tv Americas Newsroom FOX News December 30, 2022 6:00am-7:00am PST
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whip the ohio state university. i will be staying up. >> the goal is 10:00 p.m.enter >> tune in, watch it. thanks for letting us in your living room. happy new year. ♪ >> rich: a messy start for a divided government. how the white house is already pushing against the incoming gop house and what it means for republicans looking to serve as a check on the biden administration. good morning, i'm rich edson in for bill hemmer. >> julie: is it friday already? i'm julie banderas in for dana perino. this is "america's newsroom." president biden operated without oversight because democrats controlled both chambers of congress. republicans will take control of
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the house january 3rd and they're waisting no time lining up a flurry of investigations. >> rich: the administration points out republicans do not officially take power until next week. it says gop can rerequest for fear at that time. republicans call it an attempt to deflect and distract. >> the important thing everyone needs to understand about those respects, 100% of that pertains to taxpayer dollars. to money being spent with covid, money being spent in afghanistan with weapons being left behind, money being spent with different projects and different agencies within the federal government. that's what the oversight committee's role is. >> julie: we have team fox coverage. let's get to peter doocy who joins us live from the white house. good morning. >> the white house says they'll play ball but since the last
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congress is over all the subpoenas written while temp was speaker will have to be resent when republicans take over. a spokesman for the white house counsel's office is saying as we have over the past two years, we intend to work in good faith to provide appropriate information to congress. but americans have made clear they expect their leaders in washington to work together on their top priorities like lowering costs. that's what the president will focus on and we hope house republicans join him. if those subpoenas are void, so is the promise the president's press secretary made on inauguration day. >> his objective and his commitment is to bring transparency and truth back to government, to share the truth even when it's hard to hear. >> just because the white house says they won't honor the subpoenas from the last congress does not mean the subpoenas will stop coming.
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on the contrary. >> apparently joe biden doesn't know what copy and paste means. we'll simply copy and paste and only change the dates and resend all those requests. we're trying to do our jobs and the biden administration sent a signal loud and clear we'll do everything in our ability to prevent and block your oversight. >> and comer, who will be in charge of house oversight and leading a lot of these investigations is saying right now his interest is on things like covid and afghanistan's withdrawal. they say they aren't interested at this point in allegations of biden family influence peddling. so that's at least not yet priority for the house republicans. this is something we do expect to hear a lot of as soon as next week when congress comes back. julie. >> julie: back to business. you've been in business all week long. thank you, peter doocy. >> rich: let's bring in bill mccarne a member of the "wall
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street journal" editorial board. is any of this surprising? it seems like run of the mill, par for the course, you try to delay this as much as possible and make it as difficult as possible for the opposing side to conduct oversight. >> yeah, i think it's kind of foolish because all the biden administration has done is irritate the republicans. it's a petty act. i don't think it will change the subject. i think in addition, the whole atmosphere is with all the things they did searching for information for donald trump, now that can all be turned on the president. and i think it is. we'll have a really bumpy year. a lot of investigations into the f.b.i. and i think a lot of it will reach back to the president. >> congressman comer will be the head of the house oversight committee says he will copy and paste the requests he has been sending over the last couple of years.
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won't really slow him down much. the white house says if they're greeted with what they are calling a barrage of subpoenas, a barrage of information requests, that would break with long-standing practice. would it? >> i'm not so sure about that. look, it will be a barrage if they weren't responding up until now. the republicans have made their intentions clear over the last 2 or 3 months. so they had time before. look, there is going to be a lot of oversight this time. there are a lot of republicans asking questions that need to be asked about the poll itization of the f.b.i. and so far, withdrawal from afghanistan, covid. there are all these questions. i think the biden administration is going to be under scrutiny. it hasn't been before. >> rich: where do you republicans over the next couple of years make the most headway.
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what topic is most ripe for shedding light. >> well, i don't know because we don't know what they will find. i have think the oversight is very important, you know, for accountability. but i also think the primary job of republicans is passing an agenda. even if the president vetoes it, to make very clear which party stands for what. so i don't think they should let the oversight hearings swamp their legislative agenda. primarily it is going to be to block the spending and bad things the biden administration wants to do. but there is also an opportunity to put things on the table, make the other democrats vote for it and make him veto it and people will have a better idea where everyone stands. >> rich: before they get started on any of this they have to pick a speaker. it doesn't seem very certain
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right now. here is congressman andy biggs, one of the republicans who said he won't vote for leader mccarthy. >> we'll have to have that vote on january 3rd. right now nobody has 218 votes, which is the magic number. and i'm not -- i don't believe we'll see that until january 3rd and it will take a few ballots to shake it out. >> rich: we asked biggs if there were any scenario where mccarthy gets his vote. he said he doesn't think so. how much does it delay what republicans are trying to do and how long will it take? >> we don't know what will happen until they have the actual vote. a lot of times these things come down last minute in a deal that gets them through. i have no particular beef for kevin mccarthy. i think some of the other people like steve scalise would be the good choice.
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the choice is secondary to voting a speaker to get unified and get an agenda done. this is a real distraction for republicans. i have think the lesson of nancy pelosi was that she ran the house even with a small majority and the republicans should do the same. they need unity above all. and right now we don't see it. i disagree with congressman biggs. he is free to vote however he wants. but from his own point of vorax i think it's counterproductive. >> rich: republicans have such a slight majority in the house it can take a lot of time and as you mentioned so much of this has to do with optics. if republicans don't look like they have their house in order from day one, that's a problem, no? >> yes, it is. it's not just optics. it is committee assignments, hiring staff, all sorts of things. you know, two years goes by
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pretty fast and if you are going to delay it for a couple of weeks in the beginning, you are not starting off on the right foot. so i think republicans have to unify and select a speaker. i think who it is, given the choices, is less important than getting it done and settling on a guy to lead and then using their majority to real purpose. >> rich: two years goes real fast. they move into our offices and they're already running for re-election. >> julie: southwest airlines says it is almost back to business as usual. but after it canceled nearly 16,000 flights this week, way more than any other airline, the transportation department issued a warning, though. make things right for stranded and inconvenienced passengers or else. garrett tenney is live in chicago with more. that's a lot of cancellations,
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garrett. >> yeah, it sure is. when we spoke to southwest airlines this morning the airline said it is encouraged by the progress it's making and it expects to resume normal operations this morning. what do normal operations look like? according to flightaway, so far southwest has canceled 41 flights with more than 100 others delayed. as you mentioned, though, it's a huge improvement from the rest of this week including yesterday when more than 2300 flights were canceled. the department of transportation is issuing a warning to southwest. in a letter thursday secretary peat buttigieg wrote no amount of financial compensation to make up for passengers who missed moments with their families they can never get back. southwest needs to reimburse passengers for the costs that can be measured in dollars and
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cents. it will hold southwest accountable if it fails to adhere to the promises made to reimburse passengers for costs incurred for alternate transportation. not only that, but for all of the lost and delayed luggage as well that many passengers are still trying to track down. >> we received one bag with the flight. they told us don't worry your bags will get to dallas before you. i said that don't make sense. when we got here our bags weren't here. we had a connecting flight in houston. we've been here for three days with no clothes. >> that's no good. things are looking better today. see if that holds up throughout the holiday weekend, julie. >> julie: garrett tenney reporting live. thank you very much. rich the record surge at the border sift to continue in 2023. what can border agents do to reduce the number of gotaways? we'll ask texas congressman tony gonzalez. >> julie: the nypd is facing a
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record number of retirements. what is driving it and what it means for the crime crisis that's already out of control? >> it's the first time i've seen the lack of support by every level of government in our country. years ago there used to be a waiting list between 25,050,000 people waiting to come on nypd. no more, people want to go.os e e felt more energy in just two weeks. uhhhh... here, i'll take that. [woo hoo!] ensure max protein, with 30 grams of protein, one gram of sugar and nutrients for immune health. research shows people remember commercials with nostalgia. so to help you remember that liberty mutual customizes your home insurance, here's one that'll really take you back. wow! what'd you get, ryan? it's customized home insurance from liberty mutual!!! what does it do, bud? it customizes our home insurance so we only pay for what we need! and what did you get, mike? i got a bike. ♪
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stats released by the nypd show that officers are leaving at a rapid rate. it is the combination of the high crime rate and low pay that is sending these officers heading for the door and in many cases, going to different jurisdictions for much better options. according to the nypd nearly 1,972 unformed officers retired this year, up 500 from the same time last year. and that is the largest number of officers leaving the department since 2002. while officials have said they're hiring to replace those retiring nypd officers are actively being recruited by departments across the nation with the promise of higher pay, moving incentives and even bonuses. criminal justice experts say it shows no end in sight. >> dwindling numbers you're working more overtime. you take all the factors together and they'll leave for a
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better paying job. >> police unions also cite a burn-out factor as officers, detectives and other ranks are working more hours. the head of the detectives union says the state's bail reform laws are a contributing factor here. >> the district attorneys in the city of new york are supposed to work with the police to combat crime, not against the police. and they're not working for the criminal element. >> in a statement the nypd says it has hired approximately 2,000 individuals since january including 600 training at the police academy. the mayor and police commissioner will be at a recruitment graduation ceremony this morning. we expect them to speak and well oh he let you know what they have to say on that. >> rich: thank you. >> julie: startling numbers to show you how dire the crisis is at the southern border. nearly 7,000 migrant encounters a day for the past three months.
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this as the fate of title 42 policy protections remain uncertain. some in congress are pleading with the white house to step up. texas representative tony gonzalez joins us now. there are a record high number of migrant encounters. you wouldn't know it if you listened to a news conference coming out of the white house. they have been report evidence at the border since the start of fiscal year 2023 october 1st, as of thursday, 600,000 total migrant encounters at the border. a new record for the month of october, november and december. over 186,000 were expelled under title 42. leaving the majority of over 430,000 released. there is the problem. title 42 is still in place, right? this administration has not utilized it the way it was intended under the trump administration when it actually worked. why is that? >> good morning, julie. the reality is this is exactly what the administration wants. what we're seeing unfold is their plan.
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one of the things that we have to do, we as republicans, as just americans, is to push the administration to go this is not normal. what is happening at the border is not normal nor should it be normal. it is as if the administration wants everyone to think it's a typical thing that occurs. no, it's the dead of winter and you have record numbers of people coming over. there is nothing normal about what is happening at the southern border. nothing normal about the number of potential terrorists coming over, fentanyl, the list goes on and on. as republicans we have to push back and let them know that things have to change. it starts with border security. >> julie: let's talk about the gotaways. in the past 90 days there were 230,000 gotaways, 2600 per day. congressman henry cuellar, a democrat from texas takes a swipe at progressive staffers for blocking efforts to handle the border crisis. watch this. >> the administration just can't
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say congress through immigration reform. they have the power to do policy right now. but they just quite honestly i think the homeland security department is struggling with some of the more progressive white house staffers and i hope homeland wins this particular fight. >> julie: i can't understand how they would have any say on what is the largest humanitarian crises in this country. that and the number of fentanyl deaths which i could talk about every single day hoping that the white house would somehow respond and they simply do not. they're worried about politics and progressives when people are dying? >> congressman cuellar, like myself, has a district along the border. what is happening is essentially him and i are contacting customs and border patrol literally daily and trying to work
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directly with the source to get some of these holes filled. it really shouldn't be that way. the administration should be doing its job, which they aren't. i'll remind everyone, it is time for congress to lead. house republicans now will have the majority and we have to stop just bringing to light all these issues but start fixing them. the power of the purse resides in the house. so there is opportunities for house republicans to start by funding border security. one of those measures is operation stone garden funds. funds that go directly to sheriffs and law enforcement officers along the border that are doing a lot of the heavy lifting. that account hasn't been increased during this biden administration. there are others, too, like the wall and some other things that make sense. it is time for house republicans to lead and through the appropriations process is, i believe, the best way to do it. >> julie: title 42 was going to expire this week and extended and president biden was like
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this is his response i'm paraphrasing, yeah, i guess they've extended it until june. i suppose we have time to figure things out. they aren't trying to figure anything out, that's the problem. the president is on the vacation in the caribbean. congress hasn't made any decisions. who is the backbone of the root of the problem? it ain't kamala harris? >> one of the issues is -- this administration is a slight of hand. they want you to look at one side while the right hand is stealing everything out of the cookie jar. one of the things they've done is when these policies get overturned by the courts is they don't enforce them. so one of the things a new majority in the congress needs to do is insure that title 42 and other policies are being enforced. there is nothing more dangerous to this country than catch and release. when someone comes over and they get released into our country with no repercussions it only
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encourages more. over 100 members of congress that have come down and see it. you have many new members like zach nunn from iowa and derrick van orden from wisconsin and from arizona new members up to speed on the border. day one you'll see house republicans push to secure the border starting with the appropriations process. >> julie: we look forward to it. thank you for coming on. happy new year. >> rich: we're just minutes away from the start of the final trading day of 2022. stock markets saw more red than green this year. what can we expect to see in 2023? fox business anchor david asman weighs in next. the omnibus bill is packed with more green energy initiatives. why was it flown all the way to st. croix for the president's signature? we'll try to make sense of that next hour. helping them achieve financial freedom. we're providing greater access to investing,
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with low-cost options to help maximize savings. from the plains to the coasts, we help americans invest for their future. and help communities thrive. i'm frank siller from the tunnel to towers foundation. i'm here at the patriot awards to honor some very special people. gold star families and families of fallen first responders. after their loved ones died serving our country, there's a hole in their family. a missing spouse missing father or mother. but many are also left with the struggle of keeping their family home. we can't bring these heroes back, but we can help ease their burdens. here at the patriot awards, we are going to surprise them with a very special gift. we take care of our gold star families
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oh boy, let's take a look at the dow. where are we? down 165 points. it is a bit of the same. i guess things must come up if they go rock bottom. >> rich: wall street is set to close its final trading day with its worst year since the 2008 financial crisis, remember that. all these indices are in the red. the dow down 9%, s&p dropping more than 19%. nasdaq is down about 33%. this as the country braces for a new year fueled with concerns over inflation and a possible recession. let's bring in fox business anchor david asman. david, tech, yikes. >> i will try to be positive. it is so hard with all the red arrows pointed down. first of all, party, everybody. tomorrow night is new year's eve. have a big party.
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2023 we'll have to pay the bill for all the parties we've been having during the pandemic. that has been horrible, many people died. it was a terrible thing but silicon valley, remember, did very well with all those people at home and getting paid for not working, etc. that's why there was a boom in revenue from the tech sector but now that the pandemic is over, these states like california that had silicon valley were booming, california had a $58 billion surplus during the pandemic because of silicon valley was booming and because they got a lot of covid relief money because nancy pelosi has a lot of influence in where the money went. the covid money is drying up and silicon valley is in a tailspin. of all those indexes you showed nasdaq is down 33%. a full 1/3 of the value of tech stocks has gone down because first of all, people aren't home
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anymore so companies like facebook and others that relied on people staying at home are not making as much money. also when interest rates go up, tech stocks go down. so many tech stocks begin as speculative companies and rely on borrowed income. 1% interest rates it wasn't a problem. now 7, 8, 9% interest rates the venture capital is drying up. 70 to 80% dried up. the political spin-off of this is california again went from a $58 billion surplus to a $25 billion deficit. that's what they are expecting to have in 2023. you have to pay the piper eventually. the bills are coming due. not just for individual states like california and new york that spent like crazy, but also for individuals. by the way, the urban institute came out with a focus on generation z and credit card date. one in five adults between 18
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and 24, generation z, with the credit card file currently have debt in collections, one in five. young people who weren't used to interest rates going up because they lived most of their early life at a time when you didn't have to worry about interest rates. now you do and they will feel the pain in 2023. >> julie: what can americans expect to happen to the 401ks. is recession deaf niftily in the cards for the new year? >> i think so. what is it 80% of economists think so. the question is how severe it will be. i would bet it would be more mild until congress passed this omnibus bill. that's -- let's round it out to 2 trillion. an extra 2 trillion. the federal reserve has been hoping they could ease off on these interest rate increases which are hurting people with debt and hurting states with debt but the omnibus makes it hard to do because the more money you spend that you don't have, the more they will have to
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keep raising interest rates. and 401ks, i don't know if you've looked at yours. >> i try not to. >> best not to. you are young. even during the depression if you held onto your stocks for 20 years you would be okay. >> when we launched before. >> spending money that you don't have is always a mistake whether you do it personally or whether you are doing it as a state government or a federal government. we've been doing too much of it. party tonight and tomorrow night. have a good time. realize in 2023 you have to pay for the party. >> julie: the u.s. is imposing new travel restrictions on visitors from china. dr. marc siegel says the testing requirement is not enough. it looks like the worst of the blizzard is over in buffalo. now people are trying to clean up the remnants of the once in a
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a negative covid test from passengers flying in from china. fox news medical contributor dr. marc siegel with join us in a moment. hillary vaughn has more from the white house first. >> some countries are ramping up testing for covid for people traveling from china as china drops its 0 covid lockdown policies and the world still doesn't know if they can trust that if there is another bad outbreak in china that they'll tell the rest of us. italy started testing all travelers from china. they tried to get the european union on board bust they rejected plans to do that. here in the u.s. testing for travelers from china will start january 5th even though in the past president biden approving the test theing requirement, even though in the past he called trump's travel restrictions targeting china xenophobe i can. >> president biden: this is no time for donald trump's record of hysteria and xenophobia to --
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and fear mongering to lead the way instead of science. >> some medical experts are skeptical testing is enough to keep bad strains out of the country and potential outbreaks at bay. testing two days before traveling means someone could test negative one day but be positive two days later when boarding the flight to the u.s. the republicans say it is a charade. there is no testing happening at the southern border. >> biden administration to enforce these policies the chinese coming to new york city but none from coming across our southern border. we have no policies there. we have people coming across with covid, whooping cough, with mumps, measles, eradicated diseases and we're doing nothing about it. >> republicans have been critical of president biden for not getting to the covid-19.
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something they plan to tackle when they take control of the house next week. >> julie: let's bring in rich and marc. >> we'll bring in the fox news contributor dr. marc siegel to talk about all this. good to chat with you, doctor. from the "wall street journal" editorial board. the administration is trying to show it's doing something in case fears of a more dangerous variant are realize eats. if it wants to do something to make a difference how about accelerating treatments that can't be defeated such as our current class of monoclonal antibodies and just the effects of travel bans. do they work in the volume of international travel that comes to this country every day? >> both excellent questions. let me start on the treatments. i agree with the "wall street journal" editorial board. new monoclonal antibodies that would work against the emerging variants. the latest ones don't work against.
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let's get more therapeutics and the next generation of vaccines. we talk so much about nasal vaccines but funding has dried up. we can get a barrier vaccine we'd worry less. in terms of your second curbings i have agree first of all this isn't being instituted for another week. it's a political move. if it would work, why wait a week, why not today? i have agree with the cdc testing travelers coming in but i'm concerned you could get a negative one day or positive the next. we'll miss a lot of people that way. in terms of intermediary countries are concerned we have never been able to block that. with the original trump travel ban it didn't work. folks went from china, italy and to the united states. is homeland security going to force the airlines to release the data? i'm asking for a travel ban from people from china until we
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figure out what's going on there. we don't know what variants are coming out of china or how many people are getting sick. no one will give us that information. we know the bf.7 sub variant is pre predominant there. we don't know how our vaccines are against that? they won't give us the information. >> rich: you talk about a lot of this in the "new york post" piece today. cdc's test requirement for travel from china isn't enough. want to make sure to mention that. you talked about how our vaccines are functioning here. the beginning of the vaccines was an attempt to try to create a vaccine for all coronavirus and how we got the covid-19 vaccines to begin with. where are we on that front? any chance there is a medical way to get us out of a lot of this changing variant? >> that's another great question. there are two ways to approach
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vaccination. one is to stop the virus once it is already in the body. that's the current vaccine, mrna vaccine. second generation vaccines being studied very closely at mount sinai and maas general and john h hon -- hopkins. even the nova vacs vaccine has promise. i'm talking about a barrier vaccine where you stop the virus getting into the body. >> rich: always a pleasure chatting with you. thanks so much. >> julie: tragedy in southern california. a shdep see is shot and killed during a stop. great crowds for kirk cameron's reading from his new christian-themed children's books. it says that library and others
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front loaders continue to push small mountains of snow through buffalo nearly a week after a blizzard crippled the western new york area dropping more than four feet of snow in some places and claiming the lives of dozens. >> trying to get this stuff out of here. mountains and mountains of snow. they will be here for a while. not going to be like overnight. probably be about a week before we see any of this stuff gone. >> after six days the county and officials in the city lifted the travel ban in buffalo early thursday morning thanks to crews who were able to clear enough roads throughout the city. some residents don't think the government moved fast enough. >> i think the city is not doing a good enough job. i mean, we've got essential workers that live on the street and can't get down the street. i mean, my daughter works at mercy, the only reason why she has been getting to work is i'm picking her up with a 4-wheel drive to take her to work.
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>> buffalo residents are still asked to only venture out for essential needs as hundreds of high-lift vehicles and dump trucks continue to clear streets of snow. yet some neighborhoods are still working to make their own paths. >> it's pathetic. terrible. four days of shoveling out and thank god these people came to help us. my husband is 70 years old. he can't do this himself. >> after being stuck inside for days, people are in need of supplies and trying to get back to any notion of normalcy. families and neighbors are working together and reflecting on the dangerous and deadly christmas blizzard of 2022. >> i'm very grateful to be alive now. if somebody says it is going to be bad, don't go outside. there were four other cars stranded next to me. people have lost everything, you
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know, their families. so i'm glad to be here. >> back here live, guys, you see these piles of snow in the neighborhoods. frustrated residents, you can imagine. but things are looking better as they are moving all of this snow out of here and trying to get things back to normal. but here is the thing, the city of buffalo, they did their best. i realize residents are frustrated with how long it took but when you have hurricane-force winds with all this snow it is a recipe for disaster. back to you. >> rich: incredible images and stories. thank you so much. >> julie: actor and author kirk cameron drew an overflow crowd. thousands of people at the indianapolis public library yesterday to hear him read his new christian-themed kids book as you grow. it too persistent to make it
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happen. brave books says more than 50 libraries across the country ignored or rejected his offers to appear. he says libraries in indianapolis and scarsdale new york changed their mites after public outcry. the libraries are pushing back against that notion. they say the good news is he is getting to hold his readings but not without a fight. kirk's book, as you grow teaches the biblical truths of the fruits of the spirit. this has been quite a battle. you would never imagine you would be in for the battle of your life because you wrote a children's book. tell us about your book and tell about the fight and resistance. >> the book is "as you grow." i partnered with brave books to write this about biblical wisdom and the fruit of the spirit. and i wanted to do a story hour at public libraries across america and we were denied by over 50 woke libraries who have
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also hosted drag queen story hours for toddlers. >> julie: brave books, i wrote a book there. both of our books and we're co-authors on separate books. when you basically tried to get into a couple of these libraries not only were you met with resistance you had to threaten legal action, which is crazy. >> we asked for a story hour like others have done story hours. these libraries said they weren't interested and communities weren't interested. i published a public letter asking them to reconsider mentioning the fact that we have constitutional rights. i have my copy of the constitution right here that i will assert in court they reversed course and yesterday just told the whole story in indianapolis. the community showed up in record numbers. more people showed up for this book reading than any other event in the 137 year history of the library. >> julie: this is speaking volumes not only about
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where we read as you grow and speak to families about following the wisdom of the bible as well as discussing the harmful affects of woke ideologies, crt and transgender agenda. nowhere are we asking scarsdale library to sponsor an event. that's fake news right there. >> and they are sponsoring and paying for and promoting drag queen story hours for children. but we don't even get a mention on the website calendar. if you go to the website you won't see it. they tell you there is a play-do play date today. in scarsdale we'll be there and expect record numbers. >> julie: their website is featuring the drag queen story hour that happened back in june of 2022. still on their website. the demographic is 18 to 24-month-olds. i don't make it up. anyone over the age of ten may be left alone without a parent.
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nowhere does it say kirk cameron is coming to the library. you drew 2500 people at a library in indianapolis, the most that they've had in the library since over 100 years. >> what excites me. people weren't there to hear a story. they said we can't get go the building. what can we do to support this movement? it isn't about woke libraries. i love what samuel adams said. he made a great beer but better founding father. he understood oppressive government destroying morals of children . it doesn't take a majority to prevail but an eye rate tireless minority setting brush fires of freedom in the minds of men. yesterday in indianapolis a brush fire of faith, family and freedom was ignited and moving across the country. >> julie: i'm so happy for you. you get both books for free today if you
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