tv Americas Newsroom FOX News November 29, 2022 6:00am-7:00am PST
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for ten minutes and we're forced to put it back on the table until the knock-out. >> we're so excited. coverage starts at 1:00. game at 2:00. >> one suggestion to the u.s. team? stay within themselves today. play a good day. >> thank you very much for joining us live on the couch. that's it for today. now we go to "america's newsroom." [shouting] >> bill: those are the sounds of defiance the chinese people staging historic protests against the country's communist rulers. can they count on american support? we haven't seen this since tin men square. let's get it rolling in new york. >> dana: i'm dana perino and this is "america's newsroom." the images are stunning but already some changes happening over there. this is the biggest show of dissent in decades. chinese protesting are not just
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railing against harsh covid restrictions. they are doing something unprecedented. calling on president xi jinping to resign. >> bill: a massive police response. officers arresting protestors and breaking up demonstrations and police confiscating people's phones apparently checking for banned apps like twitter. >> dana: unrest spreading across a dozen major cities. it's the biggest uprising for many years. they are looking for america for support. the white house response has been tepid. >> the protests we're seeing in china and protests we're seeing for reasons in iran and other places of the our position is the same every where, which is that we support the right of people every where to peacefully protest and make known their views, their concerns and their
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frustrations. >> dana: jacque heinrich is live on the north lawn. >> the white house is expressing support for the chinese protestors but not going so far as to echo their calls for regime change. >> what is the president's reaction when he hears protestors in china chant freedom or xi jinping with step down. >> they are speaking for themselves. >> there is no reaction? >> these protestors are speaking for themselves. >> critics say it's far short of the unequivocal and specific warning the u.s. should be giving about the consequences of any bloody crackdown harkening back to 1989 when the u.s. and other democracies made little effort to deter the leader from massacring student protestors. cruz says the biden's administration's response is worse than expected. they should know one way or another in the coming months or
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years the united states will hold accountable every ccp official responsible for atrocities against the protestors. the time to make that clear warning is now. >> make the prediction because this is actually more dangerous than 1989. the massacre then. protestors really wanted to keep the communist party in place but wanted to replace hard line leaders. >> ccp is saying the price of predome in the u.s., 1 million covid deaths, 107, 622 fentanyl deaths in 2021 aleen. what we want is to protect our people's lives and insure them a better life. now experts say that these protests are a real threat to chinese president's rule and he is likely than not to have a swift response that could
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potentially become even more severe. pushing for a strong u.s. response, dana. >> dana: jacque heinrich at the white house. >> bill: let's bring in republican mike gallagher out of wisconsin member of the house intelligence committee. you are calling on the white house to take concrete steps to support chinese protestors. such as what? >> well, i do think the president simply saying that he stands with the protestors is powerful but if they don't take action we should be in the business here in congress of imposing global sanctions on any ccp official that is complicit in a violent crackdown on the protestors. we should have long ago imposed sanctions on the wuhan institute of varology officials and chinese academy of sigh sciences. we can restrict the flow of u.s. dollars to chinese surveillance companies that allow suppression
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like this to be possible and expand the treasury list who aren't on some of the lists and there is a lot to win the information war. finding ways to get around the great firewall. making sure that american technology companies like apple aren't reducing air drop services and enabling the ccp to repress its citizens and banning tiktok. we get a sense of how brutal the ccp's methods are now. it is long past time for us to make sure that tiktok that is controlled by the ccp doesn't become the most dominant media company in america. >> dana: there were reports that the chinese officials and police were stopping people in the street and asking to see their phone and they were scrolling through to see if they had apps like instagram, twitter, snapchat or way to communicate amongst each other. want to get your take on this. these people are oppressed. they are much more frustrated than they have been in the past.
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one, they are locked down, the promises that they would have the jobs they were told they were going to get after they did all this education did not materialize. they don't have the private property thoughts they thought they might get. they look at their lives and every human heart there is a desire to be free. you are born with that. there is only so much people can take. i also wonder if after the president saw xi at the g20 and apparently didn't bring up covid, i would imagine it seems watching the white house response thinking that they are probably hoping that the white house continues to be tepid. because that's what is expected of this relationship. the biden administration will have the kind of cooperative relationship they set out to a couple weeks ago. >> i think it exposes how confused the biden administration's china policy is. you have climate change
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enthusiasts trying to work with china and other people that -- we're comparing this to tiananmen and xi has praised the violent suppression of that protest. the difference between then and now. xi jinping has many more tools of oppression available to him because he has built the technological surveillance. they need to get a service code to get groceries. they could change it from green to red to suppress protestors. we need to understand what we're up against here. >> bill: mike gallagher, thank you for your time and see where they go today and in the coming days after that. nice to see you, sir, on the hill. >> thank you. >> does the president think there is benefit to the climate
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to drill oil in venezuela and not here? >> i have nothing to do with the benefits of the climate. it remains to be seen how much will get drilled down there. it will be up to chevron to decide that, peter. but as a function of the sanction itself, that oil, whatever product is drilled, has to come to the united states. >> dana: biden administration is defending its decision to let chevron resume oil operations in venezuela, a dictatorship. we have more on this today. hi, edward. >> the president leaving in a few hours going to michigan. he is going the make the argument that his economic plans are creating a manufacturing job boom. the white house playing word games when it comes to job. >> during his remarks, president biden will highlight his economic plan, it is leading to a manufacturing boom, growing the economy and creating good
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paying jobs. the economy has created more than 700,000 manufacturing jobs and that is 10 million total jobs created under this president. >> a fact check here. according to the bureau of labor statistics the economy added jobs back lost in the pandemic and created 337,000 jobs. the economy added back all the jobs lost during the pandemic and created 804,000 jobs. now as the president pushes the green agenda overall energy is up 74.6%. fuel oil up 68.5% year-over-year. natural gas, electricity up double digits. instead of changing energy policies to address this the president is doing a deal with venezuela dictator nicolas maduro. >> they have throttled the oil and gas industry in the point in this country our national security is at risk.
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and you are now putting it in the hands of a dictator in venezuela. i mean, the only place that you can go to put you in greater danger would be in russia and we saw them do that with russia by allowing the nord stream two pipeline to go forward. >> the president will not change his energy policies and his red line from day one. >> dana: edward lawrence, thank you very much. >> bill: we'll see what chevron gets out of it. peter doocy was talking to john kirby yesterday in the briefing room and here is that exchange. >> why is it that president biden would rather let u.s. companies drill for oil in venezuela than here in the u.s.? >> that's not an accurate take on the president's view. the president has issued 9,000 permits for drilling on u.s. federal lands, peter, 9,000 of them being unused. there are plenty of opportunities for oil and gas companies to drill here in the
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united states. >> bill: you could choose venezuela or western pennsylvania or northeastern ohio. >> dana: you know the show undercover boss? i feel like president biden should try to do that at one of these oil companies one day. somebody who runs drillers. this is not how it works. if they had ever run a business, they would understand that just having the permit does not give you exactly all you need. there are all the other regulations. unshackling that would help america and the world really. >> bill: now it's an easy answer and easy out for chevron. 11 past. house majority said to take the fentanyl crisis as a top priority. if that's the case, what's the plan to stop the deadly flow of that opioid? >> dana: students returning to the university of idaho where a quadruple murder is still unsolved. what that means for life on campus. >> bill: the twitter ceo elon musk pushing for free speeches
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ca lateing a feud with apple. the richest company in the world. a battle for the future of civilization. if free speech is lost even in america tyranny is all that lies ahead. and there is more next. right here in our hometown of moulton, alabama. from our heirloom inspired sheets to our super absorbent bath towels, to our 100% cotton quilts. every single piece is made right here in america. we believe in keeping our heritage 100% american made. enjoy our farm to home products and receive what if there was a community of like minded people ready to support you when you need it most? christian health care ministries is an organization with over 40 years of trusted care who understands the importance of family.
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>> bill: soccer taking a back seat to politics, not really. world cup match later today. u.s. and iran play a critical match in qatar. the u.s. men's team posted temporarily an image of iran's national flag that left off the emblem of the islamic republic in support of protestors. iran is asking that the u.s. be booted entirely. coverage of the game starts at 1:00 eastern on fox.
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you can see it later today there. there are so many story lines in this match today. really the currents are crisscrossing across that pitch and we'll see how it goes. >> dana: england plays wales. a little rivalry there, too. >> bill: for u.s. men's soccer you need to win today. you need to advance. if you do you'll take your program and advance it further than you can imagine. for the people in the city and streets of iran, there are reports today that suggest that they want the u.s. to win. imagine that. 1:00 on fox, check it out. >> dana: we'll be watching for sure. heightened security on campus as university of idaho students return to school after thanksgiving. meanwhile, a candlelight vigil is planned for tomorrow for the four victims found brutally stabbed in their apartment over two weeks ago. dan springer is live in moscow, idaho. is there anything new this morning? >> when we got out here more than two weeks ago right after
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the murders took place, the university of idaho campus was in shock. we saw students fleeing this campus and parents demanding their kids come home. even with that killer still out there and police say that they don't have any clues or person of interest even, we're starting to see students come back on campus. we're also seeing here on campus a lot of security. university officials put out word that student safety is their number one priority and they are flooding this relatively small campus with cops and private security guards. we see officers from moscow p.d. state police and guards from a company that usually does event security. they'll have patrols 24/7 to keep students safe and for them to feel secure as they return for the last three weeks of this semester. return they did. i would guess a majority returned. one professor told me all but three of his 60 students are back in class in person.
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espos >> i feel safer. there is a lot more campus security. i feel like i can just walk around and feel safe wherever i'm going. >> it seems like a lot of police around and it seems like everyone is pretty vigilant. so i'm not too concerned but obviously they haven't found the person so there is still a threat. >> the four victims will be memorialized tomorrow night. a candlelight vigil will celebrate their lives and bring the campus together in an important way and good to see so many students coming back to do that event tomorrow and told they'll walk from a church to the middle of campus and then having that service for those four students. dana. >> dana: dan springer, thank you. >> bill: we got a battle of tech
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titans. the richest man going after the richest company. elon musk and apple. he tweeted apple has mostly stopped advertising on twitter. do they hate free speech in america? where does it go? the founder of strive asset management and vivek, good morning to you. we were looking for a response from apple. we haven't seen it yet. if we get it we'll pass it to our viewers. what is musking for here. >> calling out the hypocrisy of a company that said think different. now they'll punish you if you think the same. people might say i don't want to use my iphone then and switch to an android. google the make that exact same decision to deplatform an app like twitter as it did with parlor. both apple and the google play store did the exact same thing. i think this exposes, bill, the
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real antitrust problem in silicon valley. it is not a monopoly on products. it is a monopoly on ideas. it is not this classical product cartel that punishes the consumer by charging them a high price. it's an ideological cartel that punishes the defector. right now it's elon musk and that's what we're seeing on display. >> bill: he fired a bunch of these off yesterday. apple that's threatened to withhold twitter from its app store but won't tell us why. if that's true, that's a big deal. >> that's a very big deal that goes back to the antitrust cases in the 1990s of microsoft tying up browsers. apple and google play stores. a monopoly on ideas. i think it goes more deeply to our culture. what are our commitments to the free exchange of ideas? what are our cultural
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commitments to free speech and open debate? that's what's at stake here. the threat to free speech today plays out not just through the government. that's half the problem. but through the hybrid of governmental power and corporate power especially anti-competitive corporate power to suppress free speech and open debate in the country. that's the essence of our national soul and what's at stake in this debate. >> bill: if you follow your twitter feed and see what musk is doing since he bought the company is a stunning thing to see how many people want to see him fail. it was not like that before on this platform. "washington post" takes an entirely different angle. musk is harming free expression on twitter and not protecting it. those who believe in free expression. mr. musk has brought chaos. do you see it as chaos thus far? >> i wouldn't characterize it as
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car chaos. a lot of his commentary isn't consistent with some of the things he said. he doesn't want to see either the far right or far left. he wants to serve the 80% of americans in the middle. i personally think that nobody should be making central determinations of truth, central determinations of what viewpoints do and don't get expressed. i don't think political discrimination should have a place on twitter at all. viewpoint base discrimination of any kind. give the power back to the user. elon musk is driving the ball forward and encourage him to stay true to the true north star as operating it as a free speech platform instead of moderate principles. >> bill: he said he would release the algorithm. he hasn't done that yet. the twitter files on free speech suppression soon to be published on twitter itself. the public deserves to know what
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really happened. that would be the story of the day if it happens. >> at the end of the day give the public transparency how these decisions have been made over the last couple of years. i personally think that's what the media is most frightened of is exposing the way which government, classical and social media conspired. that's exactly what happened over the last couple of years to suppress information. i would say let's disinfect that with sunlight and it will be a good thing for american democracy. >> bill: he said free speech is not just the speech you like also speech from people you don't like perhaps. we'll see what comes this way today. nice to see you. >> dana: a slap seen around the world. will smith is opening up about the infamous oscars moment. what he is saying. plus president biden putting the onus on congress to avert a potentially crippling railroad strike. isn't this his responsibility? ie
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>> bill: one hour from now just getting word the white house president biden will sit down with chuck schumer and nancy pelosi. the incoming speaker of the house mccarthy and mitch mcconnell of the white house. doesn't happen often. house republicans laying out the priorities for the new congress. certainly that will be part of the discussion today including how you tackle the fentanyl crisis. alexandria hoff live in washington picks it up from there. >> congressman comer brought this up over the weekend when pressed whether new gun laws need to be passed he said the focus of the gop needs to be elsewhere. listen. >> the number one priority with respect to crime in america for republicans is going to be the fentanyl crisis. we talk about terrible gun crimes in america but we've had over 100,000 deaths because of fentanyl pouring across our border which is unsecured right now. that will be the top priority for republicans come january. >> the idea that fentanyl is
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pouring across our southern border was confirmed when federal officials gathered last week in l.a. county to alert families about counterfeit drugs laced with the synthetic opioid. >> the widespread death and suffering is being driven by drug cartels who care far more about profits than about people's lives. while law enforcement alone cannot solve this problem, we are doing everything we can to address this crisis and using the resources that we have. >> officials added they seized so much of the deadly substance in the last two months it is as much as they did in all of 2019. republicans see this higher quantity as just the tip of the iceberg. the biden administration sees it as a win. >> we're stopping fentanyl before it even makes it to the streets of the united states. so we have a plan. we've been putting that forward. mccarthy has no plan. the republican party has no plan.
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they do nothing except do political stunts. >> republicans went to the border believing it is the cause of fentanyl becoming the cause of death. more states have moved to legalize fentanyl test strips. those strips are controversial as some feel that it gives drug users a false sense of safety. the number one priority for republicans when it comes to crime-fighting comes this january. >> bill: we'll see what comes of that meeting in an hour's time. first big one since the mid-terms. alex, nice to see you today. thank you. >> dana: potential railroad strike looms that could cripple the economy president biden says the onus is on congress to stop it. i'm calling on congress to pass legislation immediately to adopt a tentative agreement between railroad workers and operators without any modifications or delay to avert a potentially crippling national rail shutdown.
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fox news contributor karl rove is here. maybe you can explain to people why it works this way that you have the president now calling on congress to try to get this done. >> well, it goes back to the 1926 railway act. it sets up a process by which if there is a threat of a rail strike, first you go through mediation, both parties have to agree to sit down and have a mediator meet with them to try to come to an agreement. if that doesn't completely work, it didn't completely work. then the president can invoke the presidentall emergency board that comes in and outlines an agreement and that happened. both parties sort of semi agreed to that. and then it was put up for a vote by the unions and they are like, you know, 17 or 18 unions that have to vote. 14 approved it. four turned it down and one more that's voting. the four that turned it down include some of the larger unions. so the time on that runs out on december 9th.
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if there is a cooling off period that ends on december 9th. after that point there could be a strike. just about the worst time possible for the christmas season. with huge ramifications everything from agriculture to oil and gas to you name it gets affected. so much of it gets carried by rail. so we're now -- the president -- the first time it happened. i think there have been 18 instances since 1926 in which the president has said appealed to congress you have to step in and impose the agreement that everybody sort of agreed to at the bargaining table in september. >> bill: he is the blue collar union guy and back in september he said they had a deal and i parently they only had a deal with a few unions and not everybody. so -- >> they had a deal with most of the unions but not most of the unions representing the workers. >> bill: is this the ultimate outsource or is it just what
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happens when you reach a stalemate? >> it is just what happens. the agreement has a 24% pay increase retro active to 2020. it has a $1 thousand a year bonus retro active to 2020. it has time off for doctor's appointments, that was a big thing for the union. they wanted to get the ability to take time off to go to the doctor. the railroad said okay, fine. you have to tell us 30 days in advance otherwise it can screw up our work schedules. all of those items are in the agreement that would be -- that congress is being asked to affirm. what's not in there is the unions wanted paid sick leave. they also -- there is not a big issue publicly but privately. the railroads have said in some limited number of instances like moving around trains in a rail yard, for example, they would have one man crews versus two-man crews. the unions want the two-man crews because two union workers get paid as opposed to one.
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this is pretty good. 24% pay increase retro active to 2020. >> bill: here is where it gets sticky. pelosi has said the house will not change the terms of the agreement they had in september. so if she is not going to budge in the house, we really are two trains on a track heading toward each other. >> but my sense is the senate is of the same mindset. you had a pretty generous agreement and it takes care of the big issues. you supposedly wanted the big issue that the unions were talking about was pay. the second big issue was we want time off for being able to go to doctor's appoint also. are we going to shut down the economy of the country because you want paid sick leave and you want to tell the railroads they can never use one-man crews? will we really shut down the economy of the country just before christmas? pelosi is taking a tough line and so is the administration. the president has said i want
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congress to immediately take up and approve the agreement that everybody sitting around that table agreed to september after the presidental emergency board laid it out. >> dana: they're going to the white house in about 40 minutes. we'll have you back to talk about what they accomplish or not. >> bill: in a moment here a violent weekend in chicago. wow, including a string of robberies. police say they were committed by a group of teenagers as the mayor lori lightfoot launches her re-election campaign. how will she address this never ending crisis that is ongoing? plus this. [shouting] >> bill: we're watching this. this video from sunday 48 hours ago. protests in china. people revolting against the prolonged covid lockdowns, how the unrest could potentially disrupt global markets and further stress relations with the u.s.
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>> it was a very disturbing crime scene. this guy is or was a monster. a pedophile. he is an online predator. >> dana: riverside, california police describing a grizzly scene after a catfishing scam turned deadly. the suspected killer is accused of faking his identity in a relationship with a california teen. police say edwards drove across the country from virginia to pick her up. she shot and killed her mother, grandmother and grandfather. then set the house on fire and
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escaped with the screaming girl. later police spotted edwards with the teen in san bernardino county. he was killed after a shoot out with officers there. the teen thankfully was unharmed. >> bill: in chicago violent thanksgiving weekend there. more than a dozen armed robberies taking place in five hours. more than 30 people shot. none of this was mentioned when the mayor lori lightfoot filed for re-election. we're watching it go down now with mike tobin. >> bill: criminals are appearing bolder each day. a group of teenagers robbed people at gun point. chicago police say there were 13 armed robberies, pretty standard mugings. suspects drove around and when they spotted a victim they'd pill out a victim. point guns and take things they were carrying. the crime spree went on for five hours. they're described as late teenagers, african-american wearing surgical masks while
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lori lightfoot filed for re-election and she said chicago is the safest big city in the united states. >> voters all across the city to remind them not only what we've done over the last 3 1/2 years but what our vision is for the next four and why the only rational choice is to return me to office. >> lightfoot makes note murders are down from last year. they're down 15%. 2021 was a staggering year that saw murders jump 60% from pre-pandemic levels when lightfoot took office. when you put everything together both last year and this year have seen reported crimes jump 40% in the city of the big shoulders and 24 shooting incidents over thanksgiving weekend. >> bill: mike tobin, thanks in chicago. >> dana: let's keep talking about the chicago crime surge
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with geraldo rivera. very good to see you. very sad. i know you follow this closely all over the country. this is chicago's crime stats up 40% when you have major crimes at 58,000 year-to-date right now. lori lightfoot promised the make chicago safer. listen to her on june 7th. >> together we will make our city safer, fairer, and more equitable for all. now let's get back to work. >> dana: sitting where we are and where -- i'm not in chicago every day, only see it from afar and read the news. is she the only rational choice in chicago right now? >> well, you know, it is a place where violence rules certain sections of that city. imagine nine killed this holiday weekend. the opponents to lori lightfoot are saying she has presided over this pandemic of crime. as you point out, as mike
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pointed out in his report, she is making a lot of murder being down year-to-date. but it was extraordinary last year and grim this year. 632 murders up until today. one as recently as 1:00 this morning. lori lightfoot in her defense first of all she is trying to say she is not as abrasive and apologizes for her personal style. in that regard she is taking a page from rahm emanuel's campaign for mayor where his abrasive style was criticized. she is trying to say she is unusual in her approach to things but she has increased funding for cops. they are working to reduce violence. they did convict just a few days ago in federal court this guy donald lee of the traveling vice lords, one of the many drug dealing murderous chicago street gangs responsible for so much of this violence. but she is an odd character.
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she is sometimes a -- she is struggling against an epidemic of violence that is breathtaking in its scope, its depth and devastation. >> dana: every monday when you read what is happening in chicago it's very sad. the other thing is we had a woman on yesterday an entrepreneur in portland, oregon. she decided to leave because her store has been broken into so many times. >> it came down to not just the financial side but the safety of my employees and myself. beyond this city not having law enforcement and taking care of the criminal behavior that's running rampant, we have insurance companies that drop small businesses if and when you do make a claim. >> dana: there are financial impacts to this. her store closes that means the
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jobs of the people she employs goes away, there will be an empty store front for a while and that vicious cycle can continue, geraldo. >> the difference, i think, between portland and chicago is that in portland, some of that awful violence was really in the heart of the city. chicago, you know, has the miracle mile and a shopping area relatively safe. chicago is unique in that it is the capital of the ghetto civil war that rages. i've spoken about this before, the civil rights issue of our time. young black men killing other young black men confined generally to the south side of chicago. sometimes the southwest side of the city. it is out of sight, out of mind. chicago operates the city of big shoulders that mike spoke about in his report hums along. but then in the ghetto, in the poorer areas, in the black areas of town, there is violence that
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i submit is like kabul, baghdad, mexico city. it is something that is horrifying and i think that the fact that black civil rights leaders are not speaking up about helping lori lightfoot, joining in a crusade to put down this violence that is wreaking such havoc, this tides of bloodshed is something that -- you said earlier, every monday morning we wake up, okay, what's the body count in chicago? it's appalling. if this was our g.i.s in one of the foreign capitals in war, the public outcry would be enormous to stop the war. well, stop the war in chicago, dana. >> dana: well said, geraldo. thank you, good to see you. >> thank you. >> bill: blocked by crypto currency lender files for bankruptcy. the first big after shock after the collapse of ftx.
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the founder of that company sam bankman-fried tried to bail out a company. that agreement included a $4 hundred million credit facility. all that is nothing now with the issues with ftx. they filed for bankruptcy to get any money it can get from the deal they had out there. see how it goes. >> dana: i had to check in with kelly o'grady and she explained it to me so i don't have to read it over and over again. it is huge problems in the sector. the iranian government threatening its own soccer team ahead of the high stakes match-up against the u.s. some iranian fans are pulling for the u.s. today. the supreme court hearing arguments in case for u.s. immigration policy and how it could force the white house to reshape its approach“ why.”
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>> dana: world's largest active volcano erupting for the first time in nearly 40 years on hawaii's big island. the magma pouring through the rift in the side of a mountain that prompted an ash advisory. authorities are monitoring the situation. people who live nearby should be ready to evacuate if need be. i would be ready. >> bill: that from hawaii. 30 million americans facing a severe weather threat today. snow in the forecast for several northwestern states and strong tornadoes expected in the south today. nicole valdez, fox weather, is live in memphis. what are we in for? good morning. >> a rare outlook for december unfortunately, nothing is off the table here. the storm prediction center says a regional tornado outbreak is possible here as those storms start to move over states including a louisiana, arkansas, mississippi, alabama and portions of west tennessee.
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a threat level of four out of five. how confident meteorologists are we could start to see dangerous conditions develop later on today. that includes hail, wind and some of those potentially intense tornadoes. we're talking an ef2 potentially or greater. some school districts have announced plans to send students home early as emergency officials are urging those who live in the shaded areas on the map you see there to try to get their safe space ready. these storms the end to move very fast and tornadoes can spin up in a matter of minutes. so being prepared ahead of time is always key here. unfortunately one major concern is that these intense storms will start to move over the areas as the sun is setting later today. so you won't be able to just look out your window and see if it is heading your way. it is really why keeping that fox weather app on loud is so key here to make sure that you know if and when it is heading toward your neighborhood, bill. >> bill: thanks.
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check the app. well done in memphis, tennessee. thank you. >> dana: fox news alert right now the supreme court is set to hear arguments in a case challenging the authority of the biden administration to set immigration policy. the case u.s. versus texas coming as thousands of migrants every single day enter the country illegally threatening national safety and putting a major strain on border states. retired border patrol chief explaining his major concern with the growing number of illegal crossings. >> what worries me wasn't what we arrested? but what got away. we had no idea who was coming across and it's the worst i have seen in the last 35 years. >> dana: so they will have this argument today. dr. bill bennett was talking about it earlier. we can bring it up if you have it. maybe we don't have it. that might be for later. i would love that. this is dr. bill bennett talking about th
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