tv Fox News Live FOX News January 2, 2023 7:00am-8:00am PST
7:00 am
♪ ♪ >> anita: the man accused of murdering four college students in idaho set to make a court appearance in pennsylvania where he was arrested. this as we hear from his friends and former classmates. good morning and welcome to a brand-new hour of "fox news live." >> anita: anita vogel, good to be with you julie. a live look where bryan kohberger scheduled to appear tomorrow. his lawyer says he will waive extradition wasting no time to send him to idaho to face the murder charges.
7:01 am
>> julie: that is right, classmates explain kohberger as awkward and studio spirit he has a graduate student washington state university, just a 15 minute drive from the rental house where the people were stabbed to death. for more on this dan springer in moscow, idaho. good morning, dan. >> good morning, julie. we don't have the exact details what led the police to arrest bryan kohberger. that arrest affidavit, the public because affidavit they got signed by a judge to pick him up in pennsylvania has been sealed and will not be open until physically back in the state of idaho to face those four counts of first-degree murder. what a police source tells me is the dna and the investigative genetic genealogy played a key role in pointing toward kohberger who was arrested early friday morning at his parent's home in eastern pennsylvania after being trapped there for days by the police.
7:02 am
there was a lot of blood at the scene of the quadruple murders. we know the police bagged the hands of the victims some who had defensive ones to preserve potential dna from that killer. but kohberger didn't have criminal records so his dna profile was not in the federal database. this is where genetic genealogy is used to expand the search and greatly reduce the potential suspects. we spoke with a pioneer in the field. >> genetic genealogy is using someone's dna to learn more about their family history. when we use it in the context of law enforcement, we are basically reversing the engineering of the identity of the unknown suspect. based on distant cousins. >> the police investigation is far from over as now trying to answer the question why. they searched his office on the washington state university campus where he finished his first term in criminology, the
7:03 am
phd program. he was teaching an assistant and they searched his apartment on campus and the police are getting help from the public. >> 400 phone calls within the first hour after the press conference, which is great. we are trying to build this picture now of him, who he is, his history, how we got to this event and why has this event occurred. >> we are outside of the jail and sheriff's department all in one complex here. this is where kohberger will be brought when extradited from pennsylvania. and waving that hearing tuesday and could be brought here as early as tuesday night. he could be in the court room behind me as early as wednesday, julie. >> julie: dan springer, thank you, anita. >> anita: julie, we are learning more about the suspect accused of attacking three new york city police officers with a machete near times square on new year's eve.
7:04 am
19-year-old trevor bickford was also on the fbi terror watch list as a possible islamic extremist pier at "the new york post" reports he targeted officers as "enemy of the state." let's bring in retired nypd inspector and founder of ops. great to see you. a lot to talk about. first of all this attack on the police officers in new york city come i want to play a little piece of sound from mayor eric adams and what he said about the attack. let's take a listen. >> one of the offices heard from the police commissioner and i a few days ago at his graduation. it just goes to show you thursday could be the last day the actions the police officers must take every day on life-threatening situations. >> anita: so, of course, that is true. everybody knows that but the question here is if this had to happen the suspect 19-year-old
7:05 am
trevor bickford was on the terror watch list. the fbi knew he had been radicalized because his aunt told him he would he wanted to go fight with taliban overseas. should the fbi been watching him more closely? is there more they could have done in your opinion? >> a couple of things. first of all, we don't know that they weren't. there is unity failure which is was on the radar screen. maybe he was just lost in the crowd of 1 million people around times square. you don't want that to happen, but, you know it is a human failure we are all guilty of. what is more serious is something i think would be more troubling is if we determine there is a bureaucratic breakdown, he apparently had an open case on him and why the boston field office remained as a resident. that argues there was a reason to open and posten. did he make a threat? did they think he might go there?
7:06 am
the new year's eve event in times square? his own family had given him up over the last month and somebody to be looked at with ideation. so the investigation into his computers, his phone, radicalization, we should have and facing an investigation to let us know what occurred here and lets the public know. the danger as we move on and say, well, this could have been worse but thank god it was not worse. what we need to see and not to blame anybody but to fix it so we are better going forward. >> julie: just a little more transparency what's going on the scenes because this kid, 19 years old who looks like the all-american kid got radicalized after his father died in an overdose at 18 so just last year maybe he got lost and confused but how many other trevor bickfords or l there?
7:07 am
should we worry the fbi are not watching these people closely? maybe they should be more watching? >> it is quite difficult this kind of work. and legally to be able to take certain actions against people who are bubbling up for lack of a better term with jihadi us aspirations. but once you hit that threshold, there are things you can do and anita, you make a good point, little complacent and troubling science coming out that may indicate that we are seeing a little bit of the terrorism stuff but in the rearview mirror and in my estimation that is a mistake. so what we see is that bubbling up again. this is something that all of us need to take into account here. washington, local law enforcement need to take a look at mechanisms in place post
7:08 am
9/11. the pd, the further we get from 9/11 and the closer we get -- we can't have that. this could be worse. there was a report he was reaching for the cops guns or something like that. we can't just say, well, we got lucky there. we have to make sure that this doesn't happen going forward. >> julie: paul, real quick i want to turn to the idaho murders. i know you spent a lot of time on the ground with lawrence jones talking to investigators, walking around the house, really getting to know the area well. what questions do you want answered when that affidavit is unsealed? what about the murder weapon? has it been found yet? where should investigators be looking, quick answer here. >> quick answer i don't know. but i will say a big open data point but how he found this house how it was he originally made contact was online but was it digitally and how was that he
7:09 am
decided this was the location he was going to target? that is a big open question and areas around this house. there is the is the arboretum store, a golf course, did the police look at that? were those bodies dragged? these are questions that we have outside not having been given the details of the investigation. those are a lot of points a lot of us are wondering tracking the case closely. >> julie: investigators and everyday citizens all over the country, these are questions i want to know. they have been following the story, paul mauro, thank you for joining us and giving us insight. happy new year. >> happy new year. julie. >> julie: catholics are gathering to pope emeritus benedict xvi who died on saturday 95 years old. he is lying in state st. peter's basilica. and they will honor his which
7:10 am
for a new wish for a simple funeral on thursday. chief correspondent laura greene joins us live with the very latest, good morning. >> good morning, julie. thousands of people near the vatican waiting in the long lines to pay respect to pope emeritus benedict xvi whose legacy will be remembered more.s morning. a solemn procession of clergy and house have staff accompanied his body as it was moved from the monastery in the vatican gardens to st. peter's basilica. later a silent queue of the faithful with the body of pope benedict with the high altar of st. peter's with a red cape and white rider of the bishop. pope emeritus benedict xvi died saturday and laid to rest thursday below the bill of sale know basilica with other popes. pope francis said to be the
7:11 am
first of the era to preside as pope over the funeral of his predecessor. now, people waiting in line have come all over europe and the globe. some in rome already on christmas vacations, but all showing reverence. >> he gave us these great pope. i know he is theologian legacy because he has done so much for our church. and i think it is worth pegging him a tribute and especially with our prayers. >> people show solidarity for the vatican. we are one world. >> julie: now, people can pay their last respects today, tomorrow, and wednesday and 25,000 that they expected. then on thursday morning will be the funeral for the pope emeritus benedict.
7:12 am
>> julie: laura greene, thank you, anita. >> anita: a big showdown is brewing on twitter after ceo elon musk eases the release of the next batch of files on white house chief medical advisy fauci. won't that be interesting next. only pay for what you need. jingle: liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. when you find that perfect pair, nothin' can stop your shine. because when you feel fly, you look fly. um jamie? i'm pretty sure that was my line. get two pairs of privé revaux plus a free exam for $89.95. book your exam online today.
7:16 am
speed to welcome another twitter document reportedly coming. this time and former chief white house medical advisor dr. anthony faucher. ceo elonva said he will release internal company information later this week. former public official has been getting flack over how he handled the pandemic and questions the origin of covid covid. mark meredith live in washington with more on this. mark, oh, boy, what are we going to learn about dr. anthony fauci? >> anita, that is the big question and twitter ceo elonva said you will learn more about twitter's inner workings with past, present and teasing what is coming up where else, twitter? i hope you are having a great day for 2023 but one thing for sure it won't be boring. another week, later this week he will release dr. fauci files and
7:17 am
how twitter handled dr. anthony paolucci through the height of the pandemic. a critic of dr. fauci and last month the white house came to his defense calling musk's quotes dangerous. he praised him last year writing the u.s. is stronger and more resilient because of his work. but congressional republicans are vowing to investigate dr. fauci and his accusations and he's not been forthcoming and no longer a government employee. dr. fauci said if congress calls him to testify, he will do so. >> i would be more than happy to explain publicly or otherwise everything that we have done. and i can't defend and explained everything we have done from a public standpoint. >> while twitter may be targeting fauci, twitter is being sued by california landlord for allegedly not paying rent for corporate headquarters. it is a new year and already
7:18 am
some drama with twitter. anita. >> anita: no kidding. with republicans in charge, i would say it is a safe bet he will get holiday to testify. what do you think, mark? i would like to gamble as well. >> anita: all right, mark meredith live from washington, thank you, mark. >> julie: let's bring in rich lowry editor and chief of "the national review." thank you for coming on. great to see you. >> happy new year. >> julie: the twitter file release focused on how both administrations the trump and biden administration leaned on twitter to moderate content during covid-19 pandemic. what if anything can we expect to learn about fauci's role in censoring covid and information online or his role in blocking any reports about covid's origins and potential out leak? >> we will see if there is --
7:19 am
julie, the most outrageous thing at a common theme throughout these releases is government officials contacting social media company to pressure it to take down material to suppress certain types of material pair that is crazy and outrageous. it would be one thing if someone were about to post nuclear codes and you would expect officials to reach out in that case but routinely trying to put a thumb on the scale what should be published or suppressed or not is deeply wrong. at the very least, what we learn from the newest release is that folks at twitter like many people fold into this groupthink during the pandemic thought of dr. fauci as a guy. and totally corrected. this is utterly unscientific to think in regards to the world. >> julie: basically under the trump administration, but you know the white house basically wanted to sort of dampen down the hysteria over biting,
7:20 am
remember, everybody went to the grocery store panicking. so panic spending and they were trying to chill everybody out. exactly, toilet paper, okay? you will ever forget that. but that is one thing. the biden administration took it to a whole new level. they were literally canceling and plucking accounts for people who would go on twitter and talk about how they wouldn't believe into vaccination. they are for censoring freedom of speech, freedom of debate. what country and what kind of communist country are we living in that you can't express your freedom? people have been anti-vaxxers for years and years and whether you agree with it or not, it is not the white house's decision to silence that section of the country. >> yeah, absolutely. the government should not be influencing whether published or not on social media. period, end of story. but you know, a lot of these things oppressed or labeled as
7:21 am
misleading were correct or links to peer-reviewed studies that people found inconvenient. and this is why science was capital s was used and abused as a political tool during the pandemic. it was not truly a scientific attitude but this groupthink that we think is correct and we will make everyone abide by it no matter what. again, that is not a scientific attitude. science is based on debate and it is not as though in a pandemic when you're coming with a response, there is not a cut and dry scientific answer. this is complex, social question with all sorts of conflicting values. so, there shouldn't be the laying down on the line peer that is what they were doing and it had a lot of power and they abused at. >> julie: we were all living through it together for the very first time in our lives. so, it was a learning process. i want to move on to tiktok mouth. the incoming chair of the new house g.o.p. select committee on
7:22 am
china is equating tiktok to highly addictive drug calling for social media platform "digital fentanyl." mike gallagher said the app and by chinese country should be banned completely in the u.s. after congress banned the app on federal devices. watch this. >> it is one that is highly addictive and destructive. we are seeing troubling data about the corrosive impact of constant social media use, particularly on young men and women in america. it is digital fentanyl in the sense as you allude to it ultimately goes back to the chinese communist party. speed when we know tiktok is banned among government offices so congress for example don't want tiktok and infiltration of privacy and so forth but banning the united states is now the ne. where do you think this is going? >> i think there is bipartisan pressure attending in this direction. and hopefully, the best outcome
7:23 am
would be that tiktok is spun off the u.s. affiliate and generally a firewall between it and the chinese government which does not exist now. the officials at the company very misleading about this. and then there was the broader issue, all social media is a form of a drug. >> julie: right. >> it makes sense to consider a ban of all social media with the children under age 18 or 16. why we are conducting this experiment on our kids. >> julie: rich lowry thank you for the national review and thank you for joining us. happy new year. >> thanks, julie. >> julie: anita. >> anita: house republicans failing to use the majority to hold the white house accountable for the border crisis. our next guest is a congressman elect from the largest state on the southern border. republican wesley hunt joins us next to discuss. ctuagoes♪ ♪
7:24 am
at new chapter, its' innovation, organic ingredients, and fermentation. fermentation? yes. formulated to help you body really truly absorb the natural goodness. new chapter. wellness, well done. >> tech: cracked windshield? make it easy and schedule with safelite, because you can track us and see exactly when we'll be there. >> woman: i have a few more minutes. let's go! >> tech vo: that's service that fits your schedule. go to safelite.com. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪
7:25 am
oh, hey. buying a car from vroom is so easy, all you need is a phone and a finger. just go to vroom.com, scroll through thousands of cars. then, tap to buy. that's it. no sales speak. no wasted time. just, straight up great cars. right from your phone to your driveway. go to vroom.com and pick your favorite. wooo. oh yeah, she digs it. buy your car on vroom.com vroom. get in. an unthinkable genocide took the lives of six million jews
7:26 am
and thousands of jewish survivors are still suffering in poverty today. god calls on people who believe in him to act on his word. "comfort ye, comfort my people." when i come here and i sit with lilia i realize what she needs right now is food. these elderly jews are weak and they're sick. they're living on $2 a day which is impossible. this now, is how god's children are living. take this time to send a survival food box to these forgotten jews. the international fellowship of christians and jews urgently need your gift of $25 now to help provide one survival food box with all of the essentials they critically need for their diet for one month. when you call right now, your gift's impact
7:27 am
will be doubled to help save lives. no vitamins and no protein so my legs and hands are very weak. oh, oh, oh let's make sure that we bring them just a little bit of hope. by bringing them a little bit of food. for just $25, you can help supply the essential foods they desperately need for one month. when you call right now, your gift's impact will be doubled to help save lives. your support will provide them with a box overflowing with nourishing food and the knowledge that faithful christians around the world care about them. god tells us to take care of them, to feed the hungry. and i pray holocaust survivors will be given the basic needs that they so desperately pray for to survive.
7:28 am
>> anita: the border crisis spilling over into 2023 with really no end insight. it has been two years since president biden tap vice president kamala harris to address the root causes of mass migration. since then 4 million migrants have reached the southern border. here to talk about it is texas congressman elect wesley hunt. congressman elect wesley hunt, congratulations on your win. >> happy new year. >> anita: happy new year to you also what's up you are you are joining congress in a very interesting, critical time and so many issues facing the nation including of course, the crisis at the border. i want to look at numbers that many have described as astounding starting with border encounter since march 2021. we will put those up on the screen. march 2021 through november 2022. 4 million visits, 4 million encounters. and in this next full screen
7:29 am
which is really astonishing for 2022 migrant encounters with trip by biden and here is to the border 2.76 million encounters and all of last year zero visits by the administration. your thoughts on that. >> what is happening on the border is flat out un-american. we've had 4.5 million people enter the country illegally. we've had the fentanyl pour into our country killing every american five times. right now the cartels are running our border. this is not the rule of the federal government to allow our country to be unsafe. this is wrong. we must hold this administration accountable. and alejandra mallorca's better get ready because he has explained this whole thing. what is nostalgic to me what this current administration talks about amnesty. and to try to make it better but will not fix the problem. we cannot put the cart before the horse.
7:30 am
i say "no" to amnesty and i have to make sure we secure our borders first to tackle some of these large immigration issues. but we see a spike in crime in this country. people are feeling unsafe. we see a rise of drug overdose in our state. and we have a responsibility to the american people with the majority to get this right. >> anita: you are being sworn in tomorrow. republicans have the majority but what are you hoping your party can get done realistically when it comes to the border? quick answer here. >> i think realistically, we need to hold those accountable that basically have conducted derelict of duty over the past few years during the biden administration. kamala harris the borders are has not been down to the border not one time. our president has not been down to the border not one time. so how do we hold them accountable as a body to make sure we do right by the american people and have some serious
7:31 am
change starting tomorrow? >> anita: okay, i want to listen to your new colleague congressman debbie lesko, she has some ideas about legislation. let's listen to her. >> we also have legislation that would require that illegal immigrants be turned back at the border if there's not enough space to detain them as required by the law. and of course, i am one of those people that is supportive of starting impeachment proceedings against dhs secretary mayorkas if he doesn't do his job. >> anita: so, the last part where she said, what do you think about that? should congress look to impeach secretary mayorkas? are you in favor of that? >> i am absolutely in favor of this 4 million people entering our country and we as a country not knowing who is coming in at the borders is a complete joke. as somebody who has served on the military all over the world, there is no country in the world
7:32 am
comfortable with allowing millions of able to pour into the country without being accountable and holding those accountable that allow this to happen. this is a derelict of duty at the leadership and alejandro mayorkas will be sitting at a lot of hearings. >> anita: and the immigration policy is very different. congressman elect, good luck to you, wesley hunt. >> god bless you, happy new year and thank you for having me on. >> anita: you too. >> julie: disturbing news from chicago where three police officers died by suicide in the final weeks of 2022. their tragic deaths adding to a troubling trend and 20 chicago police officers are believed to have died from suicide in just the past four years. garrett tenney is live in chicago, garrett. speak with this story and the numbers are staggering. according to 2017 study by the justice department, chicago police officers are 60% more likely to die from suicide than
7:33 am
officers in the average police department. 60%! last year alone, at least seven chicago police officers took their own lives. as you mentioned, three of those were the same week right before christmas. the police superintendent david and emily talks about how this is the most difficult time in history to wear a badge. in a statement last month our heroes, or officers repeatedly respond to traumatic incidents and not immune to the pain and cruelties among these incidents may need to balance this in their own personal lives and difficulties. this is why it is crucial to strengthen and expand the resources and support systems for our officers. those traumatic incidents include shootings like a 9-year-old boy who was killed sitting inside of his home sunday evening on the city south side. as we have reported over the past year come officers are leaving the department of chicago and other large cities
7:34 am
due to the stresses of the job the lack of support for city leaders and the public. a retired chicago chief of detectives tells fox digital that statement we showed you city leaders engaging in -- costing the officers their lives. it is a tragic trend going on for years. what we have is a failure of two things, failure of management but more importantly and critically we have a failure of leadership. chicago currently has about 1,000 vacancies. the officer rank and the department and all of this comes at a time of extremely high crime. here in the windy city, murders are down from year to near record levels but overall, crime is up 41%. julie. >> julie: all right, thank you so much garrett tenney and chicago, thank you. by the way, the national suicide crisis lifeline is available anytime. all you have to do is dial 9-8-8, anita. >> anita: president biden
7:35 am
returns to the white house less than 24 hours before republicans are set to take control of the house. that is coming up next. ♪ ♪ if you have heart failure, entrust your heart to entresto. entresto helps improve your heart's ability to pump blood to the body. don't take entresto if pregnant; it can cause harm or death to an unborn baby. don't take entresto with an ace inhibitor or aliskiren, or if you've had angioedema with an ace or arb. the most serious side effects are angioedema, low blood pressure, kidney problems, or high blood potassium. ask your doctor about entresto.
7:39 am
♪ ♪ >> baseball's all-time hit pete rose celebrating new year by doing the very thing that got him banned from the sport. at the stroke of midnight yesterday, rose placed ohio's first illegal sports bet after the state's new gambling law took effect. rose received a lifetime ban from mlb in 1989 after it was found he bet on baseball games while managing the cincinnati reds. rose said he placed a way to the reds to win the world series this year. president biden heading back to the white house on the eve of the brand-new congress. and they will be a check on the
7:40 am
white house over the next two years. biden expected to make a new plea for bipartisanship when he visits kentucky later this week. white house correspondent jacqui heinrich live in st. croix, beautiful live shot there with more. jackie, most americans would love to see a little bit more bipartisanship in the new year. is it coming? >> well, potentially peer that is what we are hearing anyway, anita. the president pushed through a lot of legislation while democrats control both chambers of congress. an ultra maga and ahead of the midterms but with republicans taking control of the house at his focus shifting away from legislating potentially toward a 2024 run according to reports. he is also shifting his tone to prioritize bipartisanship,
7:41 am
excuse me. mpc reports that beyond the focus on implementing the past legislative programs, top white house aides insist the president has additional initiatives which means they could or argue should win support and a divided congress. bipartisanship is expected to be a major focus of biden's state of the union address which reportedly when we can expect biden to announce his 2024 plans whatever it is spirit and biden has not laid out an agenda for 4 but an announcement coming soon. his only message for the american people on new year's eve how optimistic he has for the country and also asked while in church yesterday about any resolutions. he said, "good year next year." he scheduled his first event when he returns from the white house. the day after republicans take to the lower chamber, biden will travel to kentucky where he will
7:42 am
stop at mitch mcconnell's home touting investments from the bipartisan infrastructure lobby signed last year. already the administration is trying to set the tone for 2023 touting progress as one of the president's biggest challenges. that would be the economy. top officials circulated a year in memo and from the u.s. as position better than other major economies around the world with solid growth, a resilient labor market and also moderate inflation and more cost savings coming this month on things like prescription drugs, anita. >> anita: all right, guess a good year next year is a good resolution for all of us. jacqui heinrich live st. croix, thank you, jacqui. >> thanks. >> julie: the battle for house speaker not the only one on capitol hill this week but bracing for a showdown over the debt ceiling. the u.s. borrowing limit at $31.4 trillion, yes, trillion with a t.
7:43 am
one warrants more government spending equals higher infl inflation. >> american should understand that when we print for trillion dollars in the last few years, literally printed the money, it resulted in inflation over the past few years. 15% from everything is higher for americans because we can't get spending under control. that is the way you have to explain to the american people. you have to budget at home and we should have to balance our budget in washington. >> peter mucci and business professor at the university of maryland. thank you very much. all right, so if you look into a crystal ball for 2023, it is looking a little cloudy. lawmakers gearing up for potential shutdown of raising the debt ceiling. republicans claim inflation spending with joe biden the first two years but now he's got to somehow figure out how to meet republicans in the middle once they take control in january. where do you see us headed? >> i don't know that we are
7:44 am
going to have a government shutdown necessarily because they won't raise the debt ceiling. if they do raise the debt ceiling, the u.s. will go into default but what do the republicans want in return? where do they propose to cut the budget? they haven't laid that out. they haven't unified my hands a new speaker yet. we need to see what they are proposing. >> julie: what should they propose? my feeling is it would be possible for example to consolidate the support for the child care tax credit and food stamps and all the rest into a single payment, a better program that cost us less money. we could start needs testing, not needs testing but work requirements for food stamps again. and so. there are things with entitlements. this probably leaves a lot of room to economize the defense department so better interest in
7:45 am
china. without raising spending quite so much. we spend more than the chinese and russians together by many times. and we don't seem to have the capabilities we need. >> julie: one thing from last year will surely stick with us in 2023 stubborn and high inflation. we have been teetering on a recession for months. prices have come down slightly from the peak over the summer, but federal reserve chair powell said the u.s. is far off from stability and even slower inflation in 2023 will be hard for many households to stomach. how can americans prepare for another year of stretching dollars? >> well, essentially, they have to focus what is essential in their lives. you have to buy groceries and so forth. but in terms of buying a new car, they will have to confine their expectations to something that is more modest than they would like. they will have to confine expectations with regards to a
7:46 am
vacation or something more modest than they aspire to. the reality is inflation has been running ahead of wages. it is likely to continue to do so because of all of the spending we have had. when we put in place for government programs and don't pay for them, the federal government essentially borrows the money and the federal reserve essentially crunches it to make it work and that causes inflation. there is no such things as these government programs for which there are no taxes. you get taxed when you buy eggs because they were more expensive. >> julie: peter morici, thank you very much. we appreciate you coming on and happy new year to you. >> happy new year. >> julie: anita. >> anita: kim jong un pledging to expand the nation's nuclear arsenal as the regime continues an aggressive missile agenda. that is next. ♪ ♪
7:47 am
-what's he doing? -he's cleaning the trash cans. oh, boy. meeting a new young homeowner for the first time is a unique challenge. -so you think you can help? -i can try. hey, what you doing? oh, just cleaning my trash cans. wow. it's important to build trust. see you put your address and phone number on here. well, you can never be too safe. with trash? progressive can't protect you from becoming your parents, but we can protect your home and auto -when you bundle with us. -don't look at the hedges. -they're a mess. -no one's looking at the hedges. hi, i'm lauren, i lost 67 pounds in 12 months on golo. golo and the release has been phenomenal in my life.
7:48 am
7:50 am
7:51 am
live in london with more for us this morning, good morning, brian. >> hi, julie, north korea leader kim jong un told the military at the u.s. and allies the south korea and japan bent on isolating and stifling north korea and ordered his military to bolster their military, as you put it, muscle. and saying it may not be an empty threat, one analyst at the corporation said it was an ambitious but perhaps but perhaps achievable new year's resolution arguing that publicly declaring north korea leader is somewhat to be confident and he can achieve. kim jong un appeared at a ceremony to celebrate the country's new rockets climbing the country's multiple rocket launchers are capable of carrying the tactical nuclear warheads he's hoping to produce. north korea also fired a short range ballistic missile on new year's eve, just one day
7:52 am
after launching three just the day before. observers say this string indicates north korea is undeterred with its china and members of security council. plucking the u.s. and others from tightening the u.n. sanctions. in addition to targeting south korea, kim jong un says the military will launch its first satellite spy satellite and the analyst say to strike the mainland of the united states. analyst say all of this, kim jong un appears to be doing to bolster his end at the negotiation table should negotiations ever happen, julie. >> julie: branch oco thank you so much, anita. >> anita: the cdc sounding the alarm on type 2 diabetes in young people. the agency said the disease on track to increase by 700%. look at that. by the year 2060.
7:53 am
the report says type 1 diabetes more common in americans under the age of 20 projected to rise 65% purity here to talk about this is dr. debbie, i am hope i'm close on that, associate professor at nyu, school of medicine, founder and medical director metropolis pain medicine. okay, i'm just going to call you dr. debbie from now on. thank you for joining us today. perhaps the new year they wish each other new health for the new year but let's talk about these numbers on diabetes. and i want to bring them up again because i think we need to show them here and type 2 diabetes projected to rise 65% and type when rather, type 2700%. what is the difference between type 1 and type 2 and what alarms you about these numbers?
7:54 am
>> well typed 2, there is a continual input type 1 has to do with the destruction of the cells that cause you to produce insulin. type 2 is associated with obesity. it has to do with sensitivity to insulin. but really, the ultimate consequence of it is related that, you know, diabetes can damage the heart. it can damage the kidneys. it can damage the nerves, and it can damage your eyes so all the different organs in your body so the recent the study is concerning is because it can have long-term consequences and can lead to death for people. so diabetes is more a matter how long this is dr. debbie, i am hope i'm close on that, associate the diabetes diagnosis and how long you have been untreated as well. so when you think about childhood diabetes, one of the problems is that children often don't get diagnosed with chronic conditions and there is often a delay. so some of the symptoms children
7:55 am
can have is a child who starts bedwetting. a lot of parents wouldn't realize that could be a sign of a disease like diabetes. so there might be a long time passes before that child makes it to a doctor. during that time the patient or the child is actually getting damage potentially. so if you think about a population where children are developing this disease and then as adults who still have this disease, that could affect, you know, the way this plays out globally. it can affect the entire country. so we have to think about it here and on more positive note, i will say this is a projection study so this is not the situation today. this is something we can intervene in. the majority of people who have diabetes, type 2 diabetes, which is associated with obesity, this is something we can do something about, but it is more challenging because with obesity, it is more related to
7:56 am
diet, exercise, but it's not just on the child. parents model their behavior on their families, on their friends. it is something we have to look at in terms of what we can do all around. >> julie: the clock is going to cut us off. i don't mean to interrupt you but five seconds left. what is the number one health care for the new year and five seconds? >> welcome i would say prioritize what you are going to do. focus, break it up into small chunks and don't get deterred if you fail. focus on what you can learn from it and then move on and go with that. >> okay, everything in moderation, right, dr. devi, thank you for your expert health advice. always great to see you, julie. >> julie: all right, republican lawmakers take control of the house tomorrow but first, they have to elect m anthe house speaker. we will talk about it next. ♪ ♪ l. r what you need! l.
7:57 am
7:59 am
moderate to severe eczema still disrupts my skin. despite treatment it disrupts my skin with itch. it disrupts my skin with rash. but now, i can disrupt eczema with rinvoq. rinvoq is not a steroid, topical, or injection. it's one pill, once a day, that's effective without topical steroids. many taking rinvoq saw clear or almost-clear skin while some saw up to 100% clear skin. plus, they felt fast itch relief some as early as 2 days. that's rinvoq relief. rinvoq can lower your ability to fight infections, including tb. serious infections and blood clots,
8:00 am
some fatal, cancers including lymphoma and skin cancer, death, heart attack, stroke, and tears in the stomach or intestines occurred. people 50 and older with at least one heart disease risk factor have higher risks. don't take if allergic to rinvoq, as serious reactions can occur. tell your doctor if you are or may become pregnant. disrupt the itch and rash of eczema. talk to your doctor about rinvoq. learn how abbvie can help you save. ♪ ♪ >> julie: fox news alert, president biden making his way back to washington today after his week-long island vacation. after two years of his party incomplete power, the new year brings a new house majority, rested and ready to investigate. hello, everyone, and happy 2023 to you. this is a brand-new hour and a brand-new year of "fox news live." i'm julie banderas. >> anita: and i'm anita vogel. republicanar
159 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on