tv Americas Newsroom FOX News June 10, 2022 6:00am-8:00am PDT
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>> you have to download his album. >> i've been wanting to do this summer concert series for as long as i've been watching. thank you. i appreciate it. >> bye, everyone. >> great job. >> stay within yourself. >> bill: good morning, everybody. 9:00 in new york. january 6 committee bringing their case to prime time. what did we learn, what's still to come. republicans say the hearings are nothing more than a distraction. we'll go through it together. i'm bill hemmer. nice to have you with us. >> dana: i'm dana perino and this is "america's newsroom." that happened last night. the committee will hold the first of several hearings on thursday night, last night. they tried to paint the picture of president trump at the center of the con spir tee to flip the election despite no evidence of voter fraud. republicans as you can expect are firing back saying the hearings are a circus to take
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attention off the biden administration's failings. >> all they're doing is try to paint a new political narrative in november. >> it's inflation, sky high gas prices. border crisis. democrats created the crisis. the hearings are no more than an attempt to change the narrative. they are desperate. >> we all know it's a sham committee process. they want to put donald trump in jail. if they don't get that they want to keep his name off the ballot. >> dana: chad pergram is live on capitol hill for us this morning. hi, chad. >> good morning. the committee aimed to tie the riots to former president trump and his actions after the election. the panel played new video and audio tape of those close to the president that included former attorney general bill barr who said there was no fraud in the election. there was dramatic testimony
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from u.s. capitol police officer edwards sustained a traumatic brain injury defending the capitol. >> there were officers on the ground, you know. they were bleeding. they were throwing up. they were -- they had -- i saw friends with blood all over their faces. i was slipping in people's blood. >> house speaker nancy pelosi rejected the picks of house minority leader kevin mccarthy to serve on the committee so there are only two gop members on the panel now both approved by pelosi. the goal of committee members is to get the message from them across to the public they believe the former president attempted to delay certification of the electoral college with the riot. washington democrat doubted the committee could sway republicans. >> thank you so much. we appreciate it. >> bill: want to bring in bret
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baier. late night tonight and early morning today. call for number two first. this is bill barr and ivanka trump during part of their deposition played last night. >> i did not agree with the idea of saying the election was stolen. i didn't want to be a part of it. >> how did that affect your perspective about the election when barr made that statement? >> it affected my perspective. i respect attorney general barr. so i accepted what he was saying. >> bill: what congresswoman cheney has said is president trump had a seven-part plan to make sure the election was not certified. what is part one of that -- was it the tweet that she displayed last night about the tweet that went out third week in december, bret? >> yeah, he was -- she lays out this methodical effort by
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president trump. that's really the focus here as you get towards this. a couple of things before we go down that road. one is listen, the video is compelling and there was while it may all look the same there was new video and audio that stitched together reminds us of that day and dana i remember being on your show as we were covering it live and we didn't have that visual on the outside but we learned it over time, over the hours. it was a dark day for capitol hill and the nation. so reliving that puts people back in it. if they didn't see it the first time, that was heinous to watch again. however, this committee is, it seems, just focusing in on former president trump and his effort to essentially overturn the 2020 election and to say it was stolen and to prevent it from being certified. i think that's where this is going. what is notable is that there is not an opposition, there is
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not a minority. there is not any pushback like wait a second, here is the other side of that that we've seen in other big committees like the russia or benghazi committee. leader mccarthy chose that after nancy pelosi turned down two congressmen being on that committee but it is noticeable as you watch it laid out methodically. >> dana: one thing i was looking for, in the subsequent hearings are coming we might hear more about it. what were the calls for backup? what was the information the security services had before? that there could be a need for more police officers or support? apparently that will come next week. one thing we did hear -- we heard from a documentarian from the u.k. imbedded with the proud boys and describe the experience in his testimony last night. do you think at that point the committee thinks they'll try to figure out a way to connect a
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direction or instruction from president trump to the proud boys and oath keepers? you think they will? okay. >> i do. i saw an interview with bennie thompson after the hearing when he was asked will there be testimony the communication of the proud boys or oath keepers with members of trump's inner circle and he said yes. i assume that's coming in hearings to come as they lay out this kind of methodical thing. now, what i would like to see is some kind of blueprint where they are going. is the ultimate goal -- what is the ultimate goal? is it criminal charges or someone? is it just preventing former president trump from running again? what is the ultimate goal? they say it's the save democracy but obviously there are a lot of elements to that. to your point about security, there are a ton of questions about why the security was lax, was the capitol police were at
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half security strength. there is this back and forth was the national guard authorized by president trump, some trump supporters say he did the day before. liz cheney said he did not officially authorize the national guard. so i think we'll try to get to the bottom of that as well. >> bill: bret, thanks. a lot to go through and we shall. >> dana: you will do this debate, moderate the debate between bernie sanders and lindsey graham on fox nation. what is happening with this debate? >> it will be interesting called the senate project in boston in a mock senate floor at the edward m. kennedy institute. senators graham and sanders old style oxford debate about the future of the country. fun and interesting. long form, substantive and maybe get some details in there. both of them kind of well-known on either side of the ideological spectrum. >> dana: great idea. thanks for doing that and being on our show this morning.
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house democrats are still refusing to pick up a bill expanding security for supreme court justices and their families even in the wake of the foiled assassination plot against kavanaugh. the senate passed it unanimously a month ago. in addition you have the protests continuing outside the homes of not only kavanaugh but amy coney barrett. i still don't understand why the attorney general doesn't enforce the law and arrest some of these protestors. that would put and end to it. >> bill: what the senate passed in may is a total of two pages which in congressional terms is shorthand. has not moved forward. see if they take action. economy, this number out moments ago. it is nothing short of brutal showing prices up 8.6% from a year ago, the highest rate in four decades surpassing analyst's expectations. the question now will the president take responsibility for these numbers? what do you do about it?
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edward lawrence live at the white house with something considered hotter and higher than even the economists predicted. >> you talk about 8.6%, the highest level in more than 40 years. december of 1981 is when it was higher. the number one hit song at the country at that time let's get physical biolive yeah newton john. on the things that people buy at the grocery store. when you look at it meat prices up 12.3%. eggs up 32.2%. fish and seafood up 12.2%. milk up 15.9. fruits and vegetables up 8.2%. enjoy the coffee. it is costing you 15% more than last year. if you look at energy prices we're paying almost 50% more than for gas than all types of
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gas. fuel oil up 107%. electricity is up. utilities hot at 32.2%. a white house official tried to get in front of the number saying they're seeing inflation going down by the end of this year below the levels of 2021. it does not look like that from this report. the white house blaming all of the inflation now on the rise in gas prices. they are blaming that rise on the invasion of ukraine. lots of blame to go around. treasury secretary janet yellen at a policy forum says she can't understand why people don't like this economy. >> when you look at opinion polls and you see what households have to say, it is amazing how pessimistic they are given we have a strong labor market in the post war period. people can easily find jobs. >> she was also asked if corporate greed is the reason for this inflation. she said no, it is supply and
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demand that's driving this inflation and you know near record highs, 40-year highs for inflation. >> bill: big sell-off in 20 minutes when the markets open. futures down 450, a point and a half on the dow. larry kudlow is coming up in 20 minutes. thank you. >> dana: disturbing news, it shows appears to be out of control hazing at a fraternity pledge party that left one student clinging to life and the family is asking for charges against people. kamala harris, where is she going? there is this. >> look at that. >> i'm glad i spotted that. >> dana: new jersey fisherman nearly collides with a great white shark and we'll ask him with his close encounter.
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>> dana: uvalde police chief denies not doing the response. he spoke out for the first time since the incident yesterday telling the tribune not a single responding officer ever hesitated to put themselves at risk to save the children. super viceors on the seen new a dozen kids were alive while police waited outside the school for 77 minutes. >> bill: doesn't get much better, does it? 17 past the hour. new video coming in to fox. the thousands strong migrant
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caravan heading from mexico toward the u.s. borders. crossings and seizures at the border are not slowing down. bill melugin at the border today. >> good morning. a dhs source tells fox news just in the last 24 hours alone in the rio grande valley sector there have been more than 1,600 illegal crossings as this sector continues to be overwhelmed in recent days. case in point. the photos here from border patrol announcing they encountered three separate massive groups totaling 547 illegal immigrants in total. you pull up a second photo here they break that down into more than 300 family members. listen to this, 153 unaccompanied children. most of these migrants from central and south america. this sector has seen 350,000 illegal crossings just since october. we pull up this photos out of the del rio sector. a major human smuggling bust
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more than of 60 illegal immigrants in the belly of this trailer. this is the body of a man who died in the belly of the trailer being smuggled. reminder that human smugglers have zero regard for human life and very dangerous down at the border with these brutal temperatures as we go into these summer months. also dangerous the amount of fentanyl pouring into the country. cbc report back-to-back major busts. a bust of 208,000 pills hidden in the transmission block in the bed of vehicle. another bust the same day pulling up the second photo. 184,000 fentanyl pills inside the rims of a vehicle. you are looking at nearly 400,000 fentanyl pills smuggled in one part of the border in a 24-hour span. back out here live cbp reports
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through april they've seized approximately 1300 pounds of fentanyl. those numbers are up 30% over the same time last year. you do the math on the 1300 pounds of fentanyl, it is enough to kill every person in the united states and still have some left over to possibly do it again. massive numbers of fentanyl being seized at our ports of entry, guys. back to you. >> bill: bill melugin, no stop there. >> dana: bring in michael allen. good to have you. on the caravan, we know they will be coming. we see this. mexico is giving them work permits to move freely throughout the country. the summit of the americas the vice president kamala harris in charge of immigration will be leaving the summit today. today is when they are supposed to turn the attention of the agenda to migration. what's going on here? >> this is extraordinary.
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we the united states are hosting the summit of the americas here in los angeles and we have four of the countries that are most critical to migration in honduras, el salvador coming here with mexico and they have all ignored us and disrespected the president and decided not to come. kamala harris is, of course, not in the ballgame and is leaving the field today by flying back to washington instead of trying to make progress on these critical issues. >> dana: do they not understand what kind of message that sends? it's amazing to me somebody like mexico thinks they can basically tell the president of the united states -- how does he feel he has leverage at this point? >> it's extraordinary. i really wish even president biden could have strong armed our southern neighbor into coming to this particular summit. we have a clear and present disaster approaching our southern border and we can't even get the players in the
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region to the table with the president of the united states or the vice president to try to make progress on this. >> dana: it's incredible. the iran nuclear deal. the biden administration really wants this deal because it has died 100 times between the time they took office and now. "wall street journal" board writing this. the iranian nuclear deal dream never dies. they want an agreement. what's happening here? >> well, the international atomic energy agency the investigator for a world. iran has lied to them repeatedly about uranium enrichment and covert sites. instead of insisting that iran have a clean bill of health with this particular agency it has become supremely inconvenient for the administration to have them out there investigating. they would rather sweep a lot of this under the rug, reach a new deal with iran and move on which might be fine to be
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future looking except the deal doesn't actually get to the heart of what we're worried about iran doing. it allows unacceptable progress to be baked in and for iran to move forward with researching and enriching uranium and it is not satisfactory for the united states. >> dana: i imagine this issue will come up when the president goes to saudi arabia next month. lloyd austin is going to china and meet with a defense official. this meeting is in setting guardrails on the relationship continuing to call for developing more mature crisis communication and risk management mechanisms as well as an opportunity for the secretary to share significant concerns we have about global and regional security issues. >> it didn't go well for us in the bush or obama administration. the chinese military is not interested in talking to us
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very much about strategic stability and the rest. we'll call them out on their nuclear weapons growth but i think they have a plan in mind and this is why we all say repeatedly we need to be very wary of this rising china. they have designs to displace us as the super power of the world and to work against our interests and we have got to pay attention to this and be working against them everywhere. >> dana: around the world with michael allen. not quite all the way around but i have to let you go. >> bill: good stuff there. meanwhile inflation is through the roof yet again putting the price of everyday goods out of reach for many americans. larry kudlow crunching the numbers just out and we're in for a big sell-off in six minutes on wall street. stay tuned.
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to figure out which way we're going. off 500 in the opening. the number that came out an hour ago. total inflation 8.6%. that's the year-over-year mark. the estimate was 8.3 so that's much, much higher than thought and then you see the residual effect. grocery store prices, housing costs and fuel price of gasoline up 48% year-over-year. >> dana: people are realizing as gasoline is rising above $5 a gallon this is affecting people's behavior. yesterday we reported on how aaa has said they've had a 40% increase in calls from people who have run out of gas. one of the reasons that is is because if you are living paycheck to paycheck but have to get the work you might only put in two gallons. >> look at number 5. what's the most urgent issue facing the country today?
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no contest. call for 4. what is the effect of that politically and the white house. joe biden's is 2/3 disapprove of his job on the economy. that's job number one for a president. >> dana: this week when the president did his interview with jimmie kimmel the first he had done in 118 days, kimmel never brought up inflation. president biden himself had to bring it up and said it is the bain of our existence and janet yellen yesterday said the job market is very good, we have an unemployment rate of 3.6%, the lowest that we've had since world war ii. but that is not comforting to people who are having a hard time meeting their budgets. >> bill: going to bring in larry kudlow in a moment. i just found this. the company that makes an oreo cookie, a good example.
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do you scrape them off? they make other snacks, too. overall input costs go up 10 to 13% a year because of this because of transportation, fuel, ingredients it takes to get in the product, eggs. when you are shopping at a grocery store you don't think of the packaging and plastics. it all goes into the higher prices we're seeing now. we have our man larry kudlow. good morning. want to get your hot take now on what is a hot number for inflation. good morning, friend. >> good morning, everybody. well, thank you for having me. it's a bad number and it is a number, interestingly, that shows inflation is actually speeding up, not declining or easing. there is a lot of talk in both washington and wall street that we had seen peek inflation. there is no evidence in this report we've seen peak
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inflation. in fact, kids, the three-month increases are now running ahead of the 12-month increases. that's a very bad sign. the trend lines are all wrong. the other point i want to make is it's very widespread. i think you all were talking about that a moment ago. it is very widespread. it covers every single area. food and energy, yes, but shelter, automobiles, you can go through the list, services, they are all rising rapidly. off of tough comparisons a year ago, which should have slowed things down at least by math. one of the inferences here is first of all the fed will have to be even tougher. people talking about 50 basis points in june, 50 basis points in july and a pause in september. that pause, there is no way you can do that. frankly, i don't think 50, 50,
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50 will work for their target rate. i think they'll have to go up a full percentage point and the fed will have to accelerate its runoff of their bond portfolio. that policy will tighten. one more point. anybody in congress -- anybody in congress who wants to spend on some bill right now, okay, environmental spending, energy tax credits, healthcare, child allowances, bbb derivatives. anybody that wants to spend has to be out of their mind given a report like this and given the trend line and given the acceleration of inflation. we need to freeze domestic spending while the fed removes excess cash from the economy. >> dana: i've been wanting to ask you something. the white house is stressing this week that the inflation problem is happening around the globe. that this is not just a united
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states issue and not president biden's fault. you can't trace it back to him. what do you think of that argument? >> janet yellen made that point in senate testimony. that's just incorrect. that is just incorrect. studies from the san francisco fed. heck, democratic economist jason fuhrman put the lie to that in the "wall street journal" editorial. you have to look at it, our core inflation rate. europe suffers because of high energy prices because they are dependent on russia. i get that. in that sense we all suffer in the last couple months. here is the thing, our core inflation rate is now running actually what is it after today's report it's above 6% on a 12-month basis and it was even faster if i look at my notes. it's even faster than that on a 12-month basis. our core inflation rate is 3
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times faster than europe's, okay? three times. that tells you that our stimulus was greater than theirs. we had much more fiscal stimulus and also tells you that our inflation is much worse than theirs. if you look at it on a core basis. energy -- yellen has said this before and just like so many of her other statements they are factually wrong. she suffered great damage to her reputation. the point is, we are the worst case among the big developed countries. and we have to do something about it fast, very fast before this gets out of hand. >> bill: the white house has suggested it was leveling off. that's not the case. before that they said it was transitory. now you have a message problem, too. last point quickly. >> take a look -- look, when your three-month increases are
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faster than your 12-month that's a very bad trend line. if you look through this report, bill and dana, you'll see that's the story. the 3-month is faster than the 12-month across the board. that's very bad with math. shows it is get pg worse, not better. in terms of underlying policy and the decline in real worker wages, this shows you we're headed down scale. it will be very difficult, if not impossible, to avoid a recession in the next 12 months. that's what is going to happen here. >> dana: thank you, larry. appreciate you. >> bill: thank you, larry. >> thank you. >> dana: for more than two years into the covid pandemic we're learning the toll it has taken on children. a growing number of students are showing signs of increased depression and anxiety. dr. marc siegel has this story. >> more than two years into the pandemic the effects of masking, shutdowns and virtual
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learning are still impacting students across the country. in places like new york city, masking policies apply to children as young as 2 years old. this person specializes in early child development and the mother of a teenage son. she believes virtual learning is inferior to in-person instruction. >> some people are visual, and other ways. you want to attack aldo mains to make sure the child is getting lessons. >> she tutors 4-year-old thomas, now back in the classroom. >> we got covid that closed it so it was a very challenging environment for him to learn under those circumstances. >> school counselors nationwide report students are showing more signs of anxiety and depression than they did before the pandemic. she remembers having to set new house rules for her 16-year-old son during the lockdown.
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>> i used to limit how much he could play video games. >> those peer relationships are critical. you are learning how to develop other relationships and become an adult, in essence. >> this is a pediatrics professor from new york university. >> adolescents have, on occasion, really suffered from the isolation of the pandemic and lack of those interactions. >> norma, a speech pathologist says wearing solid masks presents additional challenge. >> children wearing their masks in the classroom were quieter. they weren't interacting with their friends. >> a recent study out of brown university points to mask wearing as possibly impacting
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early development skills such as facial processing. >> 25% of what is said is visual cues. the child is not seeing your mouth, your lips, your tongue and jaw. they don't necessarily know how to produce the sounds. >> in new york, dr. marc siegel, fox news. >> dana: thank you. on monday new york city mayor adams will lift the mask mandate for 2 to 4-year-old. >> amen to that for parents. two people are dead and state trooper injured in a workplace shooting 90 minutes outside of the nation's capital. we'll get a live report from the scene in moments.
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>> dana: three people are dead and an officer wounded after a suspect opened fire in a factory in maryland. it's outside of d.c. where the shooting took place. >> police say all three of the victims killed yesterday in the building were employees of the concrete and molding company. the motive remains under investigation. the sheriffs office said it happened 2:30 yesterday afternoon when they got calls of gunshots. they found one employee needing
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medical assistance and then found the bodies of the three victims. the suspect only described as a 23-year-old hispanic man from west virginia was nowhere to be found. he had fled the scene. maryland state patrol caught up with the suspect a few miles down the road. as they attempted to stop him, gunfire was exchanged. police say he opened fire shooting one trooper in the shoulder. officers returned fire. suspect was struck but alive. we have an update from the officials late last night. >> there was a handgun recovered at the -- within the vehicle and right now we are still working on working with the sheriff's office on why it happened and why it kept escalating. >> some good news, the trooper injured in the shooting is expected to be okay and already out of the hospital. as for the suspect, we're still waiting to get an update on his conditions and what charges he will face. we should get more details later this morning. >> dana: so sad.
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we know just going to work and end up in this condition. thank you, mark. >> bill: there are two high stakes primary races happening in nevada on tuesday. important state, too. republicans fighting for the chance to face two vulnerable democrats in november. josh here to talk about it. nevada senate. incumbent is a democrat senator catherine cortez masto ranked at a toss-up. joe biden won by 2 points in 2020. why do republicans think nevada is so ripe for the picking? >> kathryn mass tow is the most vulnerable democratic senator on the ballot. even though nevada voted for biden in 2020. all the national factors, the bad economy, worries about crime, inflation, immigration even. those are factors driving the political environment toward
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the republicans in nevada. the biggest issue is gas prices. they have one of the highest gas prices in the country. people are struggling to make ends meet. you also have a lot of working-class voters in nevada that did vote democratic in past elections but they are looking at the track record of president biden and the democratic party and swinging towards the republicans in this election. >> bill: the names of the republicans. great name recognition going against sam brown. now i want to ask you about this past tuesday. voter turnout. the california numbers that we have as of now. in the city of l.a., you had 14 1/2% turnout. san francisco had 22. both numbers are -- all the attention given to the races. meanwhile south dakota 32, montana 38 better but not great. come back to california.
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i believe the numbers statewide, josh, will be 30% turnout is what i was seeing earlier. this in a state where everyone was sent a ballot through the mail. you would think that nothing could be easier than to pop that ballot in the mail and send it back. can you explain why the turnout would only be 30% in the golden state in this election? >> it's a fascinating dynamic and speaks to something we've seen for a long time in california. democrats often don't show up except in presidential elections. they show up for joe biden and donald trump but not to vote for mayor or mid-term elections for congress and we're seeing that dynamic again this year. i would also add that nationally california is a very democratic state and we see in almost every national poll and also california polling democrats don't want to show up to the polls the economy is so bad. the president's support is low,
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so there is not a lot of enthusiasm overall for democrats in a state that's heavily democratic. there are still ballots to count in california. it takes them a long time to finish the count. sometimes weeks. we'll see the final numbers but it is a sign that democratic enthusiasm for this election is quite low. >> bill: that's right. the last two june primaries in california turnout was 38 and 40%. this is considerably lower than that. something to watch. an interesting data point we'll call it. thank you, josh, nice to see you today in washington, d.c. >> thanks, bill. >> dana: an alleged hazing at a college fraternity that left a student unable to see, talk or walk. details still ahead. can social media addiction ruin your health? the family of one teenager thinks so and is going to court to prove it.
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a-teen is suing instagram metaalleging the addictive comment caused her to suffer from self-harm, depression, suicidal thoughts. the teen, alexis is here along with her mom and their attorney. thank you for being here. alexis we're glad you are here. tell us about when you first were able to get on instagram. you were only 11 years old? >> yes. thank you for having us. i really appreciate it. yes, i was 11 years old when i got my first instagram at the time. i downloaded it without my parents' knowledge or consent and instagram's age of consent to join the platform is 13 years of age or older. and it started as something very innocent. it started for my web kins. the little stuffed animal and
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slowly took a dark turn and it started showing me fitness content and the second i engaged with the fitness content it started showing me eating disorder content and very sickly girls and boys and skinnying sick people. when you are 11 years old and seeing the content daily it is troubling. >> dana: when you were 12 you drew a picture of yourself crying on the floor next to your phone with words like stupid, ugly, fat, and that was emanating from the screen and kill yourself in a thought bubble. obviously ex streaming disturbing, kathleen. as you started to see your daughter change did you know what to do and what the source was? >> as parents we did everything we were told was right to do. we would go through her phone every day. we put the software on there, the parent protection controls, we took the phone out of the
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room at night. she wasn't allowed to have it. no matter what we did, she found a workaround to it. when she was younger, she was confident and outgoing and she was an advocate and stand up to any bullies but very slowly she started withdrawing, became very depressed and anxious and aggressive. and very sad. and we did everything we could. we went to multiple experts and doctors to get her the help that she needed to get better. but back at that time, the doctors didn't know that it was social media. it was never identified as social media. they said -- we took the device away and while we were going through all this it saddens me that metabehind closed doors was doing their own studies that were never released until last year where they are studying and had full knowledge that their product had an algorithm to push certain
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harmful content toward children and here i am, my husband and i, we're one set of parents trying to keep our daughter safe and alive. they were behind closed doors trying to keep her engaged and online and make money off of her. >> dana: matthew, this is the basis of your lawsuit, is that correct? >> yes, it is. meta deliberately designed the product to be addictive to young children. they say tweens are herd animals. they look at children as animals and used conditioning methods to try to addict them to their products and do whatever it could to keep them online even if it meant steering them toward destructive content. the only thing unusual about her case is she is here to talk about it. >> dana: i'm glad you are here. do you remember yourself as your mom described you before you had that account?
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>> very vaguely. a lot of it is very foggy and i do suffer from a lot of post traumatic stress from everything that happened and there was a lot that happened. you know, i really implore that people look into the facebook documents. if you do, metaadmits in their own documents they make body issues worse for one in three girls. they are aware of what's happening and if i could summarize how i'm feeling i would quote my favorite artist halsey. i'm tired and angry but somebody should be. >> dana: shout out to you alexis, kathleen and matthew, thank you for being here. >> thank you. >> dana: fox news alert topping the news. inflation in may hotter than expected up 8.6% year-over-year, a big jump from
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8.3% last month. shelter, gas and food the biggest contributors. summit of the americas day three focusing on migration. vice president and appointed borer czar kamala harris is skipping today's event. u.s. marshals intensify a search for a murder suspect elevated to a major case. why that's significant. we'll have more on those stories throughout the hour. first a severe case of alleged fraternity hazing at the university of missouri leaving the student blind, paralyzed and unable to speak and his family is speaking out. welcome to a new hour of "america's newsroom." i'm dana perino. >> bill: happy friday to you. i'm bill hemmer, good morning at home. the brutal incident leaving 19-year-old danny on the edge of death with severe and permanent brain damage. horrific surveillance video obtained by abc news. hard to watch. his family filing an additional lawsuit after settling claims
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against the fraternity and 22 defendants. >> dana: we're live in the midwest bureau with an update. >> good morning to you. this heartbreaking story is now a criminal investigation. danny was 18 years old in october when he and other pledges took part in a right wall at the file gamma delta fraternity house. this video was given to abc news. it shows danny and other pledges blindfolded being led downstairs and each given an entire bottle of vlad -vodka to driven. then they poured beer down danny's throat. he is taken to a sofa and left there struggling to move and lying still unresponsive until he is eventually taken to the hospital not breathing and in cardiac arrest with a blood alcohol level more than five times the legal driving limit.
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due to severe brain damage he can no longer walk, talk, or see. last month the family settled a civil lawsuit with the fraternity and 23 other defendants but they want to see more serious criminal charges filed as well. so far county prosecutors have only charged one fraternity member with miss demeanors. >> i do personally want to see specific kids get felony ds. it will wake them up. miss demeanor is not going to wake them up. >> an investigation found multiple violations of the school's standard of conduct by the fraternity which has now been closed. the school is reviewing hout to mitigate bad behavior on campus. safety is the highest priority. we need to provide education and services that work together to support safer behavior and overall culture.
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fraternity says danny should not have been put in such a situation. the international fraternity prohibits hazing and alcohol to minors and expects all members to follow the law and policies. we support anyone being held accountable for their conduct and the consequences that may result. the university of missouri can't share details of what specific disciplinary actions it has taken. 13 students have received proposed disciplinary sanctions that could lead to suspension or expulsion. dana. >> dana: his mother now takes care of him full-time. thank you, garrett. >> bill: on your money, breaking news on red hot inflation jumping higher than expected. the cpi, consumer price index for may up 8.6% from a year earlier. prices climbing for just about everything and you can feel it every day. the cost for energy, food, housing leading the way. to our friday money team steve moore and austan ghouls bee.
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how do you see it, steve? >> i've been saying the record will show that i've been warning about this inflation getting worse now for the last nine months that we've been doing this with austan and you go back nine months ago or a year ago, a lot of these economists including seven nobel prize economists said don't worry, we won't inflation. we don't have to worry about inflation with the build back better bill and the spending bills. now we're seeing inflation get worse, not better. it is not temporary or transitory. it is causing real hardship for people and seems to me the biden administration has no strategy now to deal with it. >> bill: let's go, what is the strategy or is it at all? >> the thing about these numbers is it was higher than expected but the new months of inflation, which the new information is lower than the
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last year. so hopefully we will have reached some peak inflation. i don't think that you can really say that at this point the inflation increases are coming from spending because government spending is now going down compared to last year quite significantly. so what we've got to put a focus and it is not going to be comfortable for the administration, is that the economy turnaround depends critically on issues of what is happening in the war and what is happening on the supply chain. try to slow demand but that's not what is causing the inflation. >> bill: kudlow was on last hour and said europe has inflation, too but ours is three times europe and attributed to government spending was the case he was making. put up the numbers. food 10%, electricity 12, new cars 12 1/2, gasoline 50, on
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the board to my right, thank you. also, steve, the white house said initially it was transitory. and then the white house said it was leveling off. that was over the past month. clearly it is not, gentlemen. so that goes to a messaging problem and now i would suggest, steve, a credibility problem. >> couldn't agree more. it was exactly my point. that every narrative that has come out of this white house from day one has been wrong on inflation and let's not forget, bill, that when donald trump left office the economy was doing pretty well. we were coming out of covid and the inflation rate was 1.6%. now it is 8.6%. do people think it's a coincidence? i really believe that the match that lit this forest fire was the runaway spending. republicans are responsible for it, too, bill. they aren't saints on this, either. we have to get spending down. we have to stop this war on american energy and get rid of some of the regulations and that will help bring it down.
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austan, i don't see biden proposing any of that. >> bill: last point, austan. >> look, the government spending as i said. ist is all about delta from last year. the deficit will shrink by more than it ever has in history. it is not the spending. if you look at inflation in europe, inflation in europe is higher than in the united states. so i do think that the messaging issues that if you get up and say predictions like inflation is about to go away and it doesn't go away, you undermine your credibility and the administration is suffering from that problem. i think you've got to -- if you can stabilize or reduce the impact in war in ukraine, then the gas price part and food price part could go away. other than that, i think people are going to be in a tough -- >> wouldn't it make some sense
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to increase our output here to stop all of the war against american oil and gas and get it up by two or three million barrels a day? why do we have to go to opec for our oil? it makes no sense to me. >> bill: i'm out of time myself. we are watching the fed. some are saying they could raise as much as a point at their next meeting. somebody we'll keep an eye on for that. austan, thanks, have a good weekend and steve as well. >> dana: protestors spent the night by barrett's home. president biden doesn't have anything to say about the assassination attempt against kavanaugh. >> they charged nicholas roske of attempted murder after he showed up in front of kavanaugh's home this week with a pistol and knife. president biden condemned the
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attack in the strongest terms. on capitol hill republicans say the threat is evidence enough. the house should pass a bipartisan bill providing security for the nine justices. house speaker nancy pelosi says democrats want changes to the bill. the senate passed last month and said there is already increased protection for justices and their families. >> they are protected. this is not about the justices, it is about staff and the rest. >> this is common sense, non-controversial legislation. it passed in this chamber unanimously. but house democrats have spent weeks blocking. >> house democrats say they want to add supreme court staff to the protection list and consider their bill early next week. protests in front of justice's homes. the department of homeland security says a decision
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overturning roe could prompt a surge in violence across the country. thank you. >> dana: bill. >> bill: more breaking news. covid front now. "wall street journal" reporting starting sunday president biden ordered that the testing for covid if you are traveling overseas trying to come back to the u.s. will no longer be required. that is a big sigh of relief for travelers all over the world. you were one of them a few weeks ago. >> dana: you spend your entire vacation worried about it and spend hundreds of dollars to make sure you have a negative test coming back. bipartisan demand that biden do this. >> i have a younger sister with a group in france. one is her daughter. they spent 600 euros two days ago to get their negative test to get on the plane to come home. you are exactly right how it affects so many and the worry you have while you are traveling. >> dana: you worked so hard in order to get your vacation to
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see some beautiful sites, eat great food and get a break. the whole time you are stressed. a good outcome. it should have come sooner but let's applaud it. it will start sunday. >> bill: just coming off our money team, dana, the dow is down almost 2 1/2 percent now. >> dana: not cause of our money team. >> bill: we don't think, right? 788 on the big board. >> dana: because of the high inflation number. a massive caravan of migrants is heading our way. the crisis at the border, vice president harris isn't paying any attention. plus this. >> great white shark right off the coast of sea isle. look at this monster. >> bill: what would summer be without the great white. how close this baby was to the shore. we'll talk to the man on board that boat later this hour.
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hers stems from her spitting match with another employee over a sexist tweet. she is not going quietly. the system is working for them, what about for everyone else? howard kurtz fox news media analyst host of "media buzz". good morning to you. what are we to learn from this now? >> at first it seemed like all the trash talking was high school. now sounds like it's an all-out food fight in the cafeteria and a big time embarrassment for the "washington post". she sued the post for discrimination a year ago, going after political reporter for stupidly retweeting a sexist joke about women. the paper suspended weigel for a month and he apologized. it escalated. others jumped in and the principal had to step in. she put out a memo saying cut it out. stop attacking each other
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publicly. this woman kept it up in a tweet storm. she was fired yesterday for misconduct including insubordination. >> dana: one of the things that's happening is the news rooms like "the new york times" just a couple of months ago a memo went out to reporters say you don't have to be on twitter all day. we would prefer you are doing the reporting we pay you to do. i wonder if other news rooms will say nice experiment. thanks for driving the website but it is becoming a self-destructive policy at this point. >> look, there is a whole new generation of woke reporters who feel like they are entitled to share every thought they have including their own paper on twitter. i happen to think that respectful disagreement is fine but what did she think would happen as she poked the eye? >> dana: she has been doing this a long time. not the first. >> another reporter wanted to
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move on and she went after him. the inmates were in charge of the asylum. the new editor had no choice but to take action or look like she could not control her newsroom. what is sad, 50 years ago we were up at the anniversary now, the "washington post" reporters were helping to drive richard nixon out of power during watergate and now it seems like they spend a lot of time going after each other. >> bill: weigel has been suspended for a month without pay even though he took down the tweet. >> dana: and apologized. >> he said he was sorry publicly and private. he should know, we all should know by now you can get in big time trouble in real life for what you say on twitter. >> bill: that's the point, howie. if you live by a zero tolerance policy, you will suffer for it. >> some said how come he had to pay a price at the "washington
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post" but felicia did not? it was a slow motion self-destructive act on her part and that's why we are talking about it now. it is happening in lots of places. >> dana: we'll see where she pops up next. thanks. >> bill: see you sunday. >> dana: kamala harris leaving the summit of the americas and world leaders shift their focus to migration today. the january 6 committee showing new video from the riot at its first prime time hearing. more on the key takeaways. >> i was slipping in people's blood and catching people as they fell. it was carnage.
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you're an owner. that means that your goals are ours too. and vanguard retirement tools and advice can help you get there. that's the value of ownership. ♪♪♪ my name is austin james. as a musician living with diabetes, fingersticks can be a real challenge. that's why i use the freestyle libre 2 system. with a painless, one-second scan i know my glucose numbers without fingersticks. now i'm managing my diabetes better and i've lowered my a1c from 8.2 to 6.7. take the mystery out of managing your diabetes and lower your a1c. now you know. try it for free at freestylelibre.us >> bill: the summit of the americas if you can call it that based on the turnout turning its focus to immigration today. kamala harris has already
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skipped town. jeff paul is there on what's happening. jeff, hello. >> bill, president biden says the u.s. along with other latin american countries will be making a joint announcement later today when it comes to immigration. they are calling it the los angeles declaration. the president touched on it a little bit yesterday calling it a transformative agreement that will likely bring a lot of countries in the western hemisphere together. >> president biden: to increase opportunities for safe and orderly migration. to crack down on criminals and human traffickers who prey on desperate people and coordinate specific concrete actions to secure our borders and resolve to share challenges. >> however, critics point out the president is waiting until the last day of the summit to address migration. some also making note of the countries left out which caused leaders of other countries critical to the immigration crisis not to attend.
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mexico's president decided against coming after cuba, nicaragua and venezuela were excluded and so did the leaders of el salvador, honduras and guatemala. argentina's president clearly isn't happy about how this summit is going. >> we definitely would have wished for a different summit of the americas. the silence of those who are absent is calling to us. so this does not happen again. >> the president will have his plate very full today. not only will he be addressing immigration, but he will be talking about inflation at the port of los angeles. bill. >> bill: we'll wait for those comments. jeff paul still in l.a. thank you, sir. >> trump has only asked me for two things. my vote and he asked me to come on january 6th. >> he asked for us to come to d.c. that big things were going to happen.
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>> what i saw was just a war scene. it was something like i had seen out of the movies. >> dana: quick look at some of the moments from the january 6 committee's first prime time hearing last night. let's bring in andy mccarthy, fox news contributor. thank you for watching last night. give us your takeaway from what you saw. >> well, i think they have a very powerful story to tell, dana, but they've undercut it by not having a fair fact finding proceeding. i used to prosecute bad guys for a long time. we even let terrorists and scam artists have their own day in court where they get to present their own side of the story. here what you have is a committee that's all -- the only credential that unifies the whole committee is they're anti-trump. which is a perfectly fine attitude to have but there is another side to the story and in a normal fact finding process they would get the
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chance to tell their side of it. >> bill: i was going into it thinking about what the democratic member of the committee said a couple months ago he would blow the roof off. i was waiting for a blockbuster. perhaps some people perceived a blockbuster and others did not. but if you had a blockbuster would you not reveal it, given the considerably large audience that was watching on all the networks last night? >> yeah, i think that's right, bill. also look, what we know about the people who were on this committee particularly the democrats, a lot of whom were on important committees in connection with russia gate. if there was some blockbuster information we wouldn't have heard already we would have heard it. they managed to get that kind of information out. we have a more graphic depiction of the things that we know already and what i continue to be baffled by is why they were afraid to let a couple of pro-trump people be
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on the committee. if you have a powerful story to tell, which they do, what difference does it make if jim jordan has a tirade every couple of days. so what? get to the bottom of the case. >> dana: i was going to ask you about the officer, very compelling and i'm so sorry that it happened to her. she is the one who testified last night. one of the things that the committee consistently is talking about is the officers. now, the treatment of the officers throughout the video is horrible. i can't stand it. but some of the fact pattern there was not challenged last night? >> right. dana, they didn't even pretend there would be cross examination, right? understand cross examination doesn't mean you have to try to take someone's head off. you make the points you need to make. no one who has a brain who is a litigator would have got after that impressive officer last night. but some of her testimony was
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designed to suggest that brian sicknick in particular, the officer who had a stroke, was killed or died because of the riot. and if you had someone cross examining her they would have pointed out that did you know that the medical examiner said he died of natural causes? did you know that there was no blunt force trauma? did you know a member of this committee, jamie raskin, filed a brief in the senate impeachment trial of trump a month after january 6 which suggested that brian sicknick got his head bashed in when that didn't happen? you would make those points to show, number one, the story is more complicated than they say and number two, maybe they aren't the most trustworthy repositories of the facts. >> bill: i found last night interesting. i don't know what they'll do on monday. 10:00 a.m. eastern time. it's like watching a trial is what you are trying to describe to us. people can listen to both sides
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and debate it. it almost becomes more interesting because of that. nonetheless that won't be the case here. think about the great culture trial we were just watching for six week, right? heard and depp. we heard arguments for months who was right and who was lying. nonetheless we'll see what happens on monday and wait for that testimony. >> dana: thank you, andy. >> bill: andy mccarthy. now, texas yoga teacher on the run wanted for murder. u.s. marshals, where are they searching for her today? we'll tell you. a bizarre mystery involving a cult, missing couple found dead and the baby girl given up for adoption. how she was found more than 40 years later. >> don't give up. don't ever give up. just keep believing in god and his miracles because it does happen. with merrill. moving his money into his investment account
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>> dana: missing baby found alive more than 40 years after her parents were murdered in texas. the infant known as baby holly is 42 years old and lives in oklahoma. she was dropped off at a church by two women who said they belonged to a cult. the bodies of her parents were found in 1981 but remained unidentified until last year. dna tracing revealed their
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identities leading to the whereabouts of holly. incredible story. >> bill: we played that sound bite and you go wow, wow. >> dana: a good outcome for the people that were wondering for years where she was. >> bill: 20 before the hour. another mystery, check this out. >> if she is willing to gun down this innocent 24-year-old cyclist over a cheating boyfriend, who else will she kill to save her own skin? don't just think of her as a defenseless female yoga teacher. this woman was armed with a gun with a silencer. don't underestimate her. >> bill: a nationwide search for a woman out of texas and killing her rival and it's upgraded to a case. caitlin armstrong is accused of killing moriah wilson a month ago. the next day police questioned caitlin and then release her.
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on the 14th she hops a flight from austin to houston and laguardia. on the 17th arrest warrant is filed, made public and the next day she is spotted apparently in new jersey at newark liberty airport but no record of her taking a flight using her own name. so effectively she vanished. lenny depaul, former chief inspector and commander of the future task force in new york. good morning to you. what is your best clue? >> good morning. well, good morning, bill. that's the million dollar question. what is our best clue? it was elevated to the u.s. marshals to a major case. these violent criminals now get elevated and get a lot of attention, manpower, state-of-the-art equipment, money. there is a $5,000 reward right now. i'm sure it will increase and as you know, bill, streets talk. you will give up your best
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friend sometimes for 5 or 10,000. hopefully they can put it to bed shortly. >> bill: do we know who she knew in the new york area that would have drawn her here for a period ever time? >> >> i'm not aware of that. she may have contacts. she has money, maybe some resources. she is a traveler. but she is dropping bread crumbs. she leaves texas, ends up at laguardia, then newark airport and becomes a ghost. was it it is anyone's guess where she is. the u.s. marshal service is the best in the business. they are connecting the dots and hopefully like i said they bring this thing home sooner rather than later. >> bill: maybe the diversion
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tactic at newark to throw you off the sense. how often is it when you can travel under an alias in today's day in age. >> it makes it very difficult even with crash. our specialized units within the u.s. marshal service are working magic. technical operations group are the best in the business. she is -- give the devil her due she got a jump start on law enforcement before the warrant was issued. it is expected. she has gone dark and off the grid. what i always like to say you can run but you can't hide. when you run you will only go to jail tired. >> bill: good point. we call it a love triangle. what was the motivation for murder allegedly? >> that was it. thank god the ballistics did match at the scene of the crime to that 9 millimeter sig sauer
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found in her apartment. all eyes are on her. the warrant has been issued. u.s. marshals got an unlawful flight to avoid persecution warrant. it is all hands on deck and full-court press. >> bill: her car was spotted in austin, texas. who knows where she is today. fair analysis, thank you, lenny. >> dana: love the u.s. marshals. imagine running into this off your boat. a great white shark coming too close to comfort for a fisherman. he will join us next. the guy, not the shark. >> sharks patrol these waters. don't let your fingers dangle in the water. don't worry about the day glow orange life preserver. it won't save you. ts you refinance up to 100% of your home's value.
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of the journey of transitioning at age 5. bryan llenas hopes their experience can help others. >> if you saw me walking down the street you wouldn't think anything different. >> 14-year-old is a typical southern california teenager. and along with his mom, dad and sister are a typical family. the only difference in rylan's eyes is what this family can mean to the tens of thousands of kids under 18 to identify as transgender. >> we put our story out there so people could see that there is another family out there that is going through what we're going through or there is another family who is proud of who they are. >> before rylan could speak he managed to tell his parents that he is a boy. >> i could see it. it wasn't him trying to be a brat. it was like painful. it was painful for him to have
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to wear feminine clothing and for us constantly telling him you with a girl. >> when he came out at age 5 a few years later he had the full support of his parents. zblien itionly there was some pushback trying to understand this. >> we were confused like most people are. we thought gender and sexuality were the same thing. those two things are different and children actually do recognize their gender identity very young. some of them, not all. >> they listened to rylan and her conservative faith zbloo. for me it is a deep spiritual belief he believes in god and he created us the way he wanted us and he created rylan just the way he is. >> they listened to families. they met in support groups. >> there was a father sitting across the table saying you have no idea how lucky you are to be here. i didn't consider myself lucky to be there. he said our child had displayed
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this gender dysphoria or gender misalignment at the same age rylan has and we didn't listen and pushed back. >> that pushback led that child to turn to self-harm as a teenager which 60% of trans and non-binary kids engage in. more than 50% consider suicide. >> that was the turning point. i didn't want to see rylan go through that. >> i would rather have a living son than a dead daughter. if we had pushed back and done what a lot of parents do, i don't think we would have either one of the kids that you see before you here today. >> allowing him to live authentically and true to himself and be who he feels like he is. when you get to know rylan he see how proud and confident he is of himself. >> his story got international attention in 2014 when a family youtube video went viral and hillary has written a book called raising rylan. >> i never thought i would be
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known for this as well as i am but really just a small part of who i am. >> he brushes things off his shoulder. he moves on in his life and everything he has been through he learned to do that and really good at it. i could never do that? >> they believe sharing their story could make a difference in another child's life. something they learned from that support group father nearly a decade ago. >> i'm hear to make the ride smoother for others. you might be struggling right now but we believe in you. we might not know you or where you live but, you know, we understand you and we believe in you. >> what extraordinary courage. i want to thank the family for speaking to us. it is not easy when a time when trans gepder issues have been
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politicized. people are afraid of what they don't understand. this family hope it leads to more love and understanding. >> bill: interesting story. thank you. update now on douglas kennedy's report on plans by the biden administration to ban all recreational skup fishing in recreational waters for the first time ever. >> you would usually be preparing for skup season. instead it's disaster. >> your father was captain of this boat and your grandfather and they all fished for skup. >> that's three generations that pishd for it. we depend on it. >> many of your clients rely on scup to feed their families. >> they do. they can't afford to buy a boat or afford the price of fish in the market anymore.
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>> officials reducing course. one inch to 10 inches and 50 fish per person limit remains unchanged. >> dana: a good outcome for those fisherman. those are my people on the jersey shore. it hurt a lot of families unnecessarily and good they pulled it back. >> bill: good correction. >> look at that great white shark. oh my god. >> dana: he might have needed a bigger boat. fisherman and his son nearly running into a 12 foot great white shark off the coast of new jersey. is that the first time you've seen something like that, jim? >> yeah, first time for sure. haven't seen a great white like that before in my life and i doubt many people will. >> your boat is 23 feet long.
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this sucker was 12 feet long. your eyes had to be popping out of your head when you saw that? >> yeah, definitely was a little nerve racking. it turned towards the boat and got really close. i was like all right, i had enough. we circled it for five minutes and it was very cool to see up close but then again a little nerve-wracking when you have your kids on the boat and the shark is half the size of the boat. >> dana: hemmer and i revealed that neither of us have ever seen jaws. my parents wouldn't let me watch it. >> bill: i choose not to watch it because i want to swim in the ocean. >> dana: this is a world renowned movie. people see like this and your mind might take you back to what you know about that experience and watching that film. >> yeah. the film was a lot different.
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that jaws was a lot bigger but definitely brought back memories watching it. seeing the shark. >> bill: apologize for the interruption. you told a reporter the videos don't do it justice. what don't we see that you saw from that boat? >> it's tough because when my son spotted it, it just looked like a fairly large fish in the ocean and he saw the fin. when we pulled up to it just seeing it in perspective was just a lot bigger than what it looks like in the picture. a couple of videos you can see where it looks pretty big from a distance. when we pulled up next to it and got close to it, it was very big. half a size of the boat. >> dana: you have a steady hand for the video camera. >> he does. we were all videotaping and it was amazing.
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it was amazing especially being out on the ocean trying to get a video of that and trying to control the boat. my son is 15. i didn't want him falling overboard or anybody else falling overboard. i was doing a lot there trying to videotape. >> bill: thanks for the fish story, jim. if folks on the jersey shore are going into the water this weekend, how far offshore were you? >> i was less than a mile. we were heading in. >> bill: i hoped you would say five miles. >> apparently the great white sharks swim up and down the coast every day or if not -- i don't really know i'm not an expert. apparently they're up and down the coast multiple times and it was very docile and didn't see aggressive. >> dana: that's just how we like them.
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looks like you have a beautiful day. enjoy your time on the boat if you go out. >> going fishing now. >> dana: thank you, bye, jim. great guy. nice life, right? >> bill: yeah. >> dana: are you questioning your life choices right now? >> some days, yeah, don't you? >> dana: wow, why am i sitting here with her. >> bill: it's 75 degrees outside. >> dana: have a good weekend. "the faulkner focus" is next. >> harris: inflation emergency. we now have an engine sucking the life out of the american dream. that crushing engine is president biden's brand of economics killing our chances to drive, thrive, and ride. inflation running hotter than it has in more than a generation. president biden could not have put the nation in a worst place if he tried. he is on the road today. he may make remarks this hour when he boards marine one fo
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