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tv   Americas Newsroom  FOX News  December 19, 2022 6:00am-7:00am PST

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♪ >> move over, mr. coffee, this is going to change america. america needs changing. >> thank you very much. >> thanks for coming in. see you later. listen to the radio from noon to noon. >> i'll be here tomorrow and the next day. merry christmas, everybody. >> bill: well done, good morning, everybody. the border has broken and open and about to get a lot worse. the expiration of a public health policy expected to unleash a flood of humanity and many agree we're unprepared at every single level. good morning, everybody. for what that's worth i'm bill hemmer. welcome to our show. >> dana: good morning, i'm dana perino. this is "america's newsroom." good morning. we're just two days away from the end of title 42. the public health order that lets the cdc turn away migrants
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who don't have visa. >> it is have a surge of illegal crossings of 14,000 a day. >> dana: democrats are even sounding the alarm. the mayor of el paso declared a state of emergency. this is inside a migrant processing center in the city of el paso. the facility has a capacity of 1,000. as of friday, it was holding nearly 5,000 people. >> bill: officials fear it will only get worse. greg abbott hoping for a last minute stick save from the courts. >> if the courts don't put a halt to the removal of title 42 it will be total chaos. >> dana: we have reaction from brandon judd and james freeman from the "wall street journal." let's get to the white house. peter doocy is live on the north lawn. what's new today? it seems very quiet from the
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white house as we face this. >> quiet so far. president biden remains in delaware for another hour or two where he was all weekend long. despite what we've been hearing from officials here at the biden white house about an all of government approach to prepare for the end of title 42, it is democrats now who are very unsatisfied with the biden white house's approach. they are starting to blame the people around the president. >> president biden can do this. with all due respect i think his advisors are doing a disservice to him. >> a top white house advisor bottoms says president biden hasn't gone to the border himself yet because it would tie up too many resources. >> you know, i don't know about you or about any of my republican colleagues who love to parachute into my community and do their photo ops at the border. >> we live there. we live in texas.
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the border i represent is 100 miles from the border. >> right now there is no known plan to replace title 42. no way to know two days from now which migrants should stay or should go according to this president. a new proposal from a top democrat. don't do anything differently. >> the president can basically ask for that extension. i think his administration is doing that or will do that. i sure hope they do. >> if they do ask for an extension of title 42, it will represent a complete 180 from a biden administration that has claimed during covid that they were stuck with title 42. >> this is not an immigration policy. this title 42 is a health authority that's determined by the cdc. >> and biden administration officials have given no indication that they plan to ask for an extension of title 42. but you can't replace something with nothing. so far they have proposed
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nothing different so far. dana. >> dana: peter doocy at the white house. >> bill: a lot of reaction, good analysis. brandon judd from the national border patrol council. listen to the democratic mayor of el paso. no surprise to you. this is what he is saying about what's happening in his town now. >> i said from the beginning that i would call it when i felt that either our asylum seconders to our community was not today. tonight i think they're not safe as we have hundreds on the streets. and that's not the way we want to treat people. >> bill: he hasn't always been talking like that. you have to imagine mayors in border towns for thousands of miles have been given a clarion call like that for two years. so will anything change? >> bill, you started off by saying that the border was already broken and i appreciate
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you saying that. it is. 8,000 apprehensions per day is way too many for us to handle. that's why you see the el paso processing center completely and totally inundated with people more than what we can actually process through in a timely manner. so it is already broken but it is about to get so much worse and it will be the mayors in these cities that are going to feel the brunt of this. it will be states like texas and arizona that will feel all of the pressure that's coming in. and to have an administration that knew that title 42 was on its last leg and not do anything about it is absolutely bad governance. people should hold this administration accountable. until we do that they'll continue the status quo. we've seen it time and time again. they don't care about border security and why they do exactly what they're doing. >> bill: as of this wednesday only in el paso the numbers will go from 2500, to 4,000 to 6,000
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coming our way. >> dana: i do want to ask you about the state of the border patrol employees and their state of mind. i read that you had said they feel defeated, overwhelmed, demoralized and also said they will continue to do their jobs. tell us more about what you are hearing from border patrol agents. >> we are defeated. every time we go out and put on a uniform to patrol the border we don't feel like we have the support of this administration. when we're doing a job we were never supposed to do in the first place. they aren't asylum officers and not dealing with asylum or processing people for that claim. we are supposed to be an enforcement agency. we are supposed to be apprehending people trying to get away and apprehending the bad actors and seizing the drugs crossing the border illegally. every time we see a death in the united states of fentanyl or any
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other drug that comes across the southwest border we know we weren't able to do what we were supposed to do. when you don't feel like you are accomplishing your job you don't go home with that sense of full philment. that's the way it is today. >> dana: we'll continue to follow it, brandon. thank you for joining us this morning. just getting the monday started and bringing everybody up to speed. thank you. for more let's bring in james freeman assistant editor of the "wall street journal." president biden's disapproval was 61%. this is actually your job as commander-in-chief. this is actually the job. and they seem to -- they say we have a plan. we haven't seen one. they said it yesterday in el paso because they didn't have enough border patrol agents we were walking across the highway into the city.
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>> this is absolutely a core responsibility of the president. i think he has another great opportunity, if he wants to seize it. i know it's not popular to say let's do a photo op. i think it would mean a lot if it was sincere for him to go to the border, make a speech. don't take questions. stick to prepared text and say we'll enforce the law now. there are many tools he has if he wants to use them that existed before covid, right? you don't need a public health emergency in order to enforce the border. in order to let them go after human trafficking and drugs. you don't have to do it exactly as trump did it. i get the politics of it. but a strong, clear statement that we're done with the chaos, the lawlessness and humanitarian crisis. don't come here if your paperwork isn't in in order and turn to the republicans in congress and said let's talk about enforcement plus more legal, lawful migration.
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>> bill: let's make this point. something has changed in the last week. dana and i have sat here for two years reporting on this story every day with our reporters up and down the border. we have a monitor to our right called a quad box watching the other networks. no one is down there or even reporting from down there except in the last week. you saw a lot of the networks over the weekend reporting on this story. do you think on its face that could have a difference for policy in this white house? >> i do. in this business there are a lot of times there are stories a lot of people like to ignore for whatever reason. eventually they have to stop ignoring it because the problem is so manifest. i think what you are seeing in those polling results, this is across the board a dissatisfaction with the status quo. you are seeing it in other networks having to pay attention and seeing it in democrats, including the mayor of this city. >> dana: i was going to bring
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that up. this is the cover of the "new york post" today tidal wave alarm. city hall in panic over the flood this week. the mayor of new york city saying when title 42 goes away we could expect 1,000 more a week. regardless of what the republicans think of president biden the pressure might start coming from the democratic party. these mayors are on the hook. >> i hope there will be internal pressure at the white house. you would think at some point it sinks in we aren't getting legislation through the next couple of years. we have to deal with the republican house. where are the places we can get a win? this is one of them. if the president decides he wants to set a course toward lawful migration, he can get a win on this. it is sitting there waiting for him. maybe now that the networks are all taking it seriously maybe the white house will, too. >> bill: maybe. the story for the week and the
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story for months to come. thank you. nice to see you, "wall street journal." late last night terrifying moments for passengers on a flight to honolulu. the flight out of phoenix hit severe turbulence and luggage crashed down from overhead compartments and dozens injured on board. some sent to the hospital including an infant. what happened? >> can you even imagine? this was a scary few moments for the 278 passengers and ten crew members who were aboard hawaiian airlines flight 35 when the wear turbulence event hit. it was en route to honolulu from phoenix when pilots reported flying into severe turbulence around 10:30 hawaii time sunday morning. the smokey cabin and scary after math after the rare event
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took the plane and sent luggage the flying. the flight crew declared an emergency and were safely able to land the plane but not without injury. paramedics responded to the scene to treat at least 36 people, some for lacerations, head bruising and nausea. 20 people and three crew members were taken to area hospitals for further treatment. the youngest was 14 months old. fortunately no one is listed in critical condition but boy, was this match of turbulence did it catch everyone off guard. >> there was no warning of this particular patch of air at that altitude was in any way dangerous. it caught everybody by surprise, which is often the case. >> bill, we wretched out to the faa for comment. they sent us a statement saying it will investigate the incident to try to figure out what went
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wrong here and we could see preliminary accident or incident report posted at some time today. we'll keep an eye on it, bill. >> bill: thank you charles watson in georgia. thank you, sir. >> dana: very scary. >> bill: technology is that good you wonder what happened on this. >> dana: not always. it's a good reminder to wear your seat belt when you are on the plane. >> bill: noted >> dana: elon musk teasing what could be a major revamp as twitter. the company's ties with the f.b.i. were closer than we thought. >> bill: fox news obtained video in the idaho murder case, new surveillance footage that might give us a new clue coming up. also this. check it out. >> yes! >> dana: a dramatic finish to an epic world cup final.
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>> dana reads sports. >> dana: the world cup coming to a close yesterday with a match for the ages between argentina
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and france. one of the biggest moments came during extra time when messi scored to give argentina the lead and france tied with the third goal of the night. he is the first men's player to do that in a world cup final in more than 50 years. peter told me that yesterday. not enough. there was a final penalty kick to give argentina the victory and trophy time. argentina celebrating its first world cup championship since 1986 and third overall. fans back home letting loose in the streets to celebrate crying, yelling, hugging. a culmination of a rollercoaster match that will live on in the history books. he said it was the best world cup he has ever seen. a lot of yelling going on in our house. percy was very confused. i was quietly watching. >> bill: i just like the level
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of competition the way it went to the end. the last shot. if you get a chance. there are shots online. there is a drone flying through that during daytime hours and it is amazing to see the people on the streets. great, great tournament and congratulations to fox, awesome job from qatar. twitter users want elon musk out at ceo. he posted a poll asking whether or not he should step down. 17 million voted and 57% said get on out of there. this after we're learning more ideas about how the f.b.i. contacted twitter during an election time. hillary vaughn covering it from the white house. a lot to get to. >> good morning. this latest twitter files dump shows how close and constant communication was between the f.b.i. and twitter. at one point the f.b.i. was even demanding written answers from twitter over statements they made about propaganda on the platform that even made twitter executives uncomfortable.
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matt taibbi says the contact between twitter and f.b.i. was constant and pervasive as if it were a subsidiary saying between january 2020 and november 2022 over 150 emails between the f.b.i. and trust and safetyy chief at twitter. agencies and even state governments flagged social media contact for action. one internal email between the f.b.i. national election command post sent the san francisco field office a long list of accounts that may warrant additional action. then f.b.i. agents passed that list to twitter higher ups and twitter replied with what accounts and tweets were suspended or deleted. republicans eager to take control of the house majority in january say they'll use their subpoena power to get answer. >> we are going to change the course of where the f.b.i. is today. if you look, the f.b.i. -- every
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day we learn something more. they became and private companies become a political arm of them to go after individuals with no repercussions for individuals that know what's happening. it raises more questions. >> the f.b.i. says their engagement with twitter was routine saying they regularly engage with private sector entities, they make decisions about what, if any action they take on their platforms and for their customers after the f.b.i. has notified them. but bill, in many of these cases the tweets and accounts that the f.b.i. were flagging had very few followers and some tweets were clearly written in satire. >> bill: thank you. hillary vaughn from the north lawn. let's get to it. >> dana: let's bring in john levine. matt taibbi wrote this about roth, who was the former head of trust and safety. roth received the questions
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circulated them with other company executives and complained he was perplexed by the complaints. one of the things i read into this. even twitter was irritated by the f.b.i. >> at a certain point. they were probing so much roth said enough is enough. more like a congressional committee. it was a case where they were looking to find state actors operating on the platform and twitter had done an internal review and the f.b.i. didn't find it sufficient and they said are you sure the review is sound and you've done a proper review? whose company is this? stay in your lane. >> bill: we've been reporting on tiktok for months thinking the chinese government getting access to your phone. we don't need to look at beijing. washington, d.c. has been doing it for several years based on this. >> the f.b.i. managed to turn twitter into an arm of the f.b.i. and part of the intelligence community. you see it both without and from
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within. >> dana: do you think based on your reporting that the 51 national security advisor or intel people who signed that letter saying the biden's laptop was possible russian misinformation, do you think that they got their information from the f.b.i. as well? >> the only thing you can say for sure from that letter those people knew it was fraudulent and false when they put it out and no way they could have worked in the intelligence agency in leadership roles and not known that. we have to get to the bottom of it next year. >> bill: this is your article today. twitter's top ranks riddled with exf.b.i. employees. that's a fact now? >> that's a fact. what the twitter file shows is a huge effort from without by the f.b.i. to influence twitter. what the latest reporting from the post shows there was also an ability for the f.b.i. to influence the company from within in the form of retired and former agents that then went
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to work at twitter. it was not just doing security at the front door. it was people who went to work in very senior leadership positions in the company. >> dana: what kind of positions? >> one individual matthew williams, 15 year veteran of the f.b.i. identified himself as the co-lead of trust and safety. the trust and safety team was the team responsible for a lot of the censorship and shadow banning and the lead of the team was roth. >> bill: you have to think facebook and google. like dominoes 2 to 3. >> i'll say there is also a legitimate role for the f.b.i. to play in twitter and facebook and google and youtube. their traditional law enforcement role. they should be working with these companies on things like child exploitation, terrorism. all that stuff. but what we saw is a mission creep where we had 80 agents assigned to monitor jokes and political commentary for
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americans. an inappropriate use. >> dana: elon musk did the poll yesterday ran for 12 hours asking should i step down? i will abide by the result of this poll. 57% said yes. perhaps he already had somebody in mind the take it over. i was joking in the break he thinks it is easier to land a rocket on the moon than to manage twitter. >> i think he was probably surprised by the results. i don't think he would have put that poll out. >> dana: i do. i think that is sort of like writing your own resignation letter. >> his way to go to the sunset? >> i agree with you on that, dana. he has done these polls in the last couple of weeks and every time he did the poll, whatever the people said he did. >> i don't doubt he will do it but i don't know that this was necessarily his intention. i think he will do it. it is probably for the best. there has been a lot of very sporadic actions and enforcement actions and rules are coming and going and he is winging it, i
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feel. >> bill: we'll see if you're right or we're right in time. we'll have you back. border officials getting ready for the end of title 42 and so, too, are the cartels. officials warn that human smugglers are in store for massive paydays as more and more try to buy their way across an open broken border. vladimir putin arrived in belarus. his first visit there in three years. will he drag one of russia's few allies deeper into his war in ukraine?
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veteran homeowners: gas, groceries, everything's costing more. if you need cash, call newday. you can borrow up to 100% of your home's value. veterans get more at newday usa. >> dana: fox news alert. at least five people killed in a shantey at a condo in canada sunday. several more hurt. a gunman open erred fire at an apartment complex north of toronto. officers arrived and exchanged fire with the suspect and killed him. the motive for the shooting is unclear. >> bill: wow. russian president vladimir putin is in belarus today.
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he may lean on one of his very few allies for help with his war in ukraine. "wall street journal" titled putin's belarus vision. jack keane, retired four star general. good morning to you. it appears based on the headlines and the story what he is looking for here is obvious. do you think it is necessarily? >> yeah, he has had a strained relationship lukashenko. longest serving dictator in europe who has had a frosty relationship with putin. no doubt they have provided a platform for putin to train his soldiers and had ground attacks and fired missiles and rockets from belarus. what putin would like is for belarus to come into the war. belarus is a border to nato
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countries, poland, lithuania, latvia and it would mean a lot to have him in the war. lukashenko's problem is the people don't like him much. they're fundamentally opposed to belarus getting involved in this war. militarily it is insignificant. 15,000 troops, poorly trained, not well equipped. they'll add nothing to the fight whatsoever. nonetheless, putin is there to get support from him and listen, there are tens -- >> he hasn't been there in three years. so it seems like a move of desperation. am i right on that? >> well lukashenko has come to visit him a number of times over the three years so it is not that they don't have a relationship. but what's taking place that has
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the ukrainians very concerned, there are tens of thousands of russian troops, mostly new mobilized troops that are training in belarus. there is a thought that come late january or february putin may indeed be willing to commit to another attack on the capital of kiev. now, when we look at that at the institute for the study of war it doesn't make a lot of sense. they would lose that fight. there are a lot of things the russians have done that haven't made a lot of sense to be frank bit. but this is a geopolitical move more than anything else by putin with lukashenko to try to get as much support from him as much as he can. >> bill: they failed miserably the first time around. a lot with our intel. quickly on north korea. what's going on there? we have a launch per week. sometimes it comes per day. the latest launch was to test a satellite. who is helping them?
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and who wants the help in return to you think? >> what's going on here is the kim dynasty has fired off more missiles in this year than they ever have in previous years and they're finishing up the year as robustly as when they started. what is this really all about? they use the excuse of exercises in the region particularly south korea is the reason for doing this. this time it has nothing to do with it. he is building up his nuclear arsenal, building up his ballistic delivery system, and those things are real and concerning. but the real issue for him is he wants to go into negotiations next year. he has been refusing to negotiate, bill. but next year he likely will say yes and he wants this leverage. the leverage of this threat to gain him some concessions particularly economic relief. he may even be willing to trade a little bit of his nuclear
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arsenal, trade something, a little bit more tangibly than what he was willing to do with the trump administration. mostly this is about leverage for upcoming negotiations so he can get concessions. obviously the country that has the most influence on him, though, is china. and china is tolerating this. they tolerate it because they enjoy north korea poking us in the eye and the fact that we get all spun up about it. they aren't going to permit north korea to start a war, bill. that's just a fact. >> bill: thank you, general. good to see you. plenty on your plate. jack keane in washington. thanks. >> dana: fox news has obtained video from the night of the murders in idaho. could this surveillance footage hold some clues? after 25 years of questions and debate, as close to an official answer as we're liable to get, to jack have joined rose on that at that time -- floating door
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on the titanic? we have this next. with your booster, i think you'll be there. for every twirl. i got a shot so my sister won't get sick. way to go, big bro! so while we're here... ...flu shot, as well? let's do it. when you need to talk vaccinations, our pharmacists are here. ♪ ♪ -hey there. -hey. -hi. hey there. how are you? i'm with disabled american veterans. i was wondering if you had a quick minute to thank america's veterans for their service and sacrifices -of course, why not? -oh, sure. -absolutely. -sure. all right. well, come on in here. i'm just going to hit record on this. i would like to thank you
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from the bottom of my heart. i can't even think of the words of how grateful i am. i want to tell you guys how much, how much we appreciate. but most importantly, i want to thank you for your courage and bravery. wow. thank you. someone here who'd like to say something to you? oh god, you guys are awesome! someone has something they want to say to you. oh my goodness! how's it going? awe! so i will let you know how much appreciate it. how much we appreciate it! just feel honored, for everything you've done. thank you for myself, thank you for everybody. i get to live every day, you know, in peace because of yo a lot of people thank us, but we want to take the time to thank you honestly, for giving back. and when you gave to dav, you are supporting veterans like dave and myself. so thank you so much. thank you, you guys are amazing.
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>> bill: fox news obtaining new video of the moscow college murder case in the hours prior. here is the story?
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surveillance footage appears to show some victims walking down the street and talking hours before being stabbed to death. matt finn pieces it together in moscow for us in northern idaho. good morning. >> good morning. five weeks since the four university of idaho students were murdered in this house behind me and this morning the killer or killers remain on the loose. you can see there is 24 hour security at this house. that new surveillance video was obtained by fox news digital comes from a property not far from where i'm standing. kayleigh's father shows his daughter and best friend madison walking from the corner bar to the grub tuck hours before their murder. he tells us the public the seeing this video for the first time. police have had the video for a whi whiechlt -- it asks the other about a man named adam.
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maddy, what did you say to adam? a second voice says, like i told adam everything. here is that sound. >> adam, what did you say to adam? >> i told adam everything. >> this, of course, might raise suspicion. kaylee's father said adam was their bartender that night and at this hour he is not a suspect. >> we have had that film for a while. i believe the business reached out to us directly and after they had given it to the police. so it was kind of a comforting to us. it is just two girls having a good time talking about, you know, asking about their bartender and just being girls on their way to the grub truck. >> the new video shows the young women walking with a man in a hoodie who police say right now is not a suspect.
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that man appears to resemble the same person in the original food truck surveillance video from the night of the murders. they appear to be wearing the same clothes in the videos. police ask the public to be on the look out for the white hyundai elantra. they don't know the license plate or the owner of that car and right now the driver and the car has not surfaced, bill. >> bill: the mystery continues in moscow, idaho. thank you. >> dana: debate has raged for 25 years ever since the titanic bam one of the big blockbusters ever. could jack have survived if rose had only scooched over and let him share the door that kept her out of the waters of the freezing atlantic? we'll bring in jimmy failla. here is what cameron said to the
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toronto sun. we took two stunt people and put sensors all over them and inside them and put them in ice water and tested to see whether they could have survived through a variety of methods and the answer was there was no way they have both survived. kate said this. >> i actually don't believe that we would have survived if we had both gotten on that door. i think that he could have fit >> he was worse for the wear. >> he could have fit on that door but it would not have stayed afloat. it wouldn't. >> dana: jimmie -- james cameron does a forensic audit saying they did these things to try to solve it. do you believe him? >> no. i'm an expert on sinking ships.
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i'm a knicks fan. here is the real issue. he had to die in the film because it's the whole ethos of the film. the song my heart will go on is a tragic love story. but the real issue is not that he died, okay, it is how he died. there was no attempt to let him get on and find out whether or not it couldn't hold the two of them. she failed the door test. people under the age of 40 don't remember this. cars used to have regular locks, not power locks. and if you let someone into the car, okay, they would lean over and open your door while you were walking around. kate winslet failed the door test. they didn't get on to see. the studies are meaningless after the fact. >> dana: so true. >> bill: it's 2022, right? 1997 titanic, right? james cameron said we put sensors all over them and inside them? what are we talking about? i remember 1997. i don't know if people put
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sensors inside of themselves. zbliet wasn't a thing, number one. two, he is pushing back. >> dana: they did it later. they did it -- they've done it to try to solve this 25-year mystery. >> a debate raged on. he did do it after the fact but the fact remains rose, who was what, the whiny entitled rich person, she went out in the movie like a whiney and title rich person. he is in the water telling her not to give up while he is freezing to death. >> bill: you are saying they did this recently with sensors inside? if that's true clarification noted. however, the story had to end that way. >> of course it did. understand there is no arc for her character. you get this deon song and visit her as an old woman throwing a diamond into the ocean. she is rich and entitled and they froze out my man jack. >> dana: last week we did a
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white elephant exchange. this happens in oklahoma and this lady -- kentucky, so she has a gift. she likes the gift, somebody else wanted her gift. t.j. maxx gift card. fine, i'll choose another gift. lottery ticket. she wins $175,000. >> wow. >> dana: check her out. >> i have a lot of family in ken kentucky. they would never say a butt load of money. i keep seeing the lottery winner. you want to woman who gave up the ticket. she is the colorful interview and probably has a lot to say. a quick white elephant strategy. you never settle for the gift card as a low denomination. you should always, always roll the dice on the lottery tickets. $25 is not $25. on the off chance you get the scratch office, like 10 or 15
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you roll the dice. the white elephant sale, you have to go for it. i once one $2 thousand of scratchoffs and we bought 2,000 more. he is buried in a pile of scratch-off debris and they're trying to find him. >> bill: nice to see you monday, james. in a moment here serious story. an afghan trained by the u.s. to be a special forces commando left behind in the chaos of kabul. so abdul made his own way to the u.s. he was thanked for his service by being thrown in jail by immigration officials. his brother will share his story today coming up. plus the end of title 42, 2 days away is expected to turn the migrant surge into an onslaught. what does it mean for national security? former vice president mike pence was front and ser -- and center
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four years. he will make his case to dana and me coming up next. ...which if ignored could bring you here... ...may put you in one of those... ...or even worse. too much? that's the point. get real about your risks and do something about it. talk to your health care provider about ways to lower your risk of stroke, heart attack, or death. learn more at getrealaboutdiabetes.com
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>> bill: gender dysphoria, the disparity one's sex assigned at birth and their gender identity. now even some children are deciding to transition to the opposite gender but a growing number of these pash interests apparently turn out to regret their decision. fox news medical contributor marc siegel is here to explain why. good morning, doctor. >> good morning, bill. gender disinformation information yeah is the psychological distress that results from one's sex at birth and one's gender identity. this condition may lead to a medical intervention. >> it was presented that this is your option to fix things. >> luca was only 16 years old when she had a double mastectomy
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and prescribed cross section hormones as part of her transition from female to male. now four years later, she is part of a growing number of young adults choosing to detransition. she says she felt pressured by her doctors into medically transitioning in the first place. >> dealing with some of the more underlying issues in depth would have definitely been a better place to start. seeing that i was clearly a teenager that had mental health issues. i was on psychiatric drugs at the time. >> the most you mention trans identity everything else is forgotten. we aren't doing thorough background checks. if psychological evaluations were not treating it in the way we would normally treat it. >> a doctor says transition therapy is placed too quickly upon young people without any
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sort of psychological exploration and that they are left out in the cold when they decide to detransition. >> these kids are put on the fast track and given hormones and all this treatment when they are trans and when they detrans there is nothing for them. >> a study from the institute for comprehensive gender research, half did not receive adequate mental healthcare before starting it. laura was 18 years old when she started testosterone treatments before having her breasts removed. at 25 she regrets the decision to transition. >> you are going against your own physiology and you desperately want it to be a solution. >> she was diagnosed as being autistic and had another condition says her conditions led to what she calls a, quote,
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more extreme version of adolescence. >> i was severely depressed and it just kept getting more severe as i got older. >> there are a lot of ways to relieve pain, mental pain, we should use that and focus on the least invasive first option. >> how long should a doctor wait before intervening? what should the intervention be and how much therapy is required first? the answers to these questions remain a big debate in the medical community, bill and dana. >> bill: thank you, doctor. >> dana: fox news alert. two days to go under the title 42 border policy is set to expire. border officials and lawmakers warn it will make the ongoing migrant crisis worse than it already is. welcome to a brand-new hour of "america's newsroom," i'm dana perino. good morning again. >> bill: nice christmas red. >> dana: matching th

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