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tv   FOX Friends First  FOX News  November 21, 2022 1:00am-2:00am PST

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catch me on "fox nation" yellowstone is up next and will be back next sunday. 's you next time. authorities have no suspect, no murder weapon and no leads. you're watching "fox and friends first." i'm todd piro. >> i'm ashley strohmier. brooke singman has the latest on this puzzling case.
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>> brooke: one of the four university of idaho students killed in last weekend's brutal slaying will be laid to rest today. ethan chapman was one stabbed to death and left the community in disbelief. the community says ethan loved life, laughed contagiously. may we all try to make the earth a better place and may we all live like ethan. his funeral service will be held this evening 4 pacific time. one week and authorities are still searching for answers. moscow police chief says there is no suspect, no murder weapon and no clear motive. listen. >> do we know any one person targeted? we're not able to say at this point in time, it is a complex and terrible crime. and it will tame some time to
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resolve. >> brooke: one prosecutor saying, "i have heard nothing to indicate they have identified a viable suspect or heard of evidence that could lead to a" and authorities claim the investigation has been hampered by thanksgiving, many students who could be witnesses have left town. we know not every victim was murdered in their bed. one victim had defensive moves from fighting back. the 911 call believe to have come from inside the house cht the two surviving female roommates have been cleared as suspects issue as well as the man behind kaylie and madison in a photo the night of the murders.
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ka kaylie's mom says it feels like a dream. >> beyond anybody's worst, i'm sure you can only fathom, it is heartbreaking. made was an only child, she was our child, as well. >> brooke: friends remember the bond, kaylie would say made is always her forever plus one. if they were going to go, they were going to go together. >> ashley: we will bring in navy seal jonathan gillian. there is a lack of evidence that is pointing to a suspect and when you take into account the first 48 hours, first two days, we're well past that, how will that hamper the investigation going through blood and fingerprints and tire tracks? it seems like time is ticking on
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and we're getting no answers. >> right, the beginning, everybody is familiar with the first 48 hours after homicide are the most important, especially at this point in time. they mentioned a lot of students have left, i believe if somebody had saw something or thought they had saw something, they might have called authorities. the fact law enforcement told everybody this was isolated incidents, people just dropped their guard and might have forgotten things they might have seen. now there are over 50 investigators from the state police, the fbi, they are there combing through evidence which has aged considerably. i think that having the fbi and state police there, they will be able to look at things such as toll records from the different areas where phones may pick up
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on the towers. if somebody else was there, if this was a target of opportunity and i think we're looking at one of two things. the person who likely did the killing, likely a male, somebody they knew and had access to the house or somebody that waited until everybody shut down for the night and went to sleep and it was late, almost 3:00 in the morning before the murders occurred. somebody was definitely watching the housor knew them and knew they had shut down for the night. i think this is where investigators will start looking along with the k-bar knife that was used. >> todd: why do you say most likely a male? >> i think the fact there were four people killed, i heard statistics saying females are more likely to murder with a knife, i don't think when we look at mass murders, three or
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more is considered a mass homicide, we're looking at somebody who was able to in one circumstance fight someone and still stab them and then also kill four other people and when we look at the brutality of this killing, i've never seen enough blood where it was running through on to the foundation of the house, exterior of the house, that is tremendous amount of blood, meaning tremendous amount of wounds. >> ashley: correct me if i'm wrong, investigators don't have to release anything if they think it will hamper the investigation, what is likelihood they have more information and don't want to release it because it would hurt the investigation and getting to a potential killer? >> no, they don't have to
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release any information, in fact, would probably be smart not to. i believe law enforcement needs to stop assuming the public is just dumb and can't handle the truth. i think we saw in the boston bombing when they said everything is safe and we got the guy, they didn't know if there were more individuals that were a part of that. the same thing here, we need to empower the public, we can do that without giving away evidence. going back, one other thing about the k-bar knife, this is very important, that knife is pretty much a relic, nobody uses that knife except for people that had them when they got out of the military, it got handed down, was at the house, sometimes it is at stores where there is surplus. it is not a slashing knife, not a folding knife, for somebody to use that particular knife, i
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would think that it could have been a younger person who had access to this. it could have been somebody who doesn't have a lot of money and doesn't go buy a nice knife if they want to go killing other people. a friend pointed out, if they have rotc at that school, that could be something rotc would have. september 12ths, there was another threat someone made with a knife on that campus, which we don't know, we don't know if that was connected or if they caught that person. this is something they need to look at, potential this person could be a students, rotc, seems significant. >> todd: interesting connection, i'm focused on seven phone calls to someone named jack, why would you call somebody seven times in
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the middle of the night, especially when most people text. >> i don't know the relationship the two females had with jack, could have been a lover spat, could have been about future plans. six calls made by one girl, two calls made by another girl and another call by the original girl. it appears they shut down for the night after that. if they were that concerned about it, i think you would have seen, they would not have shut down after the phone calls. >> ashley: i feel like the parents said that wasn't unusual with the girls, you never know someone's personal behavior. >> todd: the guy jack was cleared, i can't think of why they would make that many
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comments. the details about the knee could be key. >> ashley: we appreciate your insight. >> you got it, thank you. god bless the families. >> ashley: top official says president trump was right about the threat posed by tiktok. here is how the chinese communist party could be spying our kids. >> todd: >> todd: doug luzader has more. >> i think donald trump was right, i mean, tiktok is an eshg normous threat, it is a massive collector of information, oftentimes of our children. >> that follows new warning from f fbi's christopher wray.
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he told lawmakers last week china has stolen more american's personal and business data than every other nation combined. >> we do have national security concerns, at least from the fbi's end about tiktok. they include the fact chinese government could control data collection on millions of users or control the recommendation algorithm, used for operations if they chose so to control software on millions of devices. >> this issue has come up again and again. here is what tiktok said about concerns three years ago. our data centers, they say are located entirely outside of china and none of the data is subject to chinese law, that is likely to do little to alleviate concern in washington. tiktok has been growing by leaps and browns, claiming the platform has 1 billion users
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worldwide. back to you guys. >> todd: senator tom cotton has been warning about tiktok, calling it a trojan horse on your phoning, here is his latest warning. >> tiktok is one of the most massive surveillance platforms ever, not just content you upload on tiktoks, all data on your phone, personal information, even where your eyes are looking on your phone, i encourage every american, if they are using tiktok to delete from their phone or get a new phone awl together. >> todd: listen to this wild stat, majority of americans are signed up to tiktok with 200 million active tiktok users in the u.s., that is wild. >> ashley: congressman schiff is barbing elon musk for reinstating president trump's
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account. >> elon musk said he would get a council to evaluate this and contradiktss musk and his concern about bots on his platform to uphold playoff that could be easily abused. it just underscores irradic leadership under musk. >> ashley: musk posted this poll and 15 million voted to bring trump back, the self-proclaimed chief twit is poking fun at cbs news after announcing it was leaving the playoff because it faced security issues. cbs news pr said as assessing security concern, cbs news and stagsz is renewing activity on twitter and we continue to monitor the situation. musk responding with a giggling emoji, which racked up the likes
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so far. >> todd: the white house entering a new climate deal to pay poor countries for damages related to climate change. this is just another step in president biden's radical green agenda. barrasso says sending to a slush fund is misguided and biden administration should focus on home, not shipping money to un for new deals. >> ashley: texas railroad commission joins us now, this is called a win for the entire world. is this a win for u.s. taxpayers? >> not for the u.s. taxpayer or one-third of the u.s. population who get electricity from wood or -- the un is telling us to trust them and the president says he will put $20 billion
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into this slush fund and they will collect it from the united nations. un published ipcc, united nations climate change group and they said the study showed by scientists and people who knew the business that liquid energy, you stick a pipe in the ground and pump gas or oil, is more clean, done in countries that are controlled by governments we can trust better than going in for electric vehicles or electric generation, going into landfills and destroys the vegetation and land, digging it up, health problems to the people and population and so much dirtier and places that have rare earth metals are controlled by mostly dictatorships and trusted governments which will waste the money anyway. we are going with this study saying trust us with your money issue united states taxpayer and
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we'll let countries and the united nations says they can't trust it. why? the summary of the report from the un says we need to give more money to countries that get away from oil and gas and fossil fuels. why? the study is done by legitimate scientists and implementation strategy is from individuals that are not experts have an agenda that says we are in an energy crisis, climate crisis that didn't exist. it is energy crisis they are causing. >> todd: what made everything you just said even worse is the classification of china, look at this. china is considered a developing country under this metric, but according to stats on your screen, they almost double our co2 output.
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for argument sake, they are our greatest rival, yet still considered a developing country, that makes no sense. why would we as the united states sign on to something that had that as the backdrop? >> let me tell you the truth of this i think this. tweft-month period, india and china built 288 coal-powered plants and produced much with concentration camp labor. they take that and produce 60's % of windmill, solar panels and batteries we take american tax dollars and send to china, our good friend who does great with our tax dollars and bring wind mills and solar panels and batteries. we brag that we're cleaning the environment, this is insanity. >> ashley: it is. leave it there.
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wayne christianson, thank you for getting up with us. climate protesters attacking priceless art. a group called last generation taking the art out by flour and glued themselves to the floor. the car is worth $59 million, climate talks were underway in egypt when the group defaced the sports car, this is the latest demonstration targeting a work of art. over the last few months, mona lisa, van gogh's painting have been affected. >> todd: fifa world cup with ecuador defeating cutter. this goal from ecuador called off, fifa, virtual assistant
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ruled off sides before the score. fans getting riled up as the game progressed. it was about beer. they demanded beer after cutter banned all alcoholic beverages two days before the tournasm began. [indiscernible] >> todd: i think that is the best thing we've shown on tv, we want beer. budweiser coming up with a creative solution tweeting it is giving surplus to the winning country after morgan freeman selected as this year's host, getting a lack luster welcome, the actor who fell from grace amid sexual misconduct allegations, tried to deliver message of unity. >> here in this moment is so much greater than what divides us. how can we make it last more
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than just today? >> todd: nobody could have gotten him a chair? he was sitting on the ground. team usa takes on wales today, coverage starts 1 p.m. eastern on fox sports. ilhan omar and -- could be kicked off if kevin mccarthy gets the speaker's gavel. >> ashley: and costing more due to inflation, american farmers are working against major expenses to make sure the turkey makes it to your table. we're talking with one of them next.
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>> todd: house minority leader kevin mccarthy responding as how vows to remove three top democrats from top committees. >> we need to work as one, if that know its to move forward, all investigations we asked to happen, none of that can move forward without. eric swalwell cannot get security clearance. you have adam schiff who lied to the american people time and time again and congresswoman
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ilhan omar, we will not allow her to be on foreign affairs. >> todd: mccarthy needs 218 votes. >> ashley: cost of ingredientses reach all-time high as farmers struggles. the average cost of dinner for 10 people rising 20% from last year with individual items such as stuffing mix up 70%. john boy jr. is president of the black farmers association, we spoke in july and you warned me on this show that there would be a food shortage looming, it seems we are getting there. american farm bureau says we can expect smaller flocks and feels like they are setting us up. how did we not see this coming
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because you sure did. >> yes, i've been telling the administration about this for monthses. we have 332 million people in the united states that depend on american farmers everyday to feed them. this administration has not put farmers first. they are proposing another $37 million to ukraine and haven't taken care of american farmers here at home and the administration is not doing enough to make sure that farmers get aid they need and support they need from this administration. we have 16,000 members still waiting for debt relief and finding aid for other countries, not making sure we're at the table and have a voice and we haven't done enough to make sure we fix that. we are paying the price for 20% higher food cost in this country and we haven't heard anything from the administration on what they will do for inflation in
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this country. inflation is on the rise with no end in sight. president, the agriculture -- is not doing enough. china is buying american farms, buying historical black challenges in this country and we haven't done anything about it, this administration has been silent. >> ashley: i assume they have not gotten back to you about that meeting we spoke about in july? >> no, there has been no meeting from this administration and i've reached out to high level officials, democratic leadership, they are not keeping their word and my father taught me early on, all you have in this country is your word as a man and the president didn't keep his word to me and american farmers when he said we will have a seat at this table and should some sort of beneficial factor in his administration. all those things haven't
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happened, we are facing farm foreclosures at record high, farm input cost at record high. 1 time $6 for diesel fuel, $1500 for metric ton of fertilizer when i was paying $300 to $400 a couple of years ago. seed cost has risen and administration is not doing anything about it. totally silent. the administration, especially the secretary, haven't had contact either. >> ashley: talks about a food shortage and issues with farmers, i don't think people really understand how severe it could get. when do you see, what is the end goal, what is going to han if somebody doesn't do something like the president or those with agriculture? >> we're going to lose more farms and instead of losing more farms in this country with 332
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million people, we need to be investing more in small-scale farmers in this country to make sure they have infrastructure they need on the farm. you know i just lost my father this past week and buried him -- all he done in his life is farm and work. that is the work ethic that we need to get back to in this country and need administration that want to recognize hard work of american farmers that go out and do it everyday, the least recognized people, hardest working occupation known to man is farming and we have to put farming back on the top tier in this country, if we want to see america turn around and invest in rural communitieses instead of boarding them up and put resources back in so farmers can stay on the land and pass next generation on to the family
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farmers. >> ashley: sorry to hear about your father, keep fighting the good fight. john boyd jr., thank you for getting up with us. >> todd: condolences, mr. boyd. two lucky birds landed in washington, this year's national thanksgiving bird named chocolate and chip will be pardon at the white house today. unless they do something really bad and the president is like, i'm sending you back out there. this tradition dates back to 1863, believed to be start by abe lincoln. they will be taken care of by agriculture at center. i believe we have chocolate and chip before? are we repeating? you can't eat chocolate or chip. turning to this, gunshots ring
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outer at a middle school football game and one player is being praised for his heroic actionings during the terrifying moments. [video playing] >> run, mr. willard, get down. >> ashley: that brave 13 year old and the teacher he saved both join us to sar their amazing story, stick around for that.
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>> ashley: a bartender is speaking out about the terrifying moments gunshots rung out at an lgbtq nightclub. >> i popped my head up over the booth and i saw like the barrel of a gun that i legitimately thought i was about to get shot. i felt like a fish trapped in a barrel, i was so scared i wouldn't be able to talk to my
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mom or anybody. >> ashley: two of the slain victims were bartenders, they have a suspect in custody as they continue to investigate the attack as a hate crime. >> todd: 15-year-old football player being hailed a hero for protecting his teacher during a terrifying moment when gunfire breaks out at the school's championship game and it was all caught on video. watch. [indiscernible] [video playing] >> down, down. [screaming] >> mr. willard, i got your phone, run, mr. willard. get down, mr. willard. get down. >> todd: wow, joining me is that brave football player along with his teacher. bobby, how scary was that
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moment? >> very scary because i have never been through anything like that. >> todd: i mean, it is just scary to watch. why was your initial instinct to help your teacher instead of yourself first? >> because make sure everybody else was safe. >> todd: understood. donald, what were you thinking when you heard bobby shout at you? >> i think i may have gone unkand passed out for a second, my first reaction was what had happened. intense fear and panic can do a number on you. >> todd: we think of teenagers or preteens as being self-centered, what do you make of the fact bobby put his safety below yours, put your safety above his? >> you know, i think bobby probably can attribute a big
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part of that to bobby's upbringing and his parents, the coaches do a wonderful job and bobby spent the last hour and 15 minutes being part of a team and he was still part of that team, i was on the field with him and part of his team at the time. >> todd: beautiful csentiment. why would anybody shoot up a junior high football game? >> people are -- just so crazy, no telling what is going through anybody's mind. >> todd: donald, what would have happened had bobby not been there? >> it is hard to say, someone would have been there for me, i'm sure. saibt paul's is a town with a lot of heart and i don't see anybody would have been left on the ground. i think bobby was first.
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his mother is a nurse, being a first responder is a part of who bobby is. >> todd: you mention what bobby's mom does. bobby, what do you want to do when you grow up? >> well, what i really want to do, i want to drive a transport truck. >> todd: i feel like first responder could be in your future, a school board member in your district said, the football players from lumberton and st. paul worked hard to reach that stage and will be recognized with a trophy presentation, they deserve that moment and it is in the works. donald from the perspective of the school and community, what is reaction to bobby and all he did to save you? >> we love bobby, he's been a hero. through the school, i know bobby has been getting balloons and flowers and thank you and even myself, i've been getting hugs
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and everyone is glad to see me well and okay. the day after the game was pretty emotional. >> todd: bobby, what did your parents say when they found out what you did? >> they was very proud of me and said they will have a reward for me for my actions. >> todd: you deserve an award. thank you for what you did, we're proud of you. donald, i'm sure issue as well. nice to bring a smile to people's face early on monday, we appreciate it. major shakeup inside the magic kingdom, disney ceo out after less than a year on the job, does this have anything to do with the company's hard left turn on the issue? cheryl casone will tell us what comes next. >> ashley: this is what the american dream is about, delivery driver celebrates his first paycheck after becoming a u.s. citizen and you will meet him right after this. ♪
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expel migrants over covid-19. bringing bussing to d.c. claim they were overwhelmed. southern border dealt with 186,000 migrant crossings in october alone issue not even close to the number going to washington, d.c. monica de la cruz cruise tells the administration what it needs to do to curb this crisis. listen. >> the biden administration needs to listen to the people on the front lines, brave men and women protecting our nation and what they are saying, by lift title 42, it will mean ecto nential increase in illegal immigrants crossing our border. what that means to you and i, border patrol agents will be
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taken off the front line and put administration duties. thatten moos cartels will be able to bring more drugs across and more illegal activity and that is what should be concerning. the biden administration need to listen to what border patrol agents are saying. >> ashley: man who just immigrated legally from cuba is celebrating his first american paycheck, which was far more than the $13 a month he was making as a professor in his home country. that legal resident and his wife are joining us now. uel, hats off to you. you got your first paycheck, how did that feel? >> oh, i never had that feeling in my life because i have the -- i feel the future, i control with that check, i control my fu
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future, more opportunity and in this beautiful country, that is my feeling. in my country, i never have that sensation, i earn $12 in the month. >> ashley: i was so excited to see i was going to speak to you, my family and i thought this was the coolest story. marissa, you have been documenting little victories, what has it been like for you to watch him flourish like this? >> behind the camera, i'm always crying because he has gone through this, but his reaction is not unique, so many immigrants have this experience and come from a radically different country. i'm so proud of how he has been able to adapt. >> ashley: this could be for both of you, anyone watching
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this, just waiting to get accepted into the united states, what words of encouragement do you have? what words of encouragement for wanting their story to become your story? >> i want the people understand united states the best country you can stay, you control your life, you think about and dream. the dream is important with all the people coming here, important for the united states people, where you live, feel proud where you live. >> i say to migrants coming that it is a very hard journey becoming legal in the united states, but with time, everyone,
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you can do it. >> ashley: yoel, talking about being proud, are you proud to be in america? >> i feel 100% proud living here, it is beginning my life, my near reborn. >> ashley: talk about the other things you have documented, we saw videos of him for his first time in time square, i am sure that was amazing, i can only imagine yoel's experience, i love it. >> the bigger video was his first time at walmart. >> it was crazy. >> he was very shocked. in cuba, there are empty shelves and long lines just to buy a piece of chicken and when you go into walmart or a grocery store, there is everything there for you, it is easy, no line, no food rationing, you are very
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excited. >> excited, only you see in the movie and my country only see that in you hmovie, in real lif wow. >> ashley: your story is amazing and you are inspiring so many people with your story, keep sharing it, the people obviously love it, congrates to you and good luck with your future, i'm so glad you are here. >> ink t thank you. >> ashley: that is yoel diaz and his wife. >> todd: i love that, taylor swift's presale crashed the ticketmaster website. swifties calling for action. taylor swift blamed ticketmaster saying she wants to figure out how to improve the ticket buying process going forward.
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she made a surprise appearancea the music awards. >> i cannot express how unbelievable it is to me that i still get to do that and you still care. so thank you underlined with 13 exclamation points, i don't know what to say, i love you. >> todd: it wasn't a surprise to me she was there, she is taylor swift, she has every album right now, best pop is for "red" which which she made. >> todd: -- set for today as heart broken families and communitieses are waiting for answers about who commit third degree horrific crime and why. >> ashley: dr. michael boddin has worked on high profile cases
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in american history and joins us to share his thoughts on the investigation. the first-ever all-electric chevy blazer ev. 0 to 60 in under 4 seconds. and up to 320 miles of range on a full charge. evs for everyone, everywhere. chevrolet.
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>> todd: a fox news alert, republicans and democrats sounding the alarm on tiktok with some calling for the social media app to be banned as new concerns emerge that china is using it to target americans. you're watching "fox and friends first"s, i'm todd piro. >> ashley: i'm ashley strohmier, in for carley shimkus. trump signed an order banning tiktoks, that was revoked by president biden. the ban would be a dangerous precedent for democracy, but now some critics are changing their tune. >> todd: a growing number of lawmakers on capitol hill are concerned about tiktok and ties

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