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tv   The Faulkner Focus  FOX News  July 5, 2022 8:00am-9:00am PDT

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63 or something like that? >> bill: this guy has got skills. i mean he's really good. he shows up the play. >> dana: i wonder if the protester got arrested. we should find that out. nice to be back with you. >> dana: aren't you glad to be back? >> bill: i'll bring the mustard tomorrow. >> dana: harris faulkner is up >> harris: with a fox news alert freedom quieted by the ripping sounds of gunfire and terror. this our new information on the july 4th parade massacre in our nation's heartland. i am harris faulkner, you are in the "faulkner focus." [gunshots] of gunmen on a rooftop murdering parade goers. kills at least six people, enters more than 30 others including children.
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this is highland park, an affluent chicago suburb known for its safety. we certainly have great cops there. four hours yesterday those police hunted down the person of interest. arresting 21-year-old aspiring rapper with a very long history, what you can see online, violent postings, had been there a while. they caught him about 5 miles north of the mass shooting. identified him as 21-year-old, again, violence online is what marks his history. those who managed to escape the bullets raining down became witnesses to this unforgettable crime skin. >> we saw people falling, people screaming, people going all different directions perry migrant daughter said to me pop but don't let the bad guys shoot me. and she's two years old. >> daughter, mommy i don't want to die.
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closer holding her saying okay, honey, it's all right. keep running. >> harris: you can see on the screen right now the ages 8-85 years old the authorities have publicly identified two of the deceased, 73-year-old grandfather mexican national, jackie, wife, mom, staff member at a local synagogue. people say jacket was warm and kind. trumbull left for us us from highland park so every hour so we get an update with the latest? >> harris, we are expecting another update in an hour or so where we will hear from police and we are hoping there will be able to answer some of the many questions we still have this morning. here is what we do know. police say the gunman opened fire on the crowd below from the roof of a downtown business, just after 10:00 yesterday morning at highland park's fourth of july parade. they say he climbed up there on an unsecured ladder that was attached to that building.
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police described the gun he used as a high-powered rifle, but didn't give any more details than that. the mayor of highland park, though, told "the today show" he legally obtained that weapon. people at the parade yesterday, including parents and young children in strollers, had to run for cover is gunshots rang out. >> he started shooting again we ran behind the building and i put my son in the dumpster. he sat there with the dog and i went back to look for the rest of my family. left them with it was horrible. went back to go people were shot on the ground. >> after the attack that massive manhunt ensued, officer with the neighboring police department spotted the suspect's car 5 miles from the police route. is running a medicament of custody in the middle-of-the-road around 6:30 yesterday evening. that manhunt lasted about eight
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hours in total. police identified the gunmen as robert cray mo the third, he grew up around the community of highland park. he went by the wrap name awake the wrapper. there are conflicting reports about whether he was already on the law enforcement's radar but he had come as you mention previously posted disturbing and violent pictures and video on social media. one depicted what looked like the aftermath of a school shooting. some of those disturbing posts have since been taken off of several social media platforms. the big question we still have today, harris, and we will begin an hour or so when the police deliver the press conference is why the gunmen opened fire on the fourth of july in his own community? harris question marks be to you very much. today's "new york post" cover was a very powerful image, and headline, fourth of july terror. for more on the continuing investigation right now, phil andrew, former fbi agent, global security expert is also from highland park area.
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former military as well, good to see you. i should say your specialty with hostage taking, i believe, with the fbi, correction there. i want to talk a little bit about what we could have known about this individual because i'm reading now he created something in a video called "are you awake?" in the main character was a stick figure that looks kind of like this kid like somebody new things weren't right with him. and may not been the police department, but there is a lot of violence coming out of this individual online. >> we often see this, these are what we call preinstance indicators. some level of behavior that the community, the virtual or local community, has some knowledge of. it just doesn't get to the right people for the intervention, whether it be a social intervention or law enforcement intervention, or the ability to leverage their law enforcement tools red flag laws which allow
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them to take guns from dangerous people. >> harris: you know, want to talk a little bit about when this happens in your own area. i am looking kind of at your background right now. i mean, behavioral analysis is something that comes with the territory they you did for so many years. why his home town, potentially? if it turns out they can prove a case against this guy, and the sky went after his own neighbors and friends in school teachers and the like, what is it that we know about an individual like that? >> they are striking out. they are trying to cause pain and sometimes what they are doing is expressing the pain they feel and the turmoil they feel internally. they are reflecting in on the community. with obvious tragic outcomes here. six people killed, many others injured, a community that is just devastated and fear.
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so, we often see people acting out to get attention for things they were unable to get attention for before. but, careful social listening and community awareness, and law enforcement intervention, and even social service intervention often can often ramp somebody from these dangerous behavior buildups before they result in a violent event like this. >> harris: that is such an important term you mentioned, careful social listening. that is kind of a reverberation, if you will, or a way of just casting out that if you see something, say something, yes, but if you know someone is doing something, and you know that individual personally or is in your neighborhood, you must say something now. because their anger could turn on you. you are the closest target. you live in town. the gun debate, again, front and center. this is just unfortunate.
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they always do. >> the difficult about the political discussion as this is our 304th mass shooting of the year. are we talking about the policy that was for addressing texas or buffalo? or now? >> harris: hold on a second, let's look at the policy for only. they have some of the strictest gun laws in the nation. it is given an a grade, phil. universal background checks. gun owner licensing very lost and stolen firearm reporting. i mean, when you look at this list waiting periods, minimum age law, open carry reporting, these are some of the things that people say work. but the things you are talking about might have worked in this instance depend on all of us. >> that's right. this is really a conference of problem. there are some tools around violence prevention, there are some tools about community intervention. there are certainly some tools
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of just being good at community members and recognizing that somebody might be in distress. seeing something posted online, being a company that runs a social media company and is doing the things that allow for people to report and flag distressful posts and behavior very quickly so that the community, law enforcement, and even neighbors, can do the things to support people before they become so disconnected, so despondent, that they are striking out the community. >> harris: that is so important. you have to give people a way of doing it and also protect their own privacy and themselves. i mean, i know the nature of where we are right now, certain members of the community walking away from crime because, you know, they are being let go on serious crime. we don't want to make other people targets simply by standing up. luxe, chicago is a lot of problems. that particular part of our
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nation has been hurting for a while, highland park, affluent suburb of chicago, this mass shooting the worst of the horrible weekend, but there was so much violence around it, phil. is a democrat led city, we want to point that out because they are mayor of chicago is getting ready to speak at a little while. allen park is not even her play and the cops started their job, but chicago is a place where pretty much the criminals run wild. crowds in chicago attacking police officers and their patrol cars, kicking the vehicles, shooting fireworks on two's separate incidents. this is just on the holiday. the grim police statistics here show 51 shootings, 68 victims, so 51 shooting incidents, many more people because you and more people involved in each incident, eight people died today from all of that. let's look at philadelphia where the district attorney is facing a push, two officers shot during the fourth of july festival, photograph of one of the
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officers captures the bullet hole, both are thickly held hospital. new york city, we see it too. 13 people shot, one killed in separate incidents. minneapolis, police still investigating a shooting at a local park for fourth of july celebration street chaotic, a people's though my call also lists in critical condition. so, what is happening? i mention all that when district attorney and soft on crime policies we are seeing in new york and other places. >> when you break down the data and you start analyzing some of the increases in violence, one of the things you noticed is that the violence is really concentrated in certain areas. there is a certain number of people that are responsible for repeat crime. in those cases, what you really need is for the authorities to make strong judgments about who needs to be taken off the
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street, and all the interventions that might be available to them if they were on the street, start delivering those, right? really think about this with an inpatient/outpatient scenario. that some people are such a great risk to themselves and others that they really need to be treated in a custodial place. >> harris: phil, we know this. the law enforcement of this. they let back out. >> that is a difficulty there, right? we need accountability. you can't say the police hey, please go out and risk your life and do 12-hour shifts with no days off, but we are not going to fall through and hold people who are presenting themselves as a danger to themselves or others. >> harris: phil andrews, thank you, i know you've been with us on fox news for the last day or so of this breaking news. helping us along the way to understand what is next. what you just talked about is what we need. because it is starting to feel a
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good battle. the victims against the criminals. thank you very much. actually, i'm going easy on that. we are beyond starting to feel like. this is, this is the victims versus the criminals. it's war. president biden, shocking listeners during his fourth of july speech yesterday. only the briefest passing mention of the deadly mass shooting, including a big old gaping wrong, a fact he got wrong. about the highland park massacre that it had just happened hour before he spoke. the thinly veiled attacks on florida's governor. >> then he dissented to make himself relevant, it's not like they like the way he handled but would go, homelessness, or crime or freedom. the irony of so many californians, they want to red states, they gone to ron desantis. >> harris: the california
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democrat asking people who fled california for florida's freedoms to come back to kelly. how is that going, governor? florida republican congresswoman catt came into focus next. a new day in america. air force, pararescue, five years. home values are at record highs. the newday 100 va loan lets veterans borrow up to 100% of their home's total value. and take an average of $60,000 cash. 25% more cash than they'd get at a bank. united states marine corps, aviation maintenance, five years. that's why veterans from every branch... united states army, military police, eight years. ...from every specialty... marines, infantry, four years. ...from every length of service... united states army, strategic intelligence officer, twenty-eight years. ...trust newday usa to make the most
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>> president biden: i signed the first real gun safety law in years, things will get better still but not without more her work together. you all heard about what happened. you all heard about what happened today. each day we are reminded there is nothing guaranteed about our democracy. >> harris: was he tired? lost in the moment? actually wrong? i don't know about the first two but definitely yes on being wrong. making only the most fleetingng,
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illinois, during his fourth of july address. guess, that's what he meant. but he did tell her to the bipart legislation passed by congress last month andime attacking the u.s. supreme court over recent decisions. here is a tweet, the president said jill and i are shocked about this senseless gun violence that yet again has brought grief to an american community. i will not give up fighting the epidemic of gun violence. so, we got on the topic. two hours after the speech, president biden returned to the white house lawn to lead in "silent moment, a slight moment of silence." and then this. >> president biden: hey, guys, a serious note. you know, there was a shooter as you well know. in highland park in chicago. they have, i talked to the governor and the mayor who are
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giving all the help they can possibly give, including the fbi and special services. >> harris: so much, the president called it special service, we think he may have meant secret service. i don't know what she was talking into the flowered dress the entire time he was talking about the massacre that happened in highland park that had to read off of a card because he couldn't remember where it was. then he falsely said authorities hadn't publicly share the name of the suspect. when they had already done so well before him. florida republican congresswoman catt carmack serves on the homeland security in there so we should get there because you put so much on the shoulders of our leader in building that's unfair, you want the job he's now. >> catt: s. absolutely. think about this, harris. they supposedly campaign for this job, supposedly 81 million people voted and this is what we have. a bumbling, stumbling, so-called
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commander in chief who just last month didn't even acknowledge d-day until about 9:30 p.m. i think it was about after a slew of criticisms of hey can we do recognize the significance of the day? so my surprised he, 1, confirmed the name of the town illinois was experiencing such chaos and anguish? no. my surprised he stumbled on the second venture on the lawn? no. it's just more a reflection of how disastrous this entire administration is, but more important to them to talk about their so-called political win that fancy so-called bipartisan gun reform package, and we see just how much this actually does. >> harris: i want to get to this because if he can to help a democrat come november or when any of them run by the time he gets out of office, the question becomes what will he be doing with this free time? certainly not studying about where the mass shootings are. california governor gavin buying
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an ad in florida on the fourth of july, the spots are urging people to live there to move to the golden state. come back from florida, he says. it comes after pandemic restrictions are people fleeing to california, fleeing california colorado to go to your state. while the ad never mentioned governor desantis by name takes aim at several of his signature achievements. >> freedoms under attack in your state. republican leaders are banning books, making it harder to vote, restricting speech in classrooms, even criminalizing women and doctors. i urge all of you living in florida to join the fight. >> harris: the press secretary for governor desantis governor desantis clapped back. a report from u-haul it ran out of vehicles for people leaving california. here is the quote, number one u-haul salesman of 2021 increasingly desperate to communicate with californians who fled his left lived dystopia from florida. sorry, you aren't getting those u-haul's back.
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congresswoman, your reaction? >> catt: listen. there is nothing in politics that you never punch down, right? you only punch up. if i was governor gavin newsom i would be desperate too. over 60,000 californians have gotten their florida drivers licenses in the last three years. in florida we are about freedom and faith and family, and california it looks like high taxes, just her vision homeless tent cities and apps you can download in order to report feces on the sidewalk area no wonder they are fleeing to the sunshine state is how the humidity at its 100%, us women don't appreciate that as you can see. [laughs] the thing is that is just crazy is if you seriously think that is going to work, it is just reflective in his policies. their 20th in the nation in education, we are number three. we have some of the lowest unemployment and low taxes in
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the country, this in the highest. this is a clear distinction and what works when it comes to governing a state. it is either trustor people, give people the option and the freedom to make the best decision for themselves and their families, or try to metal in everyone's lives. that is what california does, and florida he is led the charge in freedom, faith, and i am telling you, this could be america's governor even going and bigger in the future. i think that spells disaster. >> harris: that's an interesting point, the democrats look around i think david axelrod formally of the obama administration as an advisor pointed out maybe you'll be pete buttigieg, known as income on harris' name to to run in 24. and masoud joe biden, maybe this how he thinks thinks he's putting himself on a national scale. your thoughts? >> kat: think about this.
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he is related to nancy pelosi and nancy pelosi has approval ratings lower than joe biden if that were possible. when you look at the democratic bench, it's pretty empty. there's not a lot of depth of their. to look at the republican bench, we have president trump. we have governor desantis. mike pompeo pence, such a plethora of talented legislators and leaders that we are going to have a remarkable bench to choose from when it comes to '24. let's keep the faith and keep her eyes on the prize. >> harris: congresswoman cammack, 126 days for democrats or republicans. your hair looks fabulous by the way. >> kat: thanks, grow. >> harris: thank you. [laughter] well, our president may not of been focused on that at the moment, but the nation certainly was.
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we all are now, chicago in general has our attention. they have real problems there. terror on the fourth of july in highland park raining down on a parade on the chicago. people and spectators trying to escape. police holding a news conference at noon eastern to talk about the charges on the suspect now. we will bring you that live. i will also talk with an eyewitness who was there with his wife and children, such a beautiful family there. yeah, they were pretty close. you stay close. some great news for fellow veterans who own a home. with home values at record highs, now's the best time in history to turn your home equity into cash. up to $60,000 or more. the newday 100 loan lets you borrow 100% of your home's value: 25% more cash than you get at a bank. give them a call.
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>> harris: after the white house responded, jeff bezos for criticizing president biden's tweet calling on gas stations to simply lower their prices, "the wall street journal" and editorial board is now weighing in on what it calls side now makes 11. had donald trump issued such a
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command that would of said authoritarian. you'd think economic advisors would've informed him that large refiners own fewer than 5% of all gas stations in america. more than 60% are owned by an individual or family that has a single store. senator tom cotton with this. speak of the problem here is joe biden's policies. especially his energy policy, because the price of gasoline and electricity drives the cost of everything else. by the bite at a grocery store or walmart or anywhere else, it took energy to make it, took gas to drive it there, joe biden needs to look in the mirror at the white house if you want to find the problem and perhaps the solution for inflation. >> harris: joining me now, steve forbes, forbes media chairman and editor in chief, look i know the president spends a lot of time on trains going from scranton to d.c. for 50 years, but still had to have gone to a gas station, right? he had to kind of gas station. yes or no that is a mom-and-pop bobs operation most of the time.
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>> steve: i guess he didn't if he did it escaped his brain right now. this ignorance is really bad for the future. because when he says lower prices or else, that means this administration is considering price controls. or some other way to show before the election they will bring inflation down. this is typical of inflation. they always look for scapegoats. roman times they went after christians in medieval times it was which is. today it has made producers, gas stations owners, truck drivers, you name it. everyone but themselves. they should look in the mirror, that is what the problem is. >> harris: i am reading out of the inflation we stepped into this time in our american history could be very long-lasting. why is that? >> steve: eight has two sources in the book i recently coauthored call inflation, their turgor times of inflation paired nonmonetary and monetary. the nonmonetary type is when you get a disaster like we did with covid, he shut things down, destroy to the mock supply chains it compounded by waging
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war against the private sector, putting barriers in the way. they're now about to close on a big part of natural gas in texas, the production there of ozone regulations and some such thing. they're doing everything in the federal reserve clearly doesn't know how to fight inflation. they think they do it by suppressing the economy, making people poor or. so you put that together, not a good recipe. >> harris: we hear this term, even the president says i'm not going to tell the feds what to do and then that very afternoon, couple months ago, he had the fed chair over the white house from confused or what he means by are not going to tell them what to do. but i'm curious, the feds says it may not be able to do anything at this point. so, maybe they should just stop what they are doing. >> steve: what they should stop doing is raising interest rates. let the markets that interest rates like rent control. for the price of renting the money, leave it alone and stop this idea that suppressing the economy is the way you fight inflation.
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you start to lower prices and when you have a going out of business sale prices get marked down. that is the kind of mind-set they have. back in the 80s, mid-80s and early 90s. they did a different way, looking at commodity gold prices for a stable dollar. they should focus on keeping the dollar stable, and a sense up to the white house to put in tax cuts and deregulation and things to get the economy producing again. >> harris: you know they will not be cutting taxes. >> steve: like doctors, 200 years ago you got sick they used to bleed you. that got rid of praying and suffering of the got rid of the patient. that's what this crowd is doing today, hurting production instead of encouraging. >> harris: that is quite the visual, while my. here is the headline from your outlet, forbes.com, which reads inflation make it much worse the summer and could linger many years, experts warn. of this was kind of where i started. i want to get your thoughts on that. i want to mix in this idea that we are seeing gas prices come
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down just a little. i remember a couple of weeks ago, we were on and you said be careful with that because by taking away temporary gas tax, it's very gimmicky some of the things they're doing. >> steve: that's right. they are still not getting to the real problem. they still apparently don't know that saturdays don't have much unused capacity. the emery's don't have much unused oil capacity so when he goes over there and begs to increase production it's going to be months before the saudis can ramp that up. so he is suppressing supply here at home, doesn't realize we have energy shortages around the world, and so that is why he is going to go hat in hand to the saudis behind the scenes with your brand and help us out you know what help we will get. >> harris: back to inflation for a second because what you just said a still hanging in the air. that we have shortages around the world. biden says we have worse inflation around the world and that we shouldn't feel so bad about it. >> steve: oh, yes. he says there is suffering more, not actually true. germany has lower inflation
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rate, france is lower in inflation rates, switzerland, india, japan, numerous other countries. >> harris: what is he looking at? >> steve: good question. >> harris: [laughs] >> steve: he is not wearing glasses so i don't know what he is looking at. >> harris: steve forbes, thank you for breaking it down. one day he will deliver so much great news about the economy we will just fall over. >> steve: bring me up for >> harris: 626 days, thank you. live a fox news alert, president of the united states is honoring four vietnam war veterans of the white house right now paredes awarding them the medal of honor for risking their lives with their injured comrades, among them is you receiving posthumously after making the ultimate sacrifice buried jennifer griffin to see your life for us at the pentagon to break it all down, jennifer. >> hi, harris, the medal of honor sam when he begins moments ago at the white house. the soldiers represents the best of what it means to be american.
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among those being honored today, special assists class dwight birdwell of oklahoma, proud citizen of the cherokee nation who led his unit through bloody ambush at the start of the tet offensive in 1968. after his own machine gun exploded from enemy fire, bird will refuse to evacuate, staying behind to fend off the enemy with hand grenades. birdwell is the first native american to receive the medal of honor from the vietnam era. >> certainly proud to be an american citizen from i'm very, very proud to be cherokee. a group in the wood so to speak. the men who raised me always emphasized listen to the sounds around you. listen to the sounds of the birds, squirrels, even the cattle. they will tell you when something is going on. >> major john duffy of the fifth special forces group served four tours in a 1972 braved enemy fire to treat the enemy soldiers
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and coordinate air strikes. a pulitzer nominee, he is now an author and poet. >> they tried to evacuate me twice, medically evacuated. i refused because you had to have an american on-site to control american air assets. without american air access they would've overrun charlie within hours. >> staff sergeant edward teneshiro will be given post-post-op seamlessly. the 21-year-old crew chief ambulance after surviving the crash behind enemy lines in laos, fuji repeatedly exposed itself to enemy fire for hours to direct air strikes. before all these are american heroes but now they are recipients of the highest medal for valor, harris? >> harris: them always have when you break it all down for us, thank you, jennifer, good to see you.
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moments from now we will hear from law enforcement in island park illinois. as it is grieving and the rest of the nation grieves with them. watching for any answers to come after a gunman opened fire on the july 4th parade. six people are gone. dozens are injured. police say they will announce charges against that suspect, the 21-year-old who wanted to be a rapper. they hunted him down for eight hours until they arrested him. warren friede was at that parade with his wife and their 7-year-old twins, one boy come one girl, beautiful family. warren is with me now. warren, i would think it has taken a minute just to get your mind around what transpired. take us back to that moment when you realize what was happening. >> sure. there was a gap of about 20-30 seconds after the fire brigade and the police came by, just a way to the kids for general
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parade. military can buy and said hi. and then they were about to throw out the sweet scum of the candies the kids. and then, bang, bang, bang. active shooter, run, run, run. people just started running everywhere. people are living things on the ground, people were hiding behind ben's, people were hiding in shops, just so much fear, so much anxiety of what is happening. you could tell it was coming from above you as i found out the person was on the roof shooting down. so, it was just a really scary situation. with my 7-year-old twins, it's going to be really hard to explain to them what is going on, why they did that. we are a family that has neurological disorder. we have a condition called dyspraxia. our judgment is sensory is already skewed going into this. we had to force and push them to attend this because of those concerns. and now they're going to correlate going with a big crowd is an event where people get shot. so, i had to explain to them
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that this man's brain wasn't the greatest. it wasn't working well and he may be didn't know how much was real and how much was fake. so, he doesn't understand how much hurt he has but still, because of the empathy rooted with my condition, my kids want to actually see him to make sure he doesn't do anything bad again. that's how they are interpreting it. >> harris: that is incredible. warren friede, that is just an incredible layering on of the pain and the fear that you are talking about, explaining it to your twins. and such a way that they can take it in. have a last question for you, with a photograph of your wife on the grounds with your children in that happy moments before the sweets were about to be tossed to the crowd, love that. how are they today? >> today was actually their first day at camp. last night my son woke up at three in the morning shaking. he's going to kill me, he's going to kill me. so, the psychologically were
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going to need a lot of help within this community. that is what it's going to come down to because most of the people there were very, very young kids with their parents or grandparents. after three years of not being able to do things because of covid, finally attending an event where you have republicans, democrats, all of society coming together to integrate, to celebrate. and now, that is taken away a sense of security. >> harris: freedom is never free that's what we must teach our children but today is especially hard for the friede family and i'm think will for you being on the focus, thank you. >> thank you. >> harris: another example of do as i say, not as i do from democrat leader. critics are calling out stacey abrams for what they say is hypocrisy when it comes to security for herself. she is spending a lot of cash on it. and then, security for the rest of us, you just heard warren friede talking about security and freedom being shaken.
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>> harris: apparently when you are woke you can't stop talking, look celebrities not missing a chance to trash america on the fourth of july after the u.s. supreme court reversed roe vs. wade. katy perry tweeted a play on her head song baby you're a firework. ten is a ten but women's have fewer rights than actual sparkler. for the july has been canceled due to shortage of independence and silly women. filmmaker michael moore with this declaration, i cannot in good conscience continue to receive privileges of full citizenship in this land when all of its women and girls have now been declared official second-class citizens with no rights to their own body. power panel now. mark, special assistant to president trump, ceo and founder of rebel communications and democratic campaign consultant from great to see you both. lark, i'm giving you first your reaction to all this breaking
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off. >> lark: who cares. they have a right to free speech but america is also a free country. if you don't like it, move. if we want to europe where they actually have most of the country with more restrictive policies on abortion, this is really an attack on america itself because the supreme court didn't take away rights. it restored the people's right to have their elected representatives make those decisions, not just this. is so, this is just an attack on the fundamental form of democracy that we enjoy. >> harris: you are okay of michael moore gives up some of the citizenship? >> lark: i will help impact. laura, election relevance? >> laura: i will quote james baldwin saying i love america more than any other country in the world. that we critique american policy that in this case restricts the rights of more than half the population. i know mark doesn't have a uterus so he is not impacted,
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but i do know -- >> harris: in defining women? i'm so glad. >> laura: when you restricted a woman's rights -- i'll just finish my point which is that this is a restriction on the hands of politicians women's right to bodily autonomy. i think that is a huge problem for the vast majority of women including 54% of republican women that are now not excited to go to the polls. you can't just take rights away without consequences. you can't hide behind state rights because women know better. >> harris: ethical was, correct me mark, as a senator marsha blackburn who asked the incoming supreme court justice ketanji brown jackson as her hearing, can you define the word woman to make getting that right? i think laura just did it. >> mark: i believe that's right. you have a liberal elite right now who can't even define a woman and one woman is and how they are championing women.
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this is about the rights of these young babies. i know less than one in five americans believe in the democrat position that a baby should be able to be killed the day before its natural delivered. of that is that democrat position and it's of line. >> laura: not at all, simply not true. if we want to talk about those decisions, those late-term abortions that mark is talking about, they have to do when that fetus is suffering. when the mother's life is in danger. they are extraordinarily rare, and they are made by a woman and her doctor. it would seem that he would like those tragic situations to be put in the hands of politicians and lawyers and bureaucrats, which goes against what women know to be true and in a medical position. >> harris: laura want to give you an opportunity. >> laura: when we categorize that is incredible terrible for the one who've gone through. >> harris: followed through by reports a few weeks ago that of anything mark is talking about. and he certainly didn't put it the way you did.
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he said no, absolutely pure demand that they? absolutely. he didn't qualify it, he didn't say that it had anything to do with the health of the mom or the baby or any of that. i don't know. >> laura: but it does, harris, that's a fact. that's a fact. >> harris: that may be your opinion among the democrats i don't know if that's true for everybody. >> laura: that's what the data shows. is important to look at the fact. not just make up stories. >> harris: call the mayor of new york. >> mark: read with the bills say. >> laura: i do read with the bill say in the bill say there will be lawyers and bureaucrats in between. >> harris: we will cut away from them, not that it wasn't good and we should go back if we have time but we want to watch the highest military metal being given to move vietnam veterans today the white house as they receive in. let's watch. >> united states army. for conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty.
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staff sergeant by gallantry and intrepidity as an infantry squad leader with c first cavalry division near the hutu kim sun valley republic of vietnam on one december 1966. with a bunker and concealed trench system garrisoned by the north vietnamese troops in vastly superior forces, two squads of the platoon had deployed. more than open terrain to the east end of the village. the opportunity to ambush they arrived with machine guns and small arms fire against the two squads at the center of the village, killing the platoon leader and the point man wounding four others, then successfully suppressing the
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surviving soldiers paid staff sergeant kenna shira moved with his men to the sounds of the fire, seeing the fire from the trench had to be stopped if anyone from the trench would be survive to verse deployed is meant to cover and then crawled forward to attack the enemy force alone. he began by throwing grenades from the parapet while flattened to the ground come successfully group throwing the first kid made through the aperture of the bunker, eliminating the machine gunner who had opened the action. with five grenades remaining in his rifle to sustain the assault, staff sergeant keneshiro to sweep where it had the two pin squads. over a distance of about 35 meters, he worked the ditch alone destroying one enemy group with rifle fire, and two others with grenades. by the end, excuse me, by the end of his sweep, the able-bodied survivors of the two squads were again standing on preparing to move the dead and wounded. staff sergeant keneshiro's
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actions at the reorganization of the platoons. staff sergeant keneshiro's uncommon heroism under fire and gallantry are cube with the highest traditions of the military service and reflect great credit upon himself, his unit, and the united states army. signed joseph r. biden come the president of the united states. [applause]
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specialist five, dwight w birdwell. attention to orders. the president of the united states of america authorized by act of congress march 3, 1863, has awarded in the name of congress a medal of honor to specialist five, dwight w birdwell, united states army for conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity in the risk of his own life above and beyond the call of duty. specialist five, dwight w birdwell, distinguished himself by act of gallantry and intrepidity above and beyond the call of duty while serving with
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c troop third squadron fourth cavalry 25th infantry division and republic of vietnam on 31 january, 1968. on this date, c troop was ordered to move self to help repel an enemy attack on the airbase. is a c troop column of tanks and armored personnel carriers approached the west gate of townsend airbase, it became under intense enemy fire for a building at its right. unbeknownst to see true, it had driven directly into an enemy force consisting of three battalions. the call and tried to push through the initial attack with the lead tank crippled by rocket propelled grenade explosions was blocking the way forward. c troop immediately came under heavy enemy fire from both sides of the road. specialist birdwell upon seeing his commander was wounded by enemy fire immediately went to was. upon intense and under intense enemy fire heat lowered the injured team committed to the ground and move them to safety. specialist birdwell then with
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complete disregard for his own safety mount of the tank and assumed the tank commanders position. standing in the tank commanders half of the upper part of the body exposed enemy fire, birdwell used the .50-caliber machine, machine gun and 90 millimeters main gun to suppress enemy attack. with ammunition for the 90 millimeters main gun exhausted, he continued to fire the .50-caliber machine gun until it overheated. at this point, specialists birdwell rather than abandoning his position continuing to engage the enemy with his m-16 rifle sometimes exposing his entire body to fire in order to engage the enemy from a better vantage point. won a u.s. helicopter crash nears by, specialists birdwell under withering enemy fire dismounted and moved to the helicopter where he retrieved two and 60 machine guns and ammunition. after giving one and 60 and ammunition to a fellow soldier, he remounted his tank, and

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