that. they shouldn't have to be looking up online to see how they can diy their own infant formula, which can be very dangerous in and of itself. and if pete buttigieg is so worried about this oligopoly, why do we worry about that later? at the federal government out of the way, open up the manufacturing facility so they can start making products to help babies and families right now. the bigger the federal
9:26 am
government gets, the easy it is for people like pete buttigieg to hide behind one of the bureaucratic layers. one of the call-ons they have built to make government bigger, more intrusive, less effective, and make americans' lives worse, especially americans who are the most vulnerable and don't have any other nutritional alternatives. i would like to see urgency. don't piss off moms before an election. see when we are a long way from the tragedy of the delayed treadmill, and when biden saved christmas, pete. maybe don't laugh at inflation, especially larry get to the point where people don't have baby formula. >> pete: maybe that is the moment. the crime hitting which neighborhoods, people wake up and realize everyone else is living that reality. maybe when pete buttigieg can't get baby formula for his kid and they don't have the option of breastfeeding -- at least not scientifically, yet.
9:27 am
sorry. that'll be the moment when they say it's important for people. when they look at the polling, it shows that it is indeed inflation, issue number one for people as they drive by every gas station and see it at $5 a gallon. >> julie: we are going to cut to a fox news alert now and a live look at the southern border where a group apparently have at least 200 migrants have crossed the border illegally in eagle pass, texas. that's where this is happening. our crews on the ground saw migrants cross into private property and were also told that border patrol agents have just arrived. so we are monitoring the story as you can see from above the ground. obviously a lot of migrants there that they are dealing with, and in fact they do seem to outnumber the patrols on the ground. we'll watch this for you if any new information comes of it. we will bring it to you at home. steel and another day, another record. high gas prices. it seems every day we had a new record in the biden era. aaa says the nationwide gas average is not about $4.48 per
9:28 am
gallon, nearly $1.50 more than a year ago. while prices are rising, president biden's poll numbers are falling. a new nbc news poll puts his job approval rating at a paltry 39%. while 56% of americans now disapprove, that is a near 180 from about a year ago. instead of attacking the problems facing our country, the president chooses to go after what is called the ultra maga republicans. >> under my predecessor, the great maga king -- >> and what did the maga crowd want to do? >> i never expected the ultra maga republicans to have been able to control the republican party. >> this maga crowd is really the most extreme political organization that existed in american history. >> kayleigh: so, a lot of people are wondering the origin
9:29 am
of this ultra maga republicans phrase. jen psaki told us one thing and president biden again told us another. let's watch. watch. stick a question on messaging. who came up with this phrase "ultra maga?" why the need to kick it up a notch? maga wasn't enough? why now use this phrase? >> i will tell you, it's the president's phrase, and the president made those comments himself just last week, as you know. i think what has struck him is how extreme some of the policies and proposals are that a certain wing of the republican party, that is taking up too much of the republican party, are for. to him, adding a little "ultra" to it gave it a little extra pop. >> kayleigh: well, it was a "washington post" that told us the real story. they said it was the work of anita dunn and other advisors. it took a focus group to come up with "ultra maga republican." it wasn't biden who invented it. >> kennedy: and you could tell he was reading a prompter when
9:30 am
he was like, "it's those ultra maga republicans!" [laughter] it wasn't just something that given an extra corn pop, as it were. he did not admit that they are trying to do whatever they can to energize their base, which is growing incredibly depressed by the day. they are giving up on the president. republicans are giving up on the president. most importantly -- and these polls, whether it's ipsos arm on this or this nbc poll, and jen psaki is going to nbc. even that is familiar territory to democrats. they are polling that he doesn't have high marks paid when the house and senate are this close , you are in real trouble. so you can come up with all the shellacked phrases you want. when it's energizing the other side even more than the people you're trying to demonize, you've got some messaging problems in addition to your
9:31 am
inflation, immigration, economic problems that are growing by the day. >> kayleigh: they are. emily, axios reporting they are kicking into high gear in the white house. president biden telling white house aides to shift into campaign mode. people familiar with the conversations tell axios that even a small mistake, the president says, can be costly. very true. the bottom line, they say, biden counted on to tell axios he is at his best delivering political zingers when he actually believes them. i don't think he's at his best, because the maga phrase, that "lord of the rings" image we talked about. people are embracing the term. >> emily: exactly. i think it's having the polar opposite effect than they would like. what is so disheartening as an american, regardless of which party you are part of, is seeing this administration literally freak out over what strategy we are supposed to employ so that we can stay in power. all you have to do is actually exhibit some modicum of leadership. how about you actually stand up and decrease regulation, help
9:32 am
young mothers, actually address the problems that americans care about? which are everything that kennedy listed. inflation, the economy, the southern border we just had breaking news on. there are real crises affecting every single household in america. i would like to see just a bit of some actual solutions coming forth from this white house, and the six months they spent figuring out that term would have probably been better spent actually coming forth with actionable solutions for the american people to stop the suffering. >> kayleigh: pete, the talk a lot about president trump when it comes to these primaries in various states and who to endorse and not to endorse. let's focus on president biden and he succeeded press rightly pointing out that these are as much a referendum on president biden, and they point to week in pennsylvania. conor lamb, the moderate candidate, seems to be losing to the radical. he's not having a good showing in the primary, certainly not in the generals. >> pete: no, and donald trump is "the great maga king." if he had chosen and aching himself he probably would have chosen that one.
9:33 am
[laughter] you are trying to disparage someone but you actually component them, that's what they did. trump's support for candidates who have had no shot, vance would have lost, then it to to mehmet oz may win or not. i am baffled. they sat in the room probably like basson this and said, "how about we go with ultra maga?" >> kennedy: it sounds like a light beer. [laughter] >> pete: that's how bad they are. they are bad and they are obsessed trump. >> kayleigh: even "the washington post" pointed out, clinton tried "deplorable," which might be better than ultra maga, but they turned it around her and made t-shirts. >> julie: people are proud. >> kayleigh: of course he's going to embrace that. >> julie: "deplorables," his
9:34 am
followers loved it. they love these titles. he is doing trump a favor. rather than him constantly bring up the failures of the past president, why doesn't he focus on his own personal failures? between inflation and the border and gas prices and supply chain issues, the list goes on and on, and if he takes a look at the problems here in his own country, number one, his 39% approval rating which is only 5% higher than trump's lowest, which happen to be at the end of his presidency and at the height of the pandemic, here we are two years later and now the u.s. has surpassed 1 million covid u.s. deaths in our country. why isn't he focusing on that? 1 million u.s. deaths, but yeah, let's go at the former president. >> kayleigh: more deaths under president biden's watch than president trump's and you don't often hear about that. >> julie: and that was the cause for the low approval rating, by the way. he exited at 34% because of how the american public need is dealing with covid. now look where we are. >> kayleigh: great point. coming up, elon musk warns twitter users they are being
9:35 am
manipulated and gives step-by-step instructions on how you can fix your feed. more on that, next. ♪ ♪ ♪ baby got back by sir mix-a-lot ♪ unlimited cashback match... only from discover. first psoriasis, then psoriatic arthritis. even walking was tough. i had to do something. i started cosentyx®. cosentyx can help you move, look, and feel better... by treating the multiple symptoms of psoriatic arthritis. don't use if you're allergic to cosentyx. before starting...get checked for tuberculosis.
9:36 am
an increased risk of infections some serious... and the lowered ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor about an infection or symptoms... or if you've had a vaccine or plan to. tell your doctor if your crohn's disease symptoms... develop or worsen. serious allergic reactions may occur. watch me. ask your rheumatologist about cosentyx.
9:37 am
if your moderate to severe crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis symptoms are stopping you in your tracks... choose stelara® from the start... and move toward relief after the first dose... with injections every two months. stelara® may increase your risk of infections, some serious, and cancer. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you have an infection, flu-like symptoms, sores, new skin growths, have had cancer, or if you need a vaccine. pres, a rare, potentially fatal brain condition, may be possible. some serious allergic reactions and lung inflammation can occur. feel unstoppable. ask your doctor how lasting remission can start with stelara®. janssen can help you explore cost support options.
9:38 am
the more information i found, got me more curious. researching my family on ancestry has given me a purpose. we discovered that our family has been in new mexico for hundreds of years. it showed how much my family was really rooted in campbell county. it was really finding gold. the best part is feeling like i really have roots. don't be afraid to open the door, there's so much information on the other side. veteran homeowners, need cash? at newday you can borrow up to don't be afraid to open the door, 100% of your home's value and get up to $60,000 or more. we called and got $96,602. that's more than ever. we called and we got $62,810. home values are soaring. now is the best time in history to turn your home equity into cash. we called and we got $68,201. we called and we got $58,800.
9:39 am
use it to improve your home or save for retirement. i called and got $60,300. take ten minutes and call newday usa. ♪ ♪ >> julie: elon musk's $44 billion twitter deal may be temporarily on hold but that's not keeping them from speaking his mind. the billionaire ceo took to the platform to warn users that they are being manipulated. he also offered a step-by-step solution to the problem, tweeting this. "one, tap the home button. two, tap the stars on the upper right of screen. three, select latest tweets. you are being manipulated by the algorithm in ways you don't realize. easy to switch back and forth to see the difference." i love how elon musk is the one
9:40 am
that has to paint this out for us. he doesn't even work with twitter yet, and yet twitter has never taught us this. why? obviously they don't want us to do that because they have been silencing the right since the president was elected into office. you were talking about how we all took such a hit on twitter and it wasn't the election which a lot of us thought. it was because of twitter. >> kayleigh: and the algorithm magically -- they announce he had not has operational control, but he's buying twitter. it's amazing. it's interesting to watch the watch the step by step. i couldn't see the time-stamp, i was trying to do, but i feel like he was watching "outnumbered" because tammy bruce gave the same step by step instructions. i think part of it was on air. when it comes to unmanipulating your twitter feed. he said that as many 90% of users could be sake bots pay think of all the haiti senior feed, the disgusting things that lead to so many repercussions on social media. maybe 90% of them are bots.
9:41 am
that's scary. >> julie: it is. did you suffer the same thing during the twitter meltdown after the election? did you notice that everyone kind of unfollowed us in a mass exodus? it was crazy. >> kennedy: i was down to negative 47,000 followers. [laughter] i don't know how this works! but you can tell they are bots. >> julie: those are just close personal friends. [laughter] >> kennedy: a bot never has a picture and it's always like "carl 674-9132, zero followers, following one." and he's always like, "even mtv has-ben!" i'm like, okay, carl. thanks for stating the obvious. that's it they are trying to figure out. they said the only sampled a hundred accounts and that less than 5% of them are bots that it could be as high as 90%. obviously there's quite a gap they have to figure out. if it is that high, get them off the platform. that's what he's going to figure
9:42 am
out. we have to at least engage in more honest discussions. >> julie: as far as his honesty, i love elon musk's honesty. his comments about netflix were entertaining for me. every time he tweets, actually, i am entertained by it. he basically praised netflix and their message to woke employees, basically just tweeting, "good move by netflix." so basically the whole thing is that its employees were lazy, woke, and that, yo, if you don't want to do your job, get the heck out. >> pete: if you don't like our content or you can't handle it, you can work somewhere else. do not have to subscribe if you don't want to watch it. if you don't believe in free speech on both sides of the isles, you can work somewhere else other than twitter. how often can you watch a billionaire live tweet his purchase? by the way, i think he is showing that it's not anywhere near worth what he originally bid, if 90% of it are potentially bots. even with my name on twitter, i
9:43 am
think there are six sake pete hegseth accounts. >> julie: are there? >> kennedy: i just started another one this morning prayer [laughter] >> pete: i don't know it's gone on or what people are saying but i know there's no we need the amount of people. if you had an authentic place we could actually verify that there were other people and real conversations, that's really very variable. >> julie: i want to put this up and get your reaction. twitter legal called to complain that i violated their nda by revealing the bot check sample sizes 100." this actually happened. >> emily: he twitter hates them because he's giving us all they do it, i love it. its offering choice. you can choose what to watch and not to subscribe. twitter is the opposite. they have removed choice with a default setting, and every time someone blames an algorithm,
9:44 am
they are providing themselves a buffer that isn't really accurate because they are humans, that say he violated the nda. i feel like him purchasing it is -- was to what is it? wrestling with pigs or whatever? i'm sure they are all over him. and that's the daily. i can't imagine what this deal is actually like on a day-to-day basis. >> julie: i would love to be behind the scenes of this but i love watching it unfold on public twitter. coming up for the first time in over 50 years, congress is about to hold a public hearing on the ufos. they've got that kind of time. she's excited, emily. she loves aliens. but we'll finally get answers on sightings, with the government now calls unidentified aerial phenomena. that's next. ♪ ♪
9:45 am
this is remington. he's a member of the family, for sure. we always fed him kibble it just seemed like the thing to do. but he was getting picky, and we started noticing some allergy symptoms. we heard about the farmer's dog and it was a complete transformation. his allergies were going away and he just had amazing energy. it's a no-brainer that remi should have the best nutritious and delicious food possible. i'm investing in my dog's health and happiness. ♪♪ get started at longlivedogs.com 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 matching your job description. visit indeed.com/hire ♪ ♪ m make way for the first-ever. chevy silverado zr2. with multimatic shocks, rugged 33-inch tires, and front and rear electronic locking differentials.
9:46 am
dude, this is awesome... but we should get back to work. ♪ ♪ this good? perfect. if you're gonna work remote... work remote. find new workspaces. find new roads. chevrolet. i brought in ensure max protein, with thirty grams of protein. those who tried me felt more energy in just two weeks! (sighs wearily) here i'll take that! (excited yell) woo-hoo! ensure max protein. with thirty grams of protein, one gram of sugar, and nutrients to support immune health. you know liberty mutual customizes your car insurance, so you only pay for what you need? oh, like how i customized this scarf? wow, first time? check out this backpack i made for marco. oh yeah? well, check out this tux. oh, nice. that'll go perfect with these. dude... those are so fire. [whines] only pay for what you need.
9:47 am
♪liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty.♪ it's a thirteen-hour flight, that's not a weekend trip. only pay for what you need. fifteen minutes until we board. oh yeah, we gotta take off. you downloaded the td ameritrade mobile app so you can quickly check the markets? yeah, actually i'm taking one last look at my dashboard before we board. excellent. and you have thinkorswim mobile- -so i can finish analyzing the risk on this position. you two are all set. have a great flight. thanks. we'll see ya. ah, they're getting so smart.
9:48 am
choose the app that fits your investing style. ♪♪ >> john: the gunman in the horrific buffalo shooting hit obvious red flags, so i didn't new york state use the red flag law to stop him from having weapons? we talk to the erie county sheriff and jonathan turley about that. who dropped the ball on the baby formula crisis? congressman kathy mcmorris rodgers will be here, and if you
9:49 am
don't like the price of gasoline now, just wait. charles payne on inflation nation coming up. i'm john roberts. senator is off today. jacqui heinrich joins me for "america reports." ♪ ♪ >> emily: we may finally be getting some answers from congress on ufos. tomorrow a house panel will hold a public hearing on what the pentagon now calls "unidentified aerial phenomenon." it'll be the first such hearing on capitol hill in more than 50 years and it comes nearly a year after a report requested by lawmakers reviewed 144 sightings of aircraft or other devices from 2004-2021. aircraft or whatever they wear that appeared to be moving at incredible speeds or trajectories. pete, obviously defense officials have come out and said these are likely just develop technologies from other countries. however, they have not ruled out
9:50 am
other >> pete: and mostly going to do for my time back to you. [laughter] i am yet to see a high resolution photo of a so-called ufo. it's 2022 and everything is grainy. can i get one high-resolution? >> kennedy: they have been high-resolution photos! >> pete: show me one. >> kennedy: they published one about ten days ago. it was an accidental photograph that wasn't there, like, three frames before. but it is very high resolution. but there are a lot of consistent reports from people like navy pilots. i thought you supported your friends in the military! >> pete: you thought wrong! [laughter] >> kennedy: they have logical scientific training and have looked at these things and realized that this isn't technology we have or that we know about. when you have officials come out
9:51 am
and say, "this might be one of our adversaries and their technology," they are lying. it's impossible. from what we have, they have tried to reverse engineer it but they can't explain away radiation burns on people who get close to found objects. and all of that has been part of the official government reporting. harry reid tried to silence all of this. while at the same time creating the commission to look into it, because he was from the data and he knew. he knew! >> pete: you are looking at me and my skeptical face. [laughter] >> julie: the camera cut to it in the close-up! >> emily: but is not just kennedy and i that for me to believe. many navy pilots but also nasa astronauts. i'm paraphrasing one of them but he said they tried to contact us all the time. >> julie: i'm sorry, but i'm skeptical. i've also seen blurry pictures of bigfoot. >> emily: who also exists! >> julie: yep, uh-huh
9:52 am
chemistry does... i agree there is scientific evidence that liens to what it is. they don't know exactly what it is, but they don't know for sure that there are ufos or human life on other planets. i don't know. i'm not there yet. but i see where you guys are coming from. i'm just not there. >> emily: i feel like you have to listen to that one joe rogan podcast because then you will be there. you have to hear more and learn more stories. >> kennedy: a physics professor at harvard has been researching and augmenting this for years. >> julie: and the radiation thing you mentioned, that is interesting. i will do more reading. >> kayleigh: i will point out that there is bipartisan support that the pentagon isn't doing enough about. kirsten gillibrand says they need to take this issue more seriously. rubio is apparently frustrated with the dod because they are laughing it off like we do pay but it's a really serious issue when, as one congressman pointed out, we don't have control over our own airspace. >> emily: way to bring it home, kayleigh! now i'm terrified. more "outnumbered" in just a
9:53 am
moment. >> kennedy: laugh now, pete! [laughter] ♪ ♪ if you own a home and need cash, call newday usa. why? home values are at all-time highs. use your va benefit now to turn the equity in your home into cash in your hand. newday lets you borrow all of your home's value. you could take out an average of $60,000. that's at least 25% more cash than you get at a bank or credit union. more cash to pay credit card debt or cash to have on hand, so it's there when you need it. since newday's been granted automatic authority by the va, the process is fast and easy and newday can say yes when other lenders say no. call today. out here, you're more than just a landowner.
9:54 am
you're a gardener. a landscaper. a hunter. because you didn't settle for ordinary. same goes for your equipment. versatile, powerful, durable kubota equipment. more goes into it. so you get more out of it.
9:55 am
hi, i'm william devane. did you know there's only been two times in american history - two - when the national debt was larger than gross domestic product? world war ii - and right now. that's a deep hole. and i don't know how we'll climb out of it. that's why i buy gold from rosland capital. rosland capital is a trusted leader in helping people acquire precious metals. gold bullion, lady liberty gold and silver proofs, and premium coins, can help you preserve your wealth. call rosland capital to receive your
9:56 am
free rosland guide to gold, gold & precious metals ira, and silver brochure. with rosland, there are no gimmicks, no hassles... and they have fast, reliable shipping. ask yourself. are you safe? make gold your new standard. call rosland capital today at 800-630-8900, 800-630-8900. that's 800-630-8900. ubrelvy helps u fight migraine attacks. u put it all on the line. u do it all. so u bring ubrelvy. it can quickly stop migraine in its tracks within 2 hours... without worrying if it's too late or where you are. unlike older medicines, ubrelvy is a pill that directly blocks a protein believed to be a cause of migraine. do not take with strong cyp3a4 inhibitors. most common side effects were nausea and tiredness. migraine pain relief starts with u. learn how abbvie can help you save. ask about ubrelvy, the anytime, anywhere migraine medicine. ♪ ♪ ♪i'm so defensive,♪
9:57 am
♪i got bongos thumping in my chest♪ ♪and something tells me they don't beat me♪ ♪ ♪ ♪he'd better not take the ring from me.♪ ♪♪♪ >> airbnb is offering a chance to vacation like royalty. the home rental company is introducing a new option to rent castles in the latest site makeover. thousands of options all over the world, ireland, u.k. and even right here in the states, which might be like san simeon, the hearst castle. >> it's creepy, it's like there are spirits and oddities, and
9:58 am
pete wouldn't believe in any of it. and all of a sudden he's levitateing. >> i was in a castle in ireland, and the proprietor left. and i was terrified. >> did you know it was haunted before you rernted it? >> yes. >> and also three houses on here who is going to go on airbnb and stay in a tree house. >> i would rather have a place with room service. airbnb, don't you have to clean it yourself? >> some are like glamping. >> like the ewok, swiss family robinson. >> i wanted to live in a tree. >> that's when you knew you wanted to be in the army. >> bingo.
9:59 am
>> i want to take it to a castle and let them loose. >> chainmail and -- >> does it have a mote? >> before we go, wupt we want to talk to you for pete's new book, next month, "battle for the american mind." >> all of you have a book except kayleigh, she reviewed it. if you look at the lunacy in the classrooms, you have to understand the depth of the problem, it's not one school district or teachers' unions or the 1960s, it was set over 100 years ago and inch by inch how we steal the mind and replace it with indoctrination. and once you understand that,
10:00 am
yes, fighting back to school boards is good but more we need to do. three chapters on a solution what parents and grandparents can do to save the most precious thing we have. >> be involved in the kids, no important issue. >> comes out in a month, you can preorder now. >> i have already gotten six. >> incredible. thank you to everyone, and here is "america reports." >> thank you, emily, and fox news alert to kick off "america reports" on this monday, officials looking for clues and missed warning signs after a horrifying weekend of carnage with deadly mass shootings at a supermarket in buffalo and church in california, along with other incidents in wisconsin and texas. hello, john roberts. hello to jacqui. >> jacqui: i'm jacqui heinrich in for sandra smith. on saturday, a gunman opened fire in buffalo, new york. killing te

232 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on