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tv   Americas Newsroom  FOX News  July 20, 2022 6:00am-8:00am PDT

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now and stream your favorite streaming 24 hours. if you get a wifi signal from texas instruments. >> you're hired. great job. i'm following you now and want to see all your dance moves. >> highlight of my life right there. >> bill: good morning, everybody. president biden wants to go it alone on climate change. today set to announce new executive actions which might be more bark than bite. stopping short of declaring a national emergency. we'll see it today. i'm bill hemmer and hope you are having a good morning today. >> dana: i'm dana perino and this is "america's newsroom." it is definitely more bark than bite since he is not doing an emergency declaration and going to the home of members of congress and senator who wanted the green new deal. i know he is looking for a friendly audience and will probably get one in massachusetts. announce new action on clean energy after joe manchin hit
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the brakes on his agenda blocking more than half a trillion in new climate spending. >> bill: you call the audible. the president going all in on green energy despot experts saying it is one of the things that put the u.s. at risk for black outs. the president is urged to go back to the drawing board. >> if you are looking for the answers, mr. president. they are in america. open up the xl pipeline and offshore drilling and federal lands and get clean, american energy into the mix here to address this issue. >> dana: team fox coverage and analysis. let's begin with mark meredith at the white house today. >> good morning. later today the president will be leaving the white house heading up to massachusetts to outline how through executive action he believes he can address climate change. the president's orders are likely to fall short of the original goal to get congress
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to pass a sweeping tax and climate bill. it's joe manchin who says he cannot support the proposal and especially with inflation breaking records on a near monthly basis. some democrats accusing manchin of sabotaging the president. >> the criticism i'm getting from the people who are saying joe manchin -- don't you believe inflation is the number one thing in america right now hurting every human being? >> an increasing number of lawmakers are blasting him insisting now is the time ahead of the mid-term elections for bold democratic action on a number of priorities. we heard from people speaking out from the squad and high profile progressives. >> it's unfortunate that one man can kill legislation that would save our planet. let's see where we get to. we think it is important for the president to take executive action. >> today and in the weeks ahead the president is expected to
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direct agencies like osha to develop workplace heat standards and for the government to investing in cooling centers and officials say there is a lot more to come. >> he is going to make it clear that just because congress couldn't get it done, he is going to move forward with every power available to him to make the change and the shift to clean energy because it is important. >> we're told that president biden will stop short of officially declaring a climate emergency, even though the white house says the climate crisis now is an emergency. we'll look to see what comes down the pipe in the next two or three weeks or so but a lot of questions about what actions the questions may be able to do given some of the supreme court's recent rulings. >> dana: exactly right. >> bill: let's bring in kellyanne conway to talk about this. nice to see you. i want to show you a poll that -- this is stunning. "new york times" do you think the climate is the most
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important problem facing the country? total voters 1%. democrats 3%. among voters age 18-30, 3%. well, where is the need? >> it's unmistakable what is most important to americans including some of joe biden's core constituents that he is bleeding out with in the polls. cnn poll also bill and dana you saw 68% of americans say that joe biden does not focus on the issues most important to them. in fact, 57% of democrats, 35% of voters of color and 23% of young voters all said that joe biden focuses on the things most important to them. you see the disconnect. 1% on climate change. 35% calming inflation. joe biden has confirmed that he is mull filing the 1% of
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america. i would add his focus is -- executive focus on climate change to the long growing list americans looking at the biden/harris white house say it makes no sense. they don't think he is connected to them in a way he is listening and hearing their concerns. and when he goes to massachusetts today, that's one thing. people should know two things. blaming manchin is foolish. it is joe biden's democratic party that owns washington one party rule. his vice president has the tiebreaking vote in the senate. if joe biden goes around congress to try to move funding away from things like military and disaster relief funds for green energy, people will be upset with that particularly if they are hard hit. on earth day this year just less than three months ago joe biden took a round-trip from washington, d.c. to washington
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state emitting more carbon than eight americans do each year in one round-trip to make the point about climate change on earth day. total disconnect. what's really costing him a lot of goodwill among people who want him to succeed and run again. >> dana: the other thing happening the white house knows they have problems not just that poll but across the board and now apparently they're looking for a brand-new communications team. on the board are some of the people who recently left. women communicators. psaki, saunders, and others have gone on to do other things. they have opportunities and realize they are going to continue to be blamed for these poll numbers. all the democrats say we have a communications problem. now trying to find a new communications team. i would say that it's a fact problem, not a coms problem. you were most recently there. >> no question, dana. you had these jobs, tough jobs
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but you can't be a good communicator if you try to communicate bad policy. if your boss in this case the president and vice president aren't that nice to the people around them particularly the press. when joe biden got off marine one at 11:30 local time after his trip abroad that was embarrassing and coming back empty-handed. he came back and asked him a simple question on everybody's mind about the fist bump and he yelled at the press for saying why don't you ask questions that are important? it's a very important question why did you fist pump mbs in saudi arabia. what i fear that there is nobody telling joe biden and kamala harris this is not going well. we need to course correct. this is not a coms problem but a fact problem and also a policy and priorities problem. we see it today in the climate
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change focus. even people who don't have families say they've got to leave the white house to spend more time with their families or someone's family. it just shows you for 16 senior staffers to leave kamala harris's office, the first woman, the first woman of color to hold that. think about how historic it would be if you were there. but you can't do it if you don't have the people at the top. and i think ron klain is to blame here, too. we don't see much of the chief of staff. he likes to tweet. we lead a leader not a tweeter in the office. >> dana: spend time with somebody's family. that was a good one. i might use it for myself on "the five" tonight. the president's special envoy john kerry racking up miles of his own on his private jet.
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since the president took office in 18 months ago the plane has emitted more than 300 metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent to 300,000 pounds of coal, 12,000 propane tanks and 30,000 gallons of gas. who is counting? it's also enough energy to charge 36 million smartphones. >> bill: put it back up a second. phenomenal numbers here. think how far you can drive on 33,000 gallons of gasoline. >> dana: back and forth across the country several times. >> bill: john kerry is getting in frequent flier miles. meantime yesterday was another primary night. a shocker in the state of maryland. dan kox endorsed by president trump won. a bit of a battle between trump and hogan. cox came out the winner.
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democrats spent $2 million on his campaign >> dana: to help him. >> bill: thinking he might be more electable in a general election to allow the democrats to have a better chance. meanwhile democratic senator chris von holl en won his bid for the second term months after suffering a minor stroke. he will face chris chaffee in november. the update in maryland. >> dana: the squad making a spectacle out of an abortion rights protest pretending to be handcuffed as they were escorted out by police. you have to see this. it is drawing plenty of criticism and i just have to laugh. >> bill: take us with you is what they were saying. prosecutors let colbert staffers off the hook for trespassing in the capitol but the capitol police chief is saying not too fast. new evidence that they lied to
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authorities. >> dana: do you remember when deblasio called it quits on the campaign trail? he is dropping out running for congress. is he finally getting the hint from voters? adam corolla has a new book and he is on deck. ♪♪♪ (vo) at viking, we are proud to have been named the world's number one for both rivers and oceans by travel and leisure, as well as condé nast traveler. but it is now time for us to work even harder, searching for meaningful experiences and new adventures for you to embark upon. they say when you reach the top, there's only one way to go. we say, that way is onwards. viking. exploring the world in comfort. i brought in ensure max protein
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>> dana: explosion erupting and fire at the hoover dam yesterday. a transformer caught fire and burned for 30 minutes before it was put out thankfully no one was hurt. officials say there is no risk to the power grid and that the cause is under investigation. the dam provides power for 1.3 million people in nevada, arizona and california. it was scary for a moment.
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thankfully. >> bill: police chief calling out prosecutors in washington for clearing "the late show" with colbert staffers from charges after they had been arrested at the capitol a month ago. he said the group lied about having proper credentials to be inside the building. griff jenkins has the fallout and there is some of that today. >> in a letter to congressman rodney davison, members of the house and judiciary committees inquired about the arrest of this colbert nine u.s. capitol police chief is expressing serious frustration over federal prosecutors dropping charges against the group writing it is unfortunate that despite all of the evidence the department presented, including that the group or its leader was told several times they could not be in the buildings without an escort, that the u.s. attorney's office declined to prosecute any members of the group for unlawful entry. that evidence, bill, included
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how the group, which includes robert smieg el, the voice of comic dog lied and identified themselves as credentialed staff when confronted by officers. major also said it was an aide to representative bowman who first called the capitol police after hearing a person shouting we are going to leave something under your door outside of the office of representative lauren boebert next door. congressman jim jordan had this reaction to the charges being dropped. >> this is the double standard we see so often from the left and from this town. but i think it is important that even a democrat staffer we've been told said that they were concerned about these individuals. this is the same justice department treating mom and dads as domestic terrorist. do you think they'll prosecute folks from colbert's show? >> police interviewed the head of the house radio tv gallery who told officers the group was
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denied press credentials because they were not press and they were not allowed to enter the buildings without an escort. >> bill: griff jenkins on that. >> dana: let's bring in the author of a new book everything reminds me of something, advice, answers, but no apologies. he is the host of the adam corolla show. he is here. you know perhaps a couple of those colbert staffers. what do you think of the charges getting dropped? >> you know, it's a reaction obviously to january 6. i feel like no one was in danger then, few or -- january 6 has been blown up a bit. this has been blown up a bit. i feel like this is a reaction to that. they're hypocrites no doubt about it but i'm not clutching my pearls going oh my god. >> dana: i think the capitol police there were injuries. it was different from january 6
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but there was a precedent there and members of congress, why are we having a different standard? >> bill: you have to do something. you are there after hours. allowed in illegally. lie to the police when they questioned you and then you went on with your skits. >> i think what it is, what's going on on the left they make some proclamation, make a big deal of out of things and build things up and blow things up and some version of that happens on their side and they try to go oh, it's not much to do about nothing and people on the right go it's a version of what you were saying with the biggest thing in the world. if this is the biggest thing in the world, january 6, how can this be nothing? i think that's what it is. it is their fault because they get caught all the time. they go don't wear your mask, wear your mask, you have to wear mask and lori lightfoot i had to get my haircut. they make these big things and they get busted doing a version of that big thing and it is why
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they shouldn't make a huge thing out of whatever it is in the first place. >> bill: sounds like a book title. >> dana: mayor deblasio, you hail from california but deblasio became a national figure and somebody made fun of across the country. he was determined he would continue to serve and run for congress and yesterday he decided he had to end his campaign and listened carefully to the people and respects that they are looking for another option. so he is out. >> now he is listening carefully to the people? that's a change of pace. you know, i was thinking about it in the greenroom and i was like -- you guess tell me because i don't know. we have garcetti is a horrible mayor in los angeles. deblasio, lori lightfoot. horrible blue mayors. is it the policy that makes them horrible or are they horrible? they are not dumb but they do
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dumb things. are they dancing to the beat of their party? >> if the policy is bad and follow the policy anyway they are giving lip service to the people who voted for them. >> if i put you in charge of a plant and all the ideas going on in the plant were horrible ideas and you just had to execute those ideas -- >> bill: you would be a terrible boss. >> a horrible plant manager. can any of them step out of that and go i'm not going to follow all the dictates of my party who has a bunch of horrible policies? are they horrible or are they made horrible by having to follow horrible policies? >> dana: there is self-determination and they could do what they want. i wonder if that reminds you of anything. you have a new book out called everything reminds me of something. advice, answers but no apologies. this is your sixth book. >> this book i took questions from celebrity friends and i
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took questions from listeners of my podcast. the other books you sit down and write a book and what am i thinking about and ruminateing about? i have an idea and you write it down. this book people would ask a question and i would go i never thought about that. and then i would be forced to form thoughts about things that i had never had thoughts about, which turned out to be pretty interesting because it made me get outside of my comedy box and try to make comedy out of ideas that i had never formerly had. the one keeps popping to mind is somebody said to me in 2022 in a very progressive society, in this day and age, how come when i see two people riding on a motorcycle the man is still riding the motorcycle and the woman still behind him. everything is split now. guys work, women work, guys stay at home. woman goes off.
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the tv commercials. why in this day in age the woman is still behind the man? i thought it is a group. the progressive groups, the groups that are very progressive in 2022 the double mask wearers are too scared to own a motorcycle. the one company that is a progressive scared couple doesn't own a motorcycle because it's too dangerous. what you see is more traditional, less fear-based couple and they have the old school configuration. >> bill: did you get that? he stuck the landing. >> dana: yes, i love the podcast. thanks for coming. >> bill: well done, congratulations. >> thank you. >> bill: in a moment here he is off the hook, manhattan's d.a. dropping murder charges against this bodega worker who fended off an ex convict. should the charge have been filed in the first place? squad members are caught faking handcuffs. if you watch the mainstream media you might not have picked
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that out. is that a surprise? nicole malliotakis, new york congresswoman, will react on that coming up next. enjoying chocolate cake. now, she can have her cake and eat it too. nexium 24hr stops acid before it starts for all-day, all-night protection. can you imagine 24 hours without heartburn? ♪ you ain't seen nothin' yet ♪ ♪ b-b-baby, you just ain't seen n-n-nothin' yet ♪ ♪ here's something, ♪ ♪ here's something you're never gonna fff-forget, baby ♪ get a dozen shrimp for only one dollar with any steak entrée. only at applebee's.
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tell your doctor if your crohn's disease symptoms develop or worsen. serious allergic reaction may occur. best move i've ever made. ask your dermatologist about cosentyx®. >> bill: the congresswomen, aoc and omar and several others were arrested apparently outside the supreme court building. they put their hands behind their backs when the cops led them away. only one problem here. the squad members were not actually handcuffed. that charade became clear from aoc raised her fist to supporters and then put her hand behind her back. nicole malliotakis is with us. good morning to you. what do you call that? some might call it a charade, others may say they were out there justifying their first amendment rights on abortion, etc. what would you say about it?
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>> it goes to show you that democrats think it is politically expedient for them and improves their electability when they are arrested. bill deblasio did it. they are trying to cater to a radical base, people who are supporting lawlessness, same people who rioted in the streets of our cities of 2020 and raiseings money to release criminals on bail and the same people who supported the defund the police movement. you don't see republicans purposely trying to get arrested. so it just a different philosophy, a far left thing but what i will say more importantly they don't want to just intimidate the court, they want to pack the court. recent weeks she said it again. it's a page right out of the socialist playbook of hugo chavez in venezuela. we can never allow that to happen. in venezuela they packed the court 20 to 32 justices, 45,000 cases and he and maduro destroyed the richest country
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in south america. people need to be aware of that. >> dana: outrageous how they pull off this stunt and then they fake outrage about being called out on it. here is aoc on her instagram yesterday. >> republicans favorite hobby is to distract you and keep you from talking about what is actually important. the fact that they are trying to take away your right to bodily autonomy. if i was faking that why would i intentionally fist pump somebody, it is so silly. >> it is so silly. she is right. no consequences for them if they get arrested. if your constituents get arrested they get booked and a mug shot, goes on their record and have to take time out of work. this is political theater for them to do it. a list of all the people that went out and got arrested here. call for number three. it's their right and they can protest. but to pretend as if they were getting arrested and has
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consequences is not true. there is a tweet from shut down d.c. saying we disrupted kavanaugh's dinner and disrupt the congressional baseball game. i think it will get worse. how do you see it? >> it would be great if the members of congress were in the capitol trying to work with us to address soaring inflation, high gas prices and all the other crises that the american people are facing right now. that's what they really want us to focus on. the department of justice needs to speak out against those making threats, intimidating the court. issuing bounties if you can identify where a justice is at a certain time and how many will be there. this is dangerous stuff and again we are supposed to be a separate branch of government. let the supreme court make its decisions. and yes we can always legislate to address certain issues but do it in the capitol not in front of the supreme court. >> bill: interesting how some of the media played this. reaches aoc, omar other house
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democrats arrested in an abortion rights protest. the "new york post" says aoc fakes being handcuffed after arrested at abortion rights protest. when the capitol police took them in to take their picture they were taking selfies with them in custody quote, unquote. what a difference. >> dana: hard to do that when you are handcuffed. >> bill: here in new york the d.a. dropped the charges against the bodega employee. the mayor eric adams said the d.a. in my opinion made the right decision. what do you think? >> yeah, i have agree. the d.a. did make the right decision. it was an individual who acted in self-defense. and you know what? it is the politicians in new york, the woke left, the woke d.a.s, lenient judges that have created an environment where people leave less safe. people will try to defend themselves if the city is not going to protect them. so we need to empower our police to be able to keep our
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streets safe. we have to change the bail law to stop releasing career criminals back onto the streets including the one who attacked mr. alba. so there is something that can be done here needs to be done here but we need people like governor kathy hochul and the state legislature to do the right thing and the d.a. not only to drop the charges against mr. alba but prosecute actual criminals. stop being so lenient, stop releasing them back onto the streets. we need to have bail when they are a repeated problem in our society. if they need mental help we need to make sure they get that. it is a resolving door in new york. as long as the left continues to criticize people feel the need to act themselves to defend themselves. >> bill: there has been no action taken against the woman in there who stabbed the bodega worker five times. >> exactly. that goes to show you. why we call him backwards bragg.
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the law abiding citizens trying to protect themselves are the ones that he seems to go after while the people who are committing crimes repeatedly on our streets are being let go. kathy hochul should fire him. we don't have a recall law in new york. she can fire him. she won't. but lee zeldin who is running against her this fall will. >> dana: thank you for being here. more than 100 million americans facing a brutal heat wave. video we're about to show you highlights the dangerous situation. oppressive heat in arizona proving too much for a ups worker. he stumbled and falling down as he made his rounds. he is okay. got back up and moved on to deliver the packages. as blistering temperatures become the norm concerns are growing over the power grid ability to hold up as people try to cool down. join us now from fox weather
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robert ray. >> from downtown austin, texas, the capital in a place that likes to call themselves weird, the slogan here. food trucks behind me waiting for that lunch crowd to come in in a little bit but very warm and humid. temperatures well into the 100s. health officials are monitoring the situation here and urging people that are working out, construction jobs or being outside to watch their heat exhaustion, skin rash and stroke. spoke to one professional and here is her guidance for everyone. >> you do see overlapping between heat exhaustion and heat stroke. you will have -- if you are weak, dizzy, nauseous, that's something to look out for and go inside immediately. if your symptoms don't go away quickly and not cooling down seek medical attention. for heat stroke if you start to hallucinate or lose
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consciousness. notice you are outside and no longer sweating anymore. hot, dry skin with be a symptom as well as everything the temperature of 103 you want to seek medical attention immediately. heat stroke can lead to the failure of your organs and you can unfortunately die. >> that 10-day forecast outrageous in austin. in the 100s. no relief. very little rain. and the temperatures at night just in the 70s, a little reprieve and the breeze helps to make it feel a little better. the drought monitor we look at that and my goodness. last year at this time 5% of texas was in a drought. now this year almost 94% of the state in extreme, severe and abnormal drought. tough on the farmers and the livestock folks here as they try to keep their businesses afloat. on top of that wildfires and brush fires have ignited because of this heat and the low humidity and the winds and
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so that is happening. there is one north of dallas, 6,000 acres at this point that started a night or so ago. they are trying to contain that. the situation developing. 60 million americans in the southern plains, texas and south mississippi valley all under this heat watch with no relief in sight. hopefully it doesn't turn out to 2011, that drought that cost over $8 billion in damage. dana and bill. >> dana: a lot happening on the weather front. thank you, robert. >> bill: thank you. it has been almost a year since the taliban took control of afghanistan. in a moment we'll talk to the co-foirnd of an organization still to this day working to evacuate americans and afghan allies. despite a crime surge in chicago police have arrested the fewest suspects in two decades. now why would that be? we'll check it out.
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>> dana: u.s. army is facing a new threat. a lack of people willing and able to enlist. army officials told congress a number of active duty recruits will fall short by 10,000 soldiers this year blaming challenges on the tight labor market, higher pay offered by private companies and fewer young people who meet the tough eligibility requirements. that's a perfect storm of problems for the recruiters. >> bill: very different from 20 years ago after 9/11 a call to arms. you wonder what the pandemic has to do with that number, too. it is probably in there somewhere. >> dana: the military can be a great way to start your career or continue and have a great life in the military as well. >> bill: one hour from now dana ukrainian first lady will deliver an address to congress. it follows her meetings with high ranking officials in washington to try to boost the
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efforts to help refugees in ukraine. gillian turner is on that story. they topped another number today. more than 9 million refugees. gillian, good morning. >> that's right. good morning. first lady zelenska will address congress in an hour from now. the same venue where her husband earned a standing ovation from lawmakers during his address at the beginning of the war. house speaker nancy pelosi, it seems, is so eager for her members to attend today she sent out a letter urging them to be there. now yesterday she met the first lady zelenska with first lady jill biden at the white house. their second face-to-face meeting since the beginning of the invasion. in may she made that unannounced visit to western ukraine. >> you cannot go into a war zone and come back and not feel the sorrow and the pain of the
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people. you introduced me to so many refugees, the mother and children. >> she also attended the captive nations summit in washington she accepted the dissident human rights award on behalf of all of ukraine's people. it was gifted to her by the victims of communism memorial foundation. >> thank you very much for acknowledging our fight and thank you for the words. by bestowing us you once again reminded the world about the courage and honesty of our struggle. >> here in the nation's capital she met with tony blinken the secretary of state. we were going to play a sound bite for you from tony blinken but we have this from his spokesperson. >> he had an opportunity to commend the first lady's work to support the many civilians, ukrainian civilians who have
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been in different ways impacted by this brutal war against ukraine. >> zelenska in the address at 11:00 will highlight the plight of ukrainian women and children and the 9 million refugees you mentioned, bill. this as the russian military continues launching missiles targeting civilians. several dozen more people have been killed in the last few days. >> dana: nonprofit organization project dynamo helping bring three american citizens trapped in ukraine back to u.s. soil. they arrived in new york on friday after a 20-hour journey. project dynamo has been involved with more than 200 rescue missions in ukraine since february. co-founder brian stern joins us now. it is a pleasure to see you in person. you have joined us from afghanistan and from ukraine, no doubt in the future from elsewhere. let's start in ukraine. what is it like there now?
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because as you might have imagined, it is not the top of our news anymore. it has faded a bit and top of their minds. >> project dynamo is donor funded. we have seen our donations plummet and that's in response to the dying of the story. so our demand signal is increasing. our donations are increasing and reflective of the story dying in the media. >> bill: you have 3,000 people out of ukraine. >> 2,000 people out of ukraine. we've done really into the statistics. 48 babies under the age of a month. we've done americans that were arrested in captivity for espionage and all the holocaust survivors and handicap, blind and deaf people. we only operate in the occupied areas. so we're not a bus service. we only operate on the other side of the fence. >> dana: what is it like for somebody trapped in one of those cities right now?
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>> terrible. terrible. i tell everybody mariupol looks like 9/11. >> bill: many more rescues to come hopefully. you need that money to make sure it happens. we'll put your website at the bottom of the screen for the purpose of this session. you will be surprised how viewers respond. >> i appreciate it. >> dana: many americans who need rescue? >> we track a lot behind enemy lines. a number of americans on the run being hunted and a number of americans in captivity we're trying to work out. 9,000 requests for assistance. >> bill: you have 9,000 requests? >> as of this morning. >> bill: in that one country. >> yeah. >> bill: how many requests are there still in afghanistan a year later? >> we still get a bunch. a lot of the people asked us for help in afghanistan due to
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the policies of bringing them to america, we can't help which is unfortunate. they don't have visas but also in trouble because they helped us for 20 years. we did not pivot to ukraine, we expanded to ukraine. we have operations in afghanistan weekly or monthly. >> dana: what do you hear about reports on the ground if you're in afghanistan now and a young girl and not to school in a year. >> the taliban -- just like the russians, they aren't known for being kind to civilian targets or known to being kind to women's rights. >> bill: project dynamo.org. it. an honor to meet you. >> dana: you do amazing work. >> bill: thank you for making time for us and we'll help as much as we can. in a moment here a democratic-run city sounding the alarm on the influx of migrants seeking asylum. that is putting a major strain on homeless shelters in america.
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>> dana: imagine that. >> bill: u.s. marshals searching for a man accused of shooting lady gaga's dog walker after being arrested and mistakenly let go. how did that happen? u level up u won't take a time-out one dose of ubrelvy works fast it can quickly stop migraine in its tracks within 2 hours without worrying if it's too late or where you are unlike older medicines, ubrelvy is a pill that directly blocks a protein believed to be a cause of migraine. do not take with strong cyp3a4 inhibitors. most common side effects were nausea and tiredness. migraine pain relief starts with u learn how abbvie could help you save. ask about ubrelvy, the anytime, anywhere migraine medicine.
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♪♪♪ >> bill: so we have good news for the biebs. justin bieber is heading off on the road. his justice world tour will start again in italy the 31st of ju. he had postponed a month's worth of shows after suffering facial par all si.s he expects to announce a rescheduled u.s. tour. good for him. >> dana: hot there in europe. really hot when he gets over there indeed. also more celebrity news here
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u.s. marshals are wanting information to lead to the arrest of one of the men accused of shooting lady gaga's dog walker. he was mistakenly released in april because of a clerical error. >> keystone cops in how this came about. incompetence and miscommunication along the lines between the l.a. sheriff's department, l.a. d.a.'s office and the l.a. court system leading to james jackson being released after than facing attempted murder charges. more than three months after he accidentally got out of jail the u.s. marshal service is offering a $5,000 reward for information leading to jackson's arrest. the marshals having been called in by the l.a. sheriff's department. jackson according to prosecutors is the man who fired the gun in this attack on
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lady gaga's dog walker on a residential street in hollywood 18 months ago and then with others stole her french bulldogs. in a statement, jackson should be considered armed and dangerous. george gascon dismissed existing charges against jackson back in april to charge him in a grand jury indictment. somehow the new charging information didn't get to or wasn't acted on by the sheriff's department. they let jackson go thinking he was in the clear. bottom line, dana, everyone blames everyone else but a very dangerous criminal as a result of all this chaos is on the loose. dana. >> dana: thanks for the update and we'll keep on top of that one. border crisis landing on new york city's doorstep and the mayor is pleading for help from the feds. thousands of homeless migrants seeking asylum overwhelm the
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city's shelter and support system. imagine that. welcome to a new hour of in us news, i'm dana perino. >> bill: i'm bill hemmer. good morning. new york city's mayor blaming the sharp increase in migrants seeking shelter on texas and arizona claiming those states are sendsing bus loads of illegal migrants to new york city, the big apple. >> so we need not only federal government but we need some of those states that are giving people one-way dick tickets. we need them to understand that this must be a partnership in this country to deal with those who are coming here seeking refuge or asylum. new york is going to do its share but we have been overburdened shelter system now. >> dana: texas and arizona. the governors of both states they send them only to washington, d.c., not to new york city. >> bill: meanwhile it's not a
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pretty picture along the border. huge groups of migrants arriving by the day by the thousands making the trek in triple digit heat and waiting in the sun. some nearly passing out as sweltering agents process them into our system. >> dana: matt finn is on the border with more on that. first alexis mcadams in our new york newsroom. >> the mayor here says thousands of migrants have arrived in new york city and there just not enough space in the shelters. >> we have close to 2500 in the last probably six to seven weeks that are here. we already had an overburdened shelter system. >> mayor adams says yesterday migrants are being sent here by the bus loads. he is calling for federal resources to try and keep up. the shelters in new york. the ongoing immigration crisis adding to the new york homeless.
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there are more than 48,000 homeless people on the streets of new york in march. that is the highest number since the great depression. new york city councilman says the migrants are being flown here from other states. >> we know that a bulk of these people if not the majority are coming from federal government sanctioned and state government sanctioned flights to westchester county airport in the middle of the night. >> new york is the second major city to sound the alarm this week. just on sunday washington, d.c. mayor browser called the influx of migrants a significant issue. so far this year the numbers, a record breaking number of 1.7 million encounters at the southern border. that's on pace to push past two million. the white house says they're in constant contact with governors across the country and believe it is shameful that some governors are using migrants as a political tool. >> dana: stay on top of that for us.
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more back and forth today. >> bill: for more on the ongoing crisis at the border matt finn standing by eagle pass, texas with today's update. matt, good morning. >> good morning, bill. for days now we've been standing at the edge of the rio grande river and seen hundreds if not a thousand plus migrants freshly cross into this country. the majority say they are coming from venezuela, columbia and nicaragua. one group made a trek by foot with more than 30 days long, a woman in the group claims she was inappropriately touched by mexican police before arriving here into the united states and we also have fresh video to show you from yesterday in the middle of the intense heat we interacted with a group of 100 migrants that freshly entered the u.s. and being processed by border patrol. many young mothers with children. i spoke with two young men. one said he is 23 years old from venezuela traveling through the jungle and coming for the u.s. looking for a
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future for his family and going to pennsylvania. one said he is going to get to charlottesville, virginia and trying to dial a virginia phone number to reach a person. if he does remain in this country, where does he go next? a little bit of our exchange with that migrant who just made it into the united states. >> family phone number? >> it is a -- a friend, for a friend. >> you are going to stay with them? >> after other places. >> it is not working. >> thank you. >> here at the southern border we've seen so many young
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migrant mothers with children. children in general crossing the rio grande into the united states. many dressed in warm, long/sleeved shirts and pants to protect them in the brush. they crossed the same river which migrants are drowning. the latest numbers from u.s. customs and border protection reveal 15,271 unaccompanied children at the border in june. that's a 4% increase from may. the average number of unaccompanied children in border custody was 752 per day in june. also an increase from may. bill and dana. >> bill: extraordinary numbers. matt finn in eagle pass, texas. thank you for that. >> the goal is this continuous battle of making sure dangerous people that are arrested are prosecuted, go through the criminal justice system and off
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our st.s it is taking too long to sentence dangerous people while they are on our streets and they continue to commit crimes. >> dana: another problem the mayor is talking about. the revolving door treatment of criminals as the city's crime rate jumps higher. catch, release and repeat can only make it worse. joe cardinale is a retired nypd lieutenant. crimes have increased 37% this year compared to the same period in 2021. this is a huge problem for new york city, problem for the tourists who want to come here and people wanting to get back to work. they don't want to come back to work but it is replicating itself across the country. catch, release. >> he is part of the complaint. he is brushing it off to somebody else. he can do something about it. he can go to the governor and say remove the d.a. part of the problem. you see a bottleneck. it gets to a certain point. we make the arrest, bring them before the judge and we bring actually go to the d.a.
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d.a. says i don't think we'll prosecute that one. if it makes it to the judge it is a whole new criteria on that level as well. it never makes it out of the system we once had a great system with them. a good partnership. there is no partnership anymore in the criminal justice system. >> bill: what about the point about the homeless being run out of shelters because migrants are coming from the border? >> he is crying about them now. bringing them into planes by westchester nobody said anything about it. they said don't address it. now it is hitting home. sometimes here. if you walk new york city and walk through the streets you'll see what he is speaking about. he has the power to do something about this. he doesn't want to upset his party and trying to get the feds to send something and say it's my answer. he can do it from within. he is choosing not to. >> dana: he did add his voice rather meekly to the bodega owner who was basically acting in self-defense when he was
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attacked in his store. and yesterday the d.a. bragg dropped those charges. what do you hear from your friends that i know are still in nypd? do they see it as a possible tipping point into maybe a change the way the d.a. is approaching some of these? >> a scary point. i'll tell you why. it takes something like this to get the message across. they are only picking and choosing what issues they want to address like that. right now the cops aren't doing their job and not pro-active because they can't afford to be. they don't have the indemnification we spoke about many times. this revolving door of justice, do the job they're told to do and allowed to do. other than that it reflects on the crime in the streets and they are doing so much with so little right now. they just need the backing. they need to get back of days when the cops were spektd and had the backing of the city as well as the residents. >> bill: great point. big city crime stats from new
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york. change year to year, new york is up 37%. l.a. is up 11, chicago 34%. now you have the story about the chicago cops pulling back on the work they're doing. i was telling dana, i got off the subway in new york yesterday. first guy i saw pulling his pants up. on the sidewalk a woman dead to the world her head in a bowl of dried cereal on 6th avenue. i take a turn. a guy is face planted on the sidewalk. this is the afternoon. this is every day. >> every day. what did it take for the city to get to this point? it took policies that were turned around overnight. they just allowed it and said we have to concentrate on other things. that's not it. it is disgusting to walk around the ste. i just walked it myself. go into queens, it looks like
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somebody took garbage trucks and dumped the garbage over there. there is no excuse for this. the city can fix it. there is no excuse for it. the mayor came into power and he should do something about it. >> it took 20 years to make it nice and two years to blow it. >> as soon as a certain mayor got in there the empty suit mayor, this is the remnants of that. this man has the power to turn it around. he could say enough is enough on every level. i'm not just talking about crime. i'm talking about every level. he goes to the city council and says i need this to do this job. go to the governor and remove people. >> let's see if he gets there. a rare sight in new york city. nypd a mounted officer chased down a man suspected of stealing sunglasses. the suspect ran off with seven pair of sunglasses after swinging a piece of broken
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glass. the suspect apprehended by police after a pursuit. the horse darted around cars and got their guy. >> dana: i want to interview that cop. let's see if we can book the nypd officer. well done indeed. i will send it to my cousins in wyoming. congresswoman alexandria ocasio-cortez caught faking being handcuff during a supreme court abortion protest. does it reveal something about her push for women's justice? >> bill: a nonprofit dedicated to empowering parents working to make sure education is at the top of the ballot this november. this group has grown exponentially in a very short period of time. we'll talk to the co-founder coming up. >> dana: a 6-year-old girl forced to take dramatic actions after her mom suffered a fentanyl-related episode behind the wheel. we'll bring you the story.
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>> dana: two more shark sightings in new york city forcing officials to shut down beaches in the rockaways, a parks department spokesman said the breaches will remain closed until the waters are deemed safe. at the same time there have
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been at least five shark attacks off the coast of long island. just since memorial day weekend and why i respect what is under the water. do you? >> bill: absolutely. >> dana: would you get in? >> bill: i do. do you? >> dana: do you think about sharks? >> bill: when i'm in? kind of. it crosses my mind. but you don't get in. >> dana: not really. it is too cold for me. anyway. >> bill: neither one of us have seen jaws. check it out. tampa florida on friday. two years ago closed schools and crt got parents more involved in school board races. moms for liberty is mobileizing for the mid-terms. they have grown big time
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tiffany justice. >> the california school closures and all these other places, that hurts disadvantaged kids the most. they are the ones that were put -- because the wealthy people and the bureaucrats, they just send their kids to tutoring or to private school. so those were the kids that really suffered a lot. >> bill: why do you think the growth has been so extraordinary? you claim 100,000 members. seems like it happened overnight. >> well, it has been a long few years for american parents. and when we needed to rely on elected officials to make good decisions for our families, right, to lead us forward out of this pandemic what american parents found was they were ignored. tina and i started moms for liberty and i liken it to putting your board in the water at the right time. we're moms, too. the growth has been natural and a grassroots movement. i know there are a lot of people that don't want to believe that because we are
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really changing the balance of power in public education. >> bill: what is your objective and what do you want accomplished? >> we would like to have american children reading well and right now we're very concerned that's not happening. parents all over the country are watching as woke ideology is entering their school systems and taking the focus away from academic achievement. we want to have 3,000 counties around the united states with chapters set up by county. the goal is to have a moms for liberty member and members at every school board meeting watching their school board, reading the budget, watching the agenda and making sure that the focus stays on our children. >> bill: tiffany, did you feel this way before covid? >> i absolutely felt this way before covid. i served as a school board member for four years. and so i saw very directly that parents' voices were being ignored. >> bill: and then i'm assuming covid contributed to that feeling?
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>> absolutely. we had parents coming to school board meetings. i was sitting at a school board and parents were coming and saying my child is hearing impaired and they can't see out of one eye and they wear glasses. glasses are fogging because they're wearing the mask and can they have an exemption. the school district says no. never before had i seen the school system completely reject the parents' input in their children's education and medical care and well-being. enough is enough. american parents are done with this nonsense of being ignored. >> bill: they say you are sewing division. randi weingarten has a quote. they are trying to drive a wedge between parents and teachers we are invested in focusing on public schools and the skills students need. when they say you have turned schools into a political battleground, how do you respond to that? >> i say that's the iron law of
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woke projection. randi is an arsonist who pretends to be a firefighters. you need to look no further that their focus isn't on education and teachers and kids. their focus is on political activism. that's a project sun that randi uses to try to take the heat away from the fact that they own the harm here. kids aren't doing well in school and squarely on the union's shoulders. >> bill: we'll see where it goes. it's a movement. moms for liberty. thank you for your time today. >> dana: newly released video showing a 6-year-old girl interviewed by police after she couldn't wake her mom up and flags down a mailman. her mom overdosed on fentanyl. we're live with the story. >> it happened in the middle of the day on saturday in colorado, a suburb aft city of denver. the mother told police she was headed to her sister's house to
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get ready for a wedding. her 6-year-old daughter in the back of the car. they never arrived. the mother herself pulled over at one point and ingested fentanyl and passed out. her daughter says she tried waking up her mom. when it didn't work she began to scream for help. a nearby mail carrier heard the little girl screaming and came to her rescue. saw the mother asleep in the driver's sleep and unable to wake her. he called the police. >> mommy was driving and she pulled over to smoke a cigarette and then mommy fell asleep and began snoring and you tried to wake her up and you couldn't wake her up and you yelled for help. >> the little girl was able to call her aunt who was right down the street. according to the aunt, the first thing her 6-year-old niece said was mommy is dead. the mom did wake up but only after terrifying her child. >> i'm so tired of dealing with this. she has been doing the same
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thing for five years. >> the mother in this case was arrested and the little girl fortunately, dana, was not physically injured. i can tell you after we received this body cam video i listened to a lot of the discussions with the police department that they were having and during the arrest, the arresting officer was talking to the mom trying to convince her to get clean for the sake of her child. dana. >> dana: thank you. >> bill: in the meantime, he has been disgraced and disbarred, a prominent south carolina lawyer alex murdaugh charged for the fatal shooting of his wife and son. will the judge grant him bond? plus president biden keeping a climate emergency declaration on the table putting thousands of jobs in pennsylvania on the line. some are saying it's time to unleash america's energy potential. >> just this week alone the impact of extreme weather our
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>> [inaudible] >> bill: that was moments ago in a courtroom in south carolina. that's disgraced attorney alex murdaugh pleading not guilty on charges that he shot and killed his wife and son 13 months ago. steve harrigan watching that case with us today. good morning. >> good morning, bill. the bond hearing wrapping up just moments ago. no bond for alex murdaugh in the supposed murder of his wife and son 13 months ago in rural south carolina. paul murdaugh, 22 was killed by multiple blast from a shotgun to the head and torso. mother maggie murdaugh was killed with a different weapon,
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a semi automatic rifle, multiple shots fired including several after she was already on the ground execution style. it was alec murdaugh who claimed to have found the bodies at the family's hunting lodge and he called 911. these two killings have opened up a series of new investigations. a number of deaths are tied one way or another to this family including the death of a housekeeper who supposedly fell down the stairs in the house. the death of a young woman on a boat driven by one of the murdaugh sons and the death of a young man on a road near the murdaugh family house. alex murdaugh himself was fired from the law firm founded by his great grandfather for stealing millions of dollars from clients and from the firm itself and now for these two murders he could potentially be facing the death penalty. bill, back to you. >> bill: steve harrigan watching that story. thank you, steve.
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>> we take additional climate actions in that vein tomorrow. everything is on the table. it's just not going to be this week on that decision. >> dana: white house press secretary says president biden is keeping his options open on declaring a climate emergency. the stakes couldn't be higher in pennsylvania, one of the nation's largest producers of natural gas and coal and top exporter of electricity last year. jim is running for congress in pennsylvania's eighth district. what do you hear from people on the ground who might have lost their jobs in the last 18 months as the biden administration went in a different direction? >> people are so angry in northeast pennsylvania. joe biden has been so anti-energy from day one. he closed down the xl pipeline, hostile to the east coast number one energy source but joe biden doesn't believe in that. he bought into the green raw
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deal stuff that drove up energy prices. northeast pennsylvania has some of the most expensive energy in the country. a direct result of joe biden and nancy pelosi and my opponent matt cartwright's policies. >> dana: he voted with joe biden quite a bit. the district is pennsylvania 8 listed as a top up. do you think energy issues could be decisive either way for you or your opponent this fall? >> they will be decisive. the number one thing i hear on the campaign trail is how angry people are that we have $5 gas, $6 and $7 a gallon diesel. it is killing construction firms like my family and hitting us in the pocketbook. we'll send a strong message to joe biden we want this to stop. we can't wait until we have change in november. >> dana: the poll on the standard of living for pennsylvania voters how people are feeling there. 16 1/2% said they're better off
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now. but nearly 48% said they are worse now. so when you think about that, and you are thinking about mid-term election is usually a referendum on the president, your county, that was his hometown. he visits quite a bit and yet it seems when he has these ideas to declare an emergency they won't do an emergency but really hot outside so they want to talk about climate. he will go to massachusetts to talk about energy instead. what kind of message do you think it sends? >> it is joe biden's hometown scranton, pennsylvania. steve scalise was campaigning for me. when we beat joe biden in his hometown it will send a message the working class and the american people are sick of biden's energy policies. he is coming up to scranton tomorrow we're hearing. i wish we he would say i'll build a border wall and unleash american energy. if folks want to step up to
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biden, go to stop scranton joe.ko*fm and we'll beat joe biden. >> dana: the suffolk poll showed president biden has a 38% approval rating in pennsylvania. that will be a difficult thing. he says he will run for reelection in 2024 in the meantime you get to get to the mid-terms. what do you hear from constituents whether they think joe biden should run for office again? >> they certainly don't think he should run for office again. if joe biden ran for office tomorrow he would get smoked in scranton, pennsylvania his hometown. our polling shows over 60% of people disapprove of his performance. the only thing we can do now is to vote joe biden's lap dog matt cartwright out of office in november and we'll do that. >> dana: my friend bill hemmer will check that district on the big board on election night. thank you so much. >> bill: we shall, right? >> dana: is that interesting to
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you in terms of those counties? you know them very well. >> bill: meanwhile -- >> dana: can you point to it as soon as you look at a map? >> bill: i could. >> dana: make sure you can. >> bill: right side. >> dana: like the weather forecast. >> bill: the president is talking about climate change in massachusetts today. it's not clear whether or not he will do anything about it. federalist writes biden has no right to declare a national climate energy. there is no it is summer clause in the constitution empowering the president will ignore the will of congress when it gets hot. the rejection of the president's agenda is not a justification for executive action. it is the opposite. we'll see which way that goes and whether or not it's lip service today. >> dana: i love reading him. another question i would ask. what has happened that what has changed with the science that would lead a president to declare an emergency? probably why they aren't doing that. >> bill: i don't think july is the answer. a possible cause identified in
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the deaths of 21 teenagers at a bar in south africa. what investigators found in their blood. some members of the squad arrested during an abortion protest at the supreme court. why they are facing backlash accused of playing pretend as they were led away. martha has seen the video and she joins us next. >> the issues they are talking about is how it costs more money at the gas station. the fact that the border is in chaos. what i see fifth and sixth down the line is abortion. this is nothing more than trying to distract for the mid-terms. ses. next time, go to america's best - where two pairs and a free exam start at just $79.95. can't beat that. can't beat this, either. book an exam today at americasbest.com alright, limu, give me a socket wrench, pliers, and a phone open to libertymutual.com they customize your car insurance, so you only pay for what you need... and a blowtorch.
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>> it goes to show you that democrats think it is politically expedient for them and improves their electability when they are arrested and goes to show you that they are trying to cater to a radical base, people who are supporting lawlessness, same people who rioted in the streets of our cities in 2020. >> dana: 17 democrat lawmakers were arrested yesterday during a protest outside the supreme court including some members of the squad. alexandria ocasio-cortez and omar led away with hands crossed behind their backs as if they were in handcuffs but it is all pretend. a pose for the cameras. my favorite story of the summer.
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martha maccallum joins us. i can't get enough of it. >> what are they -- these are grown women, right? what are they doing? this reminds me like a teenage kind of act to pretend you are being taken away. it reminds me of sort of protests of the past that were vietnam protests where things that people they may have grown up learning about and watching just like such a completely different motivation and moment and genuineness. >> bill: civil rights. >> absolutely. i understand they have deeply held feelings about roe v. wade but it just cheapens it that they have to pretend. they were standing in an area that is blocking traffic, right? they're in front of the supreme court. they could have easily protested there for hours and hours but in an area and she is like i'm not handcuffed. let's pump our fists in the air. she looks mildly pleased
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tossing her hair to be getting arrested. >> dana: her ticket is $50. she was complaining about how expensive it is to be a congresswoman and difficult to have frivolous expenses. this is $50. >> the police were like this is a traffic area and not allowed to protest here and protest over there. we'll clear the street and start arresting people. we'll stay right here. >> they are looking for a john louis moment. >> it is precisely like that. in my mind it's really disrespectful to john lewis to put yourself in that category in this way. not to say the issue isn't a serious one but what strikes me is you are not seeing, i don't think, a lot of organic outpouring of grassroots protests in the roe v. wade story. so you have this instead. it just makes you wonder how much of a deep issue is it for
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the electorate if you aren't seeing that kind of grassroots organic up rising? >> bill: cnn report evidence that in lieu of a mug shot some of the police officers took a selfie. >> nice. >> bill: so you are in custody and i'll get a selfie of you and i'll have that for myself. >> dana: if you got arrested they would definitely want a selfie with you. i think they would. >> that tells you the seriousness of this entire episode. there is no seriousness on the part of the people who were arresting them and taking selfies or the people creating this fake moment of angst and arrest. >> bill: many are treating it like a celebration, selfies with friendly officers. >> dana: a serious issue. fox poll. it is not the top issue. that's inflation and higher prices, crime rates, gun laws. abortion policy is at 70% since
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the roe v. wade decision. the president has not issued an emergency declaration. this anonymous source to "politico" said the white house is under enormous pressure. majority of people don't think it's a good idea but not taking it off the table. the idea that activists want them to do something. >> they are talking about doing this prep act which is the public readiness and emergency preparedness to insure people have the right across state lines to get prescriptive abortion pills, right? this is a real issue. so especially given the fact. this doesn't get a lot of attention. 60% of all abortions are done are done by abortion pills that arrive in the mail. it is why business at clinics across the country is way down. abortion has been falling and the growth of these abortion pills as the way of having an abortion is huge. they've changed the entire abortion situation in this country. they induce a miscarriage in
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the early weeks. so they could move to do this but it is so interesting. once again you have the report of debate within the white house. should we do the prep act, the president isn't sure. a lot of tentative reaction in a lot of ways whether you look at saudi arabia, climate, or this. >> dana: or crime or immigration, education. that's one of the big complaints. they think changing a communications team is going to fix that? i doubt it. >> that drive has to come straight from the president. >> dana: good to see you. watch you on the "the story". >> arrests in chicago are down to the lowest level in 20 years. that would be a good thing if that city was not in the midst of a crime wave, but it is. almost 40% higher than a year ago. the head of a chicago anti-violence organization will join us on that plus the tesla ceo loses his wife to delay the
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leaving you lost. you need to hire. i need indeed. indeed you do. indeed instant match instantly delivers quality candidates matching your job description. visit indeed.com/hire >> harris: persistent painful gas prices, raging inflation not enough to stop president biden from caving to the left. he is set to take executive action to further his vow to end fossil fuels and his democrat party's rage against senator manchin, oh, it's heating up: critics mocking the theatrics of new york and her liberal squad thembers. the protest over the supreme court roe v. wade. they didn't use real handcuffs.
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"the faulkner focus" top of the hour. >> dana: an early win to twitter after a delaware judge agreed to fast track the trial. fox business's kelly o'grady is live in los angeles with the details. what do we know? >> good to see you. well, it could be the business trial of the century come october. we don't know the date but around the time. yesterday set the stage for what is certain to be a contentious legal battle. twitter argued a speedy trying is necessary as the continued uncertainty is having harm on the company and the judge affirmed. the other side time is necessary to dig into the platform. lead council that bots are not before the court in this case. there is no representation or warranty in the merger related to how many false accounts
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there may be on twitter. it is a bit trickier than that. the agreement rests partly on all public fileings being accurate. if musk can prove it's not the case twitter has a problem. an early indication at the heart of the trial. what comes next? october trial now we enter the complex discovery process. the judge indicated if warranted she would be willing to extend the trial past five days. it may drive on a bit especially given the time an appeal will take. are reports musk can counter sue but transaction lawyers say it wouldn't delay the trial. it would be tried at the same time. we can't rule out the possibility it could settle before we get to court. twitter is under a lot of pressure from advertisers and shareholders and they report earnings on friday and we'll see how high that pressure is. >> dana: we'll stay in touch with you our expert. thanks. >> bill: chicago police arresting the fewest number of suspect in at least 20 years despite a surge in crime.
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stats show total crime increased 34% year-to-date compared to last year. police admitting the pull back from making arrests after sweeping changes were made on how chicago police can patrol the streets. the executive director of the organization violence interrupters with me now. good morning to you. you know the problem. what's the solution? >> mainly right now in chicago criminal justice reform is backfired on society. a lot of the police shootings have been sensationalized throughout the nation. no one is talking to the victims. due to the fact the police could not chase a vehicle involved in a murder, they pulled back, public information how the police pulled back and the guys who shot and killed a young man on the west side of chicago and the police had the car right in their sight but couldn't do anything.
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they were told to pull it back. it makes no sense. i talked to a lot of police in chicago. a lot have given up. they are working just to work the job. they cannot protect and serve like they should be able to do. i want to say that. even back in the cowboy days the deputy or sheriff would chase the outlaws on horse back and they would catch the outlaws. it's crazy what is going on. lawmakers the need to re-examine their policies. >> bill: a quote. in the past cop talking. i might see a guy with a gun in waistband and chase him. no way i would do that now. the effect of that is a loss in your community. >> i live on the south side of chicago. i've been around and witnessed a lot of the crime firsthand in chicago and if a police made that comment, that's a sad day for everybody because police are paid to serve and protect
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but now they have their hands tied to a degree based on the fact some policymakers do not understand the role of a police in the community. the actions of a few police have basically given the whole police department a black eye and we have to understand that. but 90% of the people in african-american community do not have an issue in the police. people worldwide need to know that. a few police cross the line. that's where the problem lines right there. a lot of people don't have a problem with the police. >> bill: you are right about that. we hear about the cops pulling back in new york because they don't have indemnification. what would someone see if they came to your neighborhood and to the south side? >> you would see there are not a lot of police out patrolling the area. i went on facebook live a few months ago and took me almost one hour to run into a police car out there on facebook live. what they would see, we have a
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thriving community on the south side. a lot of people go to work every day but you have a lot of abandoned buildings, dilapidated houses. despair and hopelessness and a lot of crime. but you have good things happening on the south side of chicago in spite of everything else going on. >> bill: we've been watching this crime rate in your city for too darn long. thank you for your time and we'll stay in contact with you, okay? >> appreciate you. >> bill: thank you. >> dana: a great man. i love learning from him and hope we get to see more of him. also there is this. astronaut buzz aldrin before we go. you remember him, of course. he is putting some of his stuff up for auction. the items including the jacket he wore to the moon. the only piece of clothing from that mission that has ever been sold and it is expected to draw up to guess how much? don't look at the prompter. >> bill: i'm not cheating.
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it is expected to get up to 1.9 million. >> dana: bill hemmer. you do know money very well. would you bid? >> bill: probably not. >> dana: no? buzz aldrin. amazing. all the astronauts we love you and we loved being with all of you today as well. see you tomorrow. harris faulkner is up next. here she is. >> harris: the president is having to bend to the will of one democrat yet again. senator joe manchin is blocking democrats' money grab for their climate agenda and today president biden is set to take executive action. i'm harris faulkner and you are in "the faulkner focus". team biden is trying to work through their climate conundrum. at this hour is commander-in-chief will go to massachusetts to talk clean energy at what used to be a coal plant. the

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