tv Outnumbered FOX News June 7, 2022 9:00am-10:00am PDT
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don't be afraid to open the door, there's so much information on the other side. ♪ ♪ >> this is outnumbered. i am emily compagno with my cohosts kayleigh mcenany and harris faulkner and also joining us morgan ortagus and brian brenberg. voters into the nation nations most liberal cities are poised to send stinging message on soft on crime policies that may have far-reaching implications for democrats and president.
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in california voters are deciding whether to recall san francisco's far left district attorney and his counterpart in los angeles, george gascon who could face a recall himself is now defending the shockingly light sentence levied here. a hit-and-run driver admitted to mowing down her mother and her infant. he just got five months probation at a juvenile detention camp. meantime there has been yet another random attack on the new york city subways. video capturing this horrifying moment as a man violently pushed a woman onto the tracks in broad daylight. thankfully no train was approaching and bystanders got the woman back on the platform. is he generic to these democratic mayor eric adams is finally reading the political tea leaves as he lashed out at a criminal justice system yesterday that keeps putting dangerous criminals back on the streets. watch.
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>> courts have to prosecute. judges have to make sure they stay in. everyone has to do their part. if not, they go out and come back, they do another shooting. these bad guys no longer take them seriously. they believe our criminal justice system is a laughingstock. we have to get serious about this because innocent people are dying. >> emily: he is not wrong, brian. the fact is innocent people are dying all over the country. he said the other teams have to do their part. the court has to prosecute, judges have to make sure they stay, talking about the criminals. he blamed democrats in albany for failing to amend the states bail law. he recognizes there's there's food chain, group of participants in the criminal justice system as we see over and over again in these democrat led cities, everyone failing to do their part. that's what is failing the good citizens and the people who pay their taxes who are not safe in
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their cities. >> brian: i don't think it the laughingstock. it's a catastrophe. nobody in new york is laughing about this. nobody outside new york is laughing about this. they are looking at new york and san francisco and saying that it's a meltdown. we would not wanted to come or we are. it's not just a coastal issue. i'm in minneapolis for part of the year. we have the same issues going on there and people in minnesota are looking at new york and san francisco and saying get it together because if you can change they are, maybe it sends a signal here that our leaders need to change. what people don't want to go downtown. when people in cities are leaving and they are leaving in droves in a lot of places, that's not just that for those cities. it's bad for those states and it's better for the country at large. we need to get a handle on this. i like that eric adams is talking about it but he is in the middle of the ecosystem. quit slamming everybody else and start showing some real leadership.
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get focused. he seemed to me to be not focused. we need more of that. >> emily: quick follow-up. another common theme we are seeing is a disconnect between what voters want and what the city council and the mirrors are doing. we saw that in seattle where voters overwhelmingly voted to restore funding to the police, not defund them in the first place and at city council went ahead and did that and it's my understanding the same thing is happening in minneapolis. >> brian: they sort of abandon it but not really but it was only after people in minnesota and minneapolis come everywhere and that states that are you kidding me? are we really going to do this? people won't drive their cars into minneapolis because they are afraid of carjacking. you are a car person. catalytic converters getting stolen all the time. they won't go to that place because that city council and that mayor have absolutely squandered an opportunity to improve public safety. yes, these politicians need to
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listen to voters. they are much more concerned about ideology than they are about the basic bread-and-butter issues people care about. >> emily: another perfect example would be the los angeles district attorney george gascon who after we reported last summer's hit-and-run situation that we mention of the intro, they decided to tweet about the misinformation. they said "there is misinformation circulating about an incident that occurred last summer in which a minor driving under the influence struck a woman and her child. it's important, they said, that the public knows the facts." what facts are those? we saw on video that car swerving to hit the mother and child. that's why the appropriate charges should have been two counts of felony assault with a deadly weapon because that's what a vehicle is in california and one count of felony hit-and-run and one count of felony unlawful taking of the vehicle and the other thing in california, if you have certain felony charges you can indeed
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prosecute teen as an adult, another failure on the part of george gascon. >> the perpetrators lucky that you're not prosecuting them. you would've thrown the book on them. i think maybe the city of los angeles should spend more time trying to protect its citizens and the crime problem instead of using this misinformation. by the way, this is what everyone uses now. everything is misinformation whenever they want to distract from reality of what's going on in los angeles. looking at the bigger picture, it's not just our major cities. we know that crime and drugs go hand-in-hand and go all around to smaller towns in america, smaller towns in tennessee where i talk to the sheriffs. we have an opioid problem. you may not have in the smaller cities, viewers who are not living in major metropolitan areas, you may not have the crime problem but you have the effect of the crime which is the opioids and the drugs in the
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fentanyl and the overdoses killing our children. >> emily: you have seen the effects of people fleeing those cesspools of cities. >> morgan: i am one of them. >> emily: talk about what that looks like. >> morgan: we were living -- we lived in new york and then d.c. when i worked for president trump with kayleigh. when i had a baby two days after the election i said we've got to go below the mason-dixon line. that's where she has to be raised. that's one of the reasons that we made the choice for taxis to start a new life, new business but i think like many families around the country that were in dangerous big cities, i just didn't want my daughter there. >> emily: voters are voting with their feet and we also are expecting them to vote on the ballots. they already have. one of the arguments here is that on tuesday california's result will send the message that underscores how much danger
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a party in power can face when voters feel certainty has been stripped from their lives. crime, inflation, gas prices, it's going to send a stark message. >> kayleigh: it can get really discouraging. i had a young girl say to me last year give me some hope. we cover crime every night and it's tragic. tonight you have hope when the d.a. out of san francisco, chesa boudin, likely will be recalled. the democrat side of the outcome hard for republicans to end in these areas but there is a former republican running for mayor of valais. rick caruso. he wants to add thousand 500 police officers. he is running against karen bass. he could win tonight. there is hope for what is going on in california. there is hope when it's february and we saw three school board members taken away the recall in san francisco because they wanted to rename 44 historic locations, rename
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abraham lincoln, get rid of him out of history. there is hope in california. one politician said i haven't seen it this way since the 1970s. that led to president ronald reagan. >> emily: the tide is turning. >> harris: i want to go back to two things you said. you pointed out something i thought was brilliant. i don't care what people think in terms of the laughingstock. took the mirror this long to figure out that he had a liberal d.a. who met a revolving door. we have known this for a while. we have lived this. i live in jersey and the only time i see the crime the way it is as when i come here. that's not to say it can't happen anywhere but like you said, minneapolis, jersey. we need to be paying attention. the money pouring in, they defund the police money. george soros has not run out of cash. his group have not run out of energy and doorknocking in cash. in order to move some of those play pieces, the district
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attorneys, we need to shine a light on them and we can afford to have mayors who wait for their egos to be bruised because their cities don't look good to the public. what about the woman, the 57-year-old woman hit in the back of the head 57 times. one for each of her years. come on. crime has been burgeoning since before he got into office. he said he was a cop in new york for 22 years and that was going to make a difference. it's time for people to wake up and not just because he says so but in minneapolis and in other places. >> emily: that's right. coming up, the crises keep piling up for the president and so do the gaffes. the mainstream media is finally beginning to notice. okay everyone, our mission is to provide complete balanced nutrition for strength and energy. woo hoo! ensure, complete balanced nutrition
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>> kayleigh: liberal media have largely defended president biden despite all our crises piling up under his watch. there's a lot of them. inflation, gas prices, the border, the list goes on and on. biden's failures and his dismal polling numbers have become impossible to ignore. even some in the media are no longer running cover. speak of the president claims the u.s. is in a better economic position that almost every country in the world but is alsg public sentiment that's making clear americans don't feel that strength not by a long shot. >> the white house adrift from national tragedies, soaring inflation, the biden administration is struggling. >> flatfoot it and caught behind. inflation, baby formula. >> as much as the white house is now trying to make it clear they are on top of this and doing
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everything they can to deal with it something as biden likes to say was missed between the cup and the lip. >> kayleigh: sometimes you can't bear to be on a team when you're losing it is starting to feel like that in the biden administration. there is speculation among the media, another alternative. unusually lukewarm about a second term. "vanity fair." democrats are filling out of options. the hill had a piece on potential replacements. "new york magazine," democrats quietly searching for an alternative. >> harris: i'm glad they are not on my team. they gave up on their own guy. you want to wonder how he missed acknowledging the 78th anniversary of d-day, the guy doesn't have any friends. he doesn't have his own team. the inside team, the liberal media team. adrift and flat-footed on afghanistan. i mean, all of it is true. a true friend would tell you the truth so you know that's not who
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he is surrounded by because they are not telling him what's going on with america. we noise not feeling it because these -- we know he's not feeling it. i don't know what's going on at rehoboth beach. he's carrying his own bag. vacationing 30% of the time. somebody has got to hand him a news blotter and say this is what's happening. he's upset because they keep correcting him but he doesn't have the facts. when you look at what they do shown on the wall, our team has our backs and can put that back up on the wall, you look about you know there's nobody standing behind him. they literally are leading from behind. >> kayleigh: he does not have the facts. appears to be a fairy tale. this set the tone for the year. his one and only january press conference and here's what he said. >> look, i didn't overpromise. i have probably oh four performed what it --
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outperformed anybody thought would happen. we are in a situation where we made enormous progress. >> kayleigh: he has over performed he said, hasn't overpromise. then this morning it was like an hour ago he tweets the fact is america is in a stronger economic position today than just about any other country in the world. experts have projected the u.s. economy could grow faster than china's. this guy needs to wake up. it doesn't matter what someone is telling you. if you are feeling something totally different. you can tell me that you're not hitting me in the face as your punching me in the face and i'm going to feel something really different. we now know about 38% of people in america feel they are worse off financially now than they have been a few years prior. that's the only time with the exception of the aftermath of the 2007 recession that over three in ten people have felt that way, going back over 50 years. you know i broke my heart the
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most was six in ten respondents said they don't think the american dream is achievable anymore. that absolutely broke my heart and i thought about my grandparents immigrating here, grandfather had to renounce his citizenship to elderly and he proudly displayed that certificate on the wall all the days of his life because to him the american dream was real. i am the american dream because i am his granddaughter. going back all those generations and the fact that 6 out of 10 americans really don't feel that it's achievable anymore it's absolutely heartbreaking and this is bidens america. >> harris: he is not arguing that point. he's not saying i am not quite all of the american dream die. here's what we know and here's what will do about it. >> over at cnn. here you go. get ready. >> guess what. 1938, the republican leaders the
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best position for republicans at this point in any midterm cycle in over 80 years. >> kayleigh: don't often get help from cnn. the midterm elections especially for congress in modern history benner referendum on the presidency and what the american people think. i chuckled reading that article yesterday. biden and his aides were flabbergasted that his poll numbers were worse than trump. how could you do it worse than trump? i tweeted it's pretty simple because people's lives are worse. they don't realize that they have created all of these problems at home. when you have a problem when your family, your problem with your girls, you and your husband, you're solving it in the family. these problems that biden then his administration have created. energy, inflation. they are solving it with our enemies. they are talking about relieving tariffs on china and getting nothing for it.
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they are talking about letting iran and venezuela, leading to sanctions laps and it's happening now. why don't we fix our problems at home? why do we have to get baby formula from germany? >> harris: because he doesn't like half the people in the house. that's why. seriously. i don't know that even going back to hillary clinton with the deplorables comment if they will ever get to the point where they don't have to love the other side of the country who may not vote for them but they do have to lead for them. they are everybody's leadership. >> rather than marginalize them. >> brian: so full of baloney on the economy and that's what people care about so much. we have $4.91 a gallon national average gas and want to be due? declared the production act for solar panels. if you want to understand the poles, look at that. you are full of baloney,
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>> dad: looks great. thanks. >> tech: stay safe with safelite. schedule now. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪ ♪ life can be a lot to handle. ♪ this magic moment ♪ but heinz knows there's plenty of magic in all that chaos. ♪ so different and so new ♪ ♪ was like any other... ♪ >> harris: you heard me or who do this earlier. i can't wait for the gang to get into it. president biden getting called out for nearly missing the 78th anniversary of d-day yesterday. he only acknowledged it hours after fox news and other outlets reached out for comments on the apparent snob not to mention all the social media fire building. the defense secretary had shared this earlier. nothing from the commander-in-chief until 8:45 p.m. eastern last night
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when it was already june 7th in france the next day. biden finally shared a tweet about the thousands of u.s. and allied troops to give their lives that day. it read in part we must never forget their service and thus of course i'm too busy on the beach and i didn't remember it. oh, my gosh, morgan. >> morgan: there is supposedly 70 staffers running his social media. you would think, i'm sure they have this too, we have a running calendar of all the historical events and the things are supposed to remember. i don't know how something like this -- >> harris: it was on your phone. it comes up. incompetence doesn't necessarily answer the question. was it incompetence or purposeful. was it purposeful? too they just want to talk about climate change or do they not want americans to think about the military because of their epic failures in afghanistan and
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the russian war in ukraine. at least they finally got something out, let me save everyone serving, all the families, especially those of families of those who served on the day. thank you for serving our country. putting on the uniform is the most important thing other than being a mom. it's the most important thing i do in my life. i'm sorry that the president didn't thank you in time and on behalf of all of us i know we are also grateful to all those families and everyone who serves. >> harris: we are grateful to you for your service as well. i realize they are not that far apart. he must've grown up knowing about it. the fact that they didn't do anything last year didn't even send a statement, first year in the presidency and you didn't do it. this time you had to get called out before you do it. >> brian: you didn't do it and then you do it late. america needs to remember this. the greatest generation, those
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heroes, there aren't very many of them left and a lot of them are not in a position where they can speak for themselves. they can't even tell their stories. if anyone in america should tell the story and keep the flame alive it's the president of the united states. that's what troubles me. younger people need to understand about d-day. our schools aren't doing a great job of it. the president of the united states needs to do it. not just a missed opportunity, it's a failure to do one of the key things that the leader of a free country, a leader that defended the freedom of the world has to do. >> harris: younger generations need to understand sacrifice. kayleigh. >> kayleigh: this is stunning. i remember talking about this last year. almost give the president a little bit of a break a few months into his presidency, they are figuring things out, they are new to all of it. >> harris: goodness gracious. the people who thought that way. >> kayleigh: i remember a staffer from the first lady's
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office. jill honored it. jill is not the president. this is the year two. when it happens twice, what's going on? mark your calendar, set an alarm. going to the medications rector's office, i want a poster of d-day. you forgot twice. you did it twice. he remembered great outdoors month and national homeownership month. >> emily: someone who served in government. someone who talks about his son's service every chance he gets. he says god bless the troops. to me it's an indication of priority. those things are just lip service. failed to acknowledge d-day and the importance significance. let's take a watch at an example. the heroism, the patriotism and history that this white house
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has failed to acknowledge until the last minute when they were essentially forced to by the american public. >> their schools are right here. witnessing this. i'm not the hero. i'm here to tell you that the heroes are varied over here. the messages protect our freedom. honor these heroes that have given their life at a young age. honor these people. >> emily: between that veteran and you, morgan, i don't think anyone can say it better. >> harris: for the commander in chief, it's a question that many people have had over the years. should that person have served in the military? should that person have connected? this one did. his son. we have witnessed him talk about his son and not remember which branch of military he was in. >> brian: whether or not he serves in the military or served in the military, he is the
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commander in chief. throughout the ages, the folks who've been in that role, looked to the commander in chief to make great decisions, deploy them when they needed to be deployed and remember them. abraham lincoln, one of the reasons we remember abraham lincoln at the gettysburg address, short address that said it all. we don't expect that kind of rhetoric from this president a little tweet in a timely way, it's not too much to ask but apparently it is right now. >> harris: will be if he had more of that connection he would understand what our panelists talked about today. preservation of the american dream. he's got to know it to be real if he's going to speak about it. coming up, congresswoman alexandria ocasio-cortez's latest mini rant going after democrats, this time she wants a -- she won't say latinx.
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xiidra. not today, dry eye. >> welcome back. progressive new york democrat ex-andrea ocasio-cortez tearing into members of her own party this time because they are refusing to use the term latinx. a gender neutral word. almost nobody uses it including those in the latin community. >> gender inclusivity and spanish language. people sometimes like to make a lot of drama over the term latinx. gender is fluid. languages fluid. some politicians including democratic politicians that rail
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against the term latinx. they are like this is so bad, so bad for the party. blah, blah, blah. and like, it's almost as though it has not struck some of these folks that another person's identity is not about your reelection process. like, this is not about you. >> kayleigh: encapsulate why november is going to be so bad for the left. the baby formula shortage, inflation but let's talk about a gender-neutral term for the latin community. >> morgan: one to two and what i could find of hispanic americans use the term latinx, it's not very popular. biden's approval rating among hispanic americans is 26%. i think if i were they congresswoman or the president, there's a lot of things i would have on the list of priorities to reach out to the hispanic
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community. by the way, latinx is a made-up term. it's a made-up word by the progressive left that thinks that the spanish language is not politically correct enough. i think it's highly offensive to many in the hispanic community. >> kayleigh: two to 3% use it. big numbers say they are offended by the use of the term. morgan just stated that the left has lost the hispanic community. this isn't just the swing vote. >> emily: i will quote the congresswoman back to her, yeah, it's not about you. "new york times" held a student publishing essay contest. they published an essay last year, a 16-year-old who described why he found the term latinx so offensive. it was heartbreaking to him and how complicated it was and he talked about the pasteurization of the spanish language by white people essentially. talked about the the english
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station. defies the basic rules of spanish pronunciation and it's just another example of them trying to be whitewashed in that way with a broad stroke. so to have someone who allegedly represents that community that then reduces them into a box and uses this apologist white progressive term to do so is totally offensive. i'm not sure why no one has told her that yet loud enough for her to hear it. >> harris: it is so interesting what you just said about changing the way the language was meant to be spoken. oaxaca, mexico. latinx. it does. it feels sort of inorganic, if you will. this is about aoc wanting to come up with a reason to victimize. they are hurting us because they are not saying us correctly. they don't understand us. yeah.
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it doesn't work. people have individual experiences. people of color from every lane. that's what makes it a great country. whether you call me black, african american, i prefer harris because that's what most people see when they see me walking in the room. whatever. we deserve the respect of being called away prefer. were having this whole conversation about gender pronouns and everything else. this makes is in and now you are nodding at me, so just take over. a >> brian: i couldn't agree more with what's being said. she wants to call people by name they don't call themselves. you wonder why hispanics might abandon the democratic party. they get treated like a big block of people. is that what you want to be? be a big block of people that we debate about when it comes to what to call us. who made her the spokesperson for that group? she is like, i'm going to pick up the mantle. go away.
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the only one creating drama on this is you and this instagram video. she is counseling her fellow democrats to talk about real issues. >> so much internal incoherence to her instagram live. she talks about democrats pontificating whether they should put a x on their campaign pamphlets. you just gave a 15 minute instagram live about latinx. >> brian: she doesn't get that. that is what is so scary. she is massively influential in our world and she does not see that that's why we have so much dysfunction in our legislative body. >> emily: is she a big influence her? you could argue culturally there's a lot of people talking about her, sure. do you think she'll actually have an influence where it matters which is legislatively? >> morgan: approval rating.
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people that call us birthing people and don't call us mothers. if someone calls me a birthing person at the hospital, it's going to be a rough day for them. good luck in november. just ahead, apple is adding a new feature that allows users to edit or undo messages they have already sent. the panel, while some are excited about this. stick around. when pain says, “it's time to go home” “i say, “not yet”. ♪ ♪ aleve. who do you take it for? [♪♪] if you have diabetes, it's important to have confidence in the nutritional drink you choose.
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>> gasoline prices a few cents off the $5 mark. how much pain we face at the pump before president biden does anything about it? does he even want to? ro khanna joins us. katie pavlich is here. unprecedented results from two new drugs, want to treat cancer and the other to tackle obesity. dr. nicole saphier has got all the news for you. i am john roberts. join sandra smith and me at the top of the hour for america reports. see you then.
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♪ ♪ >> harris: there is a connection with snoop dogg. just wait. the next apple messaging app is getting some big updates and you'll soon be able to edit text messages you have already sent, delete messages you might've fired off in haste. mark messages that you've already read to unreachable you don't forget to go back to them. the deleted messages will be marked with the contact name and the word unsent in any changes to a text after it is sent will be labeled edited. morgan. >> morgan: yes, ma'am. >> harris: stripper pole. the message he wanted to take back. i message you wanted to take back. i never thought i would say those words. >> morgan: please apple.
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i was a snoop dogg concert in nashville with my girlfriends and i'm very close to my sisters and i was videoing some funny things that involved a pole and some ladies i thought it was funny and i sent it to my sisters and i accidentally sent it to my dad and i wanted to die. [laughter] apple, where were you when they needed you? >> harris: your sister came up with the way to help you. >> morgan: my one sister said morgan, your phone must have been hacked. >> harris: oh, my goodness. >> morgan: she had my back. >> harris: you told that story during the commercial and i wanted to break with news. breaking news. we have some. >> kayleigh: that story wouldn't be here if you had the edit button. some brilliant app maker, create an app that immediately carbon copies were screen shots the text that is sent. i have a young sisterhood dates
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and you get the courage to send a guy a message but you can take it back. no. get the screenshot app. >> harris: your intestinal fortitude. you are like, i meant it. >> brian: i'm always going to pretend like every messages of final message because it makes me think. you can trust technology all you want. i had a mentor in college and i sent an email to him. he said i want you to think of every message you ever sent like it's going to show up on the front page of the newspaper and i've never forgotten that. it's better policy than any filter. >> harris: my mom used to say that per -- pretend that you're messages are on the cover of the church pamphlet. i love where we are, i wanted to get in a deeper way with you, emily because you and i see this differently. we have had some mass shootings, some killers in our recent
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history will leave footprints on social media and messaging. i don't think i want something that immediately resolve some one of the responsibility of the truth. maybe somebody would've seen it in red flagged it for the authorities. that's what we are seeing. only if we had seen but if you make things vanish, who will have seen them? >> emily: the ephemeral nature, the ability to clive back, all it does is create more problems. i have the opportunity for more damning things to be sent. maybe it is the attorney in me, the longtime federal attorney. i was so conscious of every email. everything in writing in general because that's our record. the notion that it's somehow giving you some liberty to send the text you wouldn't otherwise mean or like you were saying -- you weren't saying this part, to be a little more free with things that might result in hurting someone else or hurting yourself, there's nothing attractive about back to me and i think of live tv versus taped.
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i am better life. when i am taped i have to do 100 takes but when we are given one shot that soon it's better and it would be more appropriate and it would serve all of us better if we were more responsible and that one moment rather than its okay, i can take it back. >> harris: i do think there needs to be the morgan ortega. >> morgan: exception. maybe just for your parents. you can delete in whatsapp and some of the other ones but it says that this message is deleted. >> emily: if the other person has opened it already, they will see it before you have deleted it. if they are quick on the draw. >> harris: i tell people even with snapchat, they are not completely gone because of somebody saw it before you and snapped it before you -- before it goes away. even your stories under instagram. they live in your archive forever. you can re-earth them.
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♪♪♪ >> last but not least, restaurant-goers are craving one thing in particular, it appears. return of the physical menu. restaurants taped qr codes to tables to check out the menu on the phone but people are over using their phones at the table and they just want their regular menus back. kayleigh, what say you. >> so over it, i was having lunch with my sister in the dallas airport, ships passing in the night and i sit down and a qr code and this cannot be real,
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where is my menu, someone rounded the corner with a menu, we are done, we are done, what if you don't have a smartphone? some have flip phones. my dad did until last year. >> it's hard to look things up on the phone or not savvy with tech. >> i have returned to no phones or devices at the table while we eat, which was, you know, during the pandemic my kids were like oh, mom, that rule just died. it's back. and these people are not helping me because we need to make eye contact with each other. we need to not be getting text messages. getting a qr code is an excuse to open the portal. bring some hand sanitizer after you handle the menu, if you think it was too sticky, if the chicken and waffles left too much behind for you, clean your hands. >> great point, removes intimacy and looking at the menu, not
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facebook. >> i'm like kayleigh's dad, ten generations behind and my phone looks like this. all beat up. so i have to take this out and do the qr code and like what's wrong with your phone, we talked about how mind the times i am. i don't want to do that at dinner. give me a menu, all on a level playing field. >> i would not have noticed that if you had not said it. >> what everybody notices, though. >> plot twist, you guys. when almost 200,000 restaurants closed during the pandemic. when business owners of restaurants are really lean, right, they have super low budgets, they see this as -- that it's helping them they don't have to pay for it, right. the argument is, it's not about the customer anymore, it's about the business owner and they need all the help that they can get. >> pass it out. what are you talking about? >> well, i think -- i like both. one argument for the qr codes and keeping the paper menus, in
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some restaurants you can pay on the qr code and i hate it at the end, where's the check, where's the check, hello, where's the check. >> leave cash on the table. >> and the chalk board. >> i'm here for the physical menu but support the business owners. thanks for watching. here is "america reports." >> sandra: thank you, emily, primary voters in seven states are heading to the polls today as the 2022 election season shifts into high gear. crime, inflation, gas prices are on the ballot amid warnings of a red tsunami that could wipe out democrats in the midterm elections. >> john: critics are blaming far left candidates for the crisis sweeping the country. katie pavlich and rafael mangual weigh in on that coming up. >> sandra: another alert, this time on the
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