tv FOX Friends First FOX News January 12, 2023 1:00am-2:00am PST
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it has some to the best of us. but the questions about the documents, they were pretty amazing from the regime media.ut they were actually curious abouy the classified docs so maybe she was surprised by that. all right that is it for us tonight. thanks for watching. remember it is america now and forever. greg gutfeld takes over from here. >> todd: a fox news alert a discovery for joe biden as new top classified government record from bp days are discovered in a second location. you were watching "fox & friends first" on thursday morning i'm todd piro. >> carley: carley shimkus, a merrick garland special counsel with questions swirling over how far this will go with potential ties to the biden family shady business dealings with china and ukraine. >> what is in these documents? these are questions we have to
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have an answer to. >> it can't be we have two tiers of justice in this country. one rule for republicans and another for democrats. >> if the fbi were serious, they would look at all of biden homes and offices. it will not go away. >> todd: the republicans want to know why democrats hillary clinton and joe biden get off easy well former president gets completely ransacked. joining us live lucas tomlinson. >> good morning todd and carl e. president biden's predecessor donald trump being irresponsible with his handling of classified information. here is our quality peter doocy at the white house yesterday. >> on these documents, how can anyone be that irresponsible? isn't that what this says about classified documents? >> he believes that classified
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documents and information should be taken seriously. he takes them seriously and he was surprised to learn of any records. i'm not going to go into specifics. but what i'm reiterating to you what you heard from the president yourself. >> that was before second batch discovered. president biden discovered when the first batch of classified materials he was advised not to ask what was inside of them. >> people know i take classified documents, classified information seriously. i was briefed about this discovery and surprised and learned they were in a government records taken there to that office. but i don't know what is in the documents. >> the university of pennsylvania received $30 million from china after the penn/biden center and senator lindsey graham with the segway with the former's presidents documents being investigated. >> if there is not a special
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counsel appointed to find out how this happened with president biden regarding classified information, it will hurt the country. if you thought it was necessary, attorney general, to appoint a special counsel regarding president trump, then you need to do the exact same thing with president biden when it comes to handling classified information. >> some have called this a dark money and wonder if it could have potential influence on the future of policymaking. >> carley: lucas tomlinson live in washington, lucas thank you. here is what alan dershowitz says, he wants to see from the justice department. >> one absolutely certain merrick garland would not and should not prosecute donald trump because to do so and pass what i call the clinton/burger/biden standard you have to show what trump did was so much worse that a different result is permissible.
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they shouldn't disclose this on november 2nd. if they didn't then, they certainly shouldn't have waited two months and l reports the only way this was disclosed in two months is because the media was on to it. somebody probably leaked it. what we need is a single standard of justice. >> carley: single standard of justice. with that, former assistant secretary of state robert charles. robert, what is your take on the second classified documents? >> appreciate it, carley, the first and second batch raise a basic -- alan dershowitz has it right a basic and legal political issue. the american people will lose trust and honesty in this justice department never mind this president. if what is good for the goose is good for the gander. if you appoint a special prosecutor just because you found the myths and length of documents, absolutely should have appointed one yesterday on this one. this was a little bit bigger and a little bit more difficult
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because it's got to be unpacked. first of all, the statutes which this is handled are different. the presidential records act after jimmy carter and basically involves a president as donald trump said correctly can be classified documents. the other act that we are talking about is the federal records act. it indicates only a supervisor in a agency classified that document can actually declassify it. in virtually the documents were classified almost certainly by the vice president here they came out of state, intelligence. the other thing is the nature of these documents is very different. wherever they are i'm curious the second location and the second location very suspect. why don't we know the second location but the bigger thing is the nature of the documents. we know this case like trump,
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these are potentially incriminating documents. the president's son was taking millions of dollars from ukraine from china and housed in a place china helped fund. it is a questionable thing. and the last big question that has to be answered, did hunter biden pay ukraine and china, we know this, did he have access to these documents? if he did, why? what does that mean? i would argue if ever a case for special counsel it is stronger here than it ever was withdrawn. >> todd: let's drill down and obviously china's donation to upn as the biden think tank was opened. you see millions of dollars within three months of the opening be donated to upenn. what can china do with access to these documents, bobby? >> it frightens me to know, todd. i was intelligence officer and worked at white house bush
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office. it is disheartening to hear china fund of the place these documents were located. what does that mean? and i guess i'm not very comforted by the fact the president two days ago was asked, what were they doing there? i don't know, they were safely in the closet. that is not the way we treat classified documents. it does it matter of the classified level. if you put them on a table and china can pick it up, that can be very. another solid reason to have a prosecutor. i'm not big on special prosecutors but when you get in a position of the trust of the public depends on whether you treat evenly randomly both sides and potentially adversaries to classified documents through or separately, i don't see how you don't appoint a special prosecutor. speak to the first round of classified documents, as you mentioned, had to deal with iran and ukraine reportedly, and they
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had classification status top-secret. while you don't know exactly what is in these documents, can you describe to us what sort of material rises to that level of classification? >> yeah, that is interesting, carley. that fact is what i didn't know. that means ts's sci level. a compartmental document and i i have that clearance. those documents contain information that is extremely sensitive. it doesn't just go to the general sources of methods but there is something in those documents that worrisome that it was on the high side. so, i am -- that really concerns me. i didn't know that. i would say -- let's get beyond special prosecutor, has to be somebody with special access and we have to understand what was in those documents that there was iran in ukraine and csi level pier they were not there by random access and random that
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the president left in the building. >> todd: so much is concerning. you talk about the two-tier system of justice but there is a two-tier system of thinking throughout the country when it comes to documents. a lot of that is propagated by hillary clinton and remember when a former president trump's home instead of saying they shouldn't do that she sold merchandise with hats and merchandise and the like. how bad is it for country that so many on the left based on the mainstream media is telling them about joe biden's documents? how bad is that they do not understand the seriousness of what joe biden did? >> you know, todd, you are getting at something very fundamental. when we grew up under the tutelage of world war ii vets, the country actually far out wearing any persuasion or issue. the concrete was the most important thing that we left
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america and understood the sacrifice that brought us to this point we understood our obligations pursuant to the sacrifice represented by all the men and women like her linkedin. the fact that we would have politicians taking vantage of moments like this to promote themselves basically means, and this is what is happening on the left, what it really boils down to is they think there are no rules. they don't see any obviously anything wrong with what they are doing. i think the most disturbing part is the vast majority of america whether you consider yourself red, blue, or purple, the vast majority of america has any link to america and study its members of the family that were a part of it know that you owe a duty to this country. that means first and foremost, loyalty and being honest if you are in public service. this is where i come back to this haunting, basic fact. the american public is losing
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trust in this governance ability to honestly govern. >> carley: roberts, yesterday all flights grounded for a period of time across the country because of faa system failure. now, republicans including congressman andy biggs calling on secretaries pete buttigieg. listen here. >> i'm not surprised he doesn't know anything because that is consistent how he has handled any question or issue we've had in the transportation secretary overnight. and we have no idea what happened or how they will fix it and how long it will last. >> it is to important questions but what do you think really happened here and is that fair criticism? >> so let's take them backwards. for sure that is fair criticism and we have any given day about 20,000 flights over this country, 22 regions that do deconfliction and probably 5,000 airports. the notion we would allow those to just get shut down. i was in the air on 9/11 and
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that was the last time i remember the air system being shut down for any reason. the notion that we would somehow walk away from this and say, "i will look into this" because what pete buttigieg did is complete lack of confidence. somebody more interest in transphobia than transportation. and i think we have americans who are owed a right to understand what he is doing with the level of competence is of his job. by the way there is no faa at the moment. so trust again, trust and confidence. if you go to the deeper question and really what is going on here, i am -- i don't know. i will tell you it smells a little bit of a hack. they are not saying anything if national security issue. if i were in charge, i would be trying to prepare as much as i could publicly. but i wouldn't be broadcasting that i knew that. because of added vulnerabilities. but it goes to this basic
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understanding with her you are flogging or believing in the white house, trust and the government's ability to do its job and do it well is fundamental. if we lose that basic public trust in these institutions and these people, then we've really screwed up. you don't put somebody at the head of the defense department that know something about dependence and ahead of the treasury department that knows about fiscal and monetary policy. you should have somebody faa and department of transportation in transportation and we don't have that. >> carley: the preliminary work has trace this outage to damaged data file at this point. there is no evidence of a cyber attack but again, they call it preliminary work. deafly more to come exactly what went down yesterday. robert, thank you for joining us. interesting perspectives on all fronts. >> always a pleasure, thank you. >> carley: the oversight committee chairman pushing ahead with the investigation into hunter biden and the first
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family's business dealings. james comer telling fox the investigation and potential influence peddling is the top priority of the g.o.p. else majority saying, "for years the biden family had access around the world for profit often at the expense of the nation's interest. the american people must know the extent of joe biden's involvement of his shady business deals and if these deals threaten him as president." james comer sent letters to former twitter executives calling on them to appear before a committee hearing in regards to the suppression of the hunter biden laptop story leading up to the 2020 presidential election. >> todd: the suspect accused of killing four idaho students will appear in court for a right to waive his right to a speedy trial to allow him more time to enter a plea for the charges against him. no cameras will be allowed in the courtroom.
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bryan kohberger murdered the four students t the and all the siblings attend the university of idaho. his mom sharing a heartfelt post as she sends her two kids back to school without ethan. they are rock stars and we couldn't be more proud of them. yesterday we successfully drop them off at the university of idaho. their job now is just be kids. we spend no time being angry. that would be energy not well spent. ethan is who we is because of our family. he touched lives and he had no idea it existed. now, the affidavit with the crus to make gruesome murders of elderly couple in a gated retirement community. >> carley: a career criminal with two doesn't prior arrests in just the past y ashley strohmier truh joins us with more. 83-year-old and his wife, 80-year-old sharon, but they do have a suspect, 50-year-old
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vicki williams. the police say the elderly couple was stabbed to death in their dorm apartment which happens to be a gated retirement community. the affidavit lining out a timeline of what allegedly took place new year's eve. 10:00 a.m., a woman believed to be williams entered the village but it wasn't until 3:00 p.m. when security escorted her off at the property and at 4:14 p.m. the same woman can be seen on surveillance reentering the gated community. she knocks on an apartment door nearly seven hours later asking to take a shower but the tenant quickly activates an emergency alarm which sends her running three hours later 2:00 a.m. the car is seen leaving the property. the police didn't discover the body until 4:00 p.m. that day. the city's mayor said it is rattled that the entire community. speak with the magnitude of this has really shaken the entire city. we've had several meetings with waterville village because of
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obviously direct concerns this happened right in the community. >> carley: williams who claimed she was home was tracked down in savannah, georgia, by license plate readers and kingss from sharon phones. and when they found her, the criminal history spans decades including 34 charges in hoa [boos] ohio last year and were arrested felony assault, criminal trespassing, theft and domestic abuse. the victim sharon and darrell were married for more than 50 years. they leave behind two children who they say were full of life and ready to enjoy retirement. the police are waiting for lab results of harris left on the scene in comparison to williams dna. speed 224 rest in a single year, horrific detail for this heartbroken family to deal with, ashley thank you. the mother of three ana walshe say they want custody of the
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children as her husband brian is in custody. >> we are willing to take the international community readily to take all children together in order to keep them from being separated. i'm excited to send a message to the police. we are begging and surely as concerned as us and the kids. we are begging them not to put them in a foster house. >> carley: those friends pleading for brian walshe to have the guts to tell the truth about his wife's disappearance. he is currently being held on $500,000 bail. he is charged with misleading a police investigation. brian walshe failed to tell the investigators he purchased $450 of cleaning supplies one day after his wife's disappearance. those cleaning supplies as well as a bloodied and i found in his basement. later this morning, pamela bardhi and natasha sky will join "fox & friends" with what they believe happened to anna.
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>> todd: a beautiful gesture by those friends to keep those kids together. turning to campus craziness. harvard medical school offering future doctors come a course to heal with lgbqt infants. the doctor here to give us a second opinion. >> carley: usc taking wokeness to a new level because they banned the word "field" from campus. wait until you hear wife. we will tell you right after this. ♪ ♪
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your search history is never tracked, so it can't be shared. and when you leave search, duckduckgo helps keep companies from watching you as you brows. join tens of millions of people making the easy switch by downloading the app today. duckduckgo, privacy simplified. ♪ ♪ >> carley: all right, here we go listen to this the university of southern california's social work is reportedly banning the word "field" from alleged racist connotation. according to a letter shared on social media, the school is telling staff, "we decided to remove field from the practice and replace it with practicum. phrases such as going into field or fieldwork may have connotations for slavery in immigrant workers that are not benign." the letter goes on to say this is just the start of its plan to
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change language in the name of social justice. >> todd: fight on trojans, fight on. harvard medical school with raising eyebrows with doctors how to provide health care to lgbqt plus infants. you have to pause because this is insane. this orifice description the elaine domain collected trained students with high quality cultural response of care for patients with diverse sexual orientation. clinical exposure and education will focus on serving gender and minority people across the life span from infants to older adults appear at the do no harm with associate dean dr. stanley joins me, in your entire medical career have you ever treated and lgbqt plus infant? >> thank you very much for having me. obviously come with the part of
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that infant is sort of insane and relate that scientific basis. i read through the course description. let me say that i think it is important that all patients receive optimal care, optimal compassionate care. that community has specific medical needs particularly the gay community that require specific kinds of medical care and knowledge. to the extent this is an evidence-based program, that makes sense. however, let me say i hope they teach evidence regarding so-called gender affirming care and i hope they teach the students over 90% of the students of the children that go through gender dysphoria and this idea uncertain about their gender actually a want to reject all that and live normal lives, perhaps as gay individuals are not and will they point out evidence-based that an norland,
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finland, sweden put a pause on gender care because we have no idea of the risk-benefit ratio, that is to say how many children are harmed by undergoing this four stage procedure and first social transitioning and thin puberty blockers and then sex hormones and entering into surgical procedures? so the the question is what will harvard be teaching the students and is it evidence-based or taken off by activist for pushing this idea of gender affirming care in the face of multiple groups of parents and individuals like a mother in florida who speaks out against the fact her child started down this pathway of transition without her knowing about it by the school that the child attended. and we will talk about individuals where a young wonderful woman tells the story how she underwent double
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meniscectomy at the age of 16 and has great regrets. and now back is a beautiful, young woman speaking out with great courage what she's gone through. until they really teach evidence-based medicine in this field, i think this is greatly suspect. >> todd: obviously the infant part is fascinating with a jumping off point. but your fear and that you express that fear that this kind of education will create doctors that push activism as opposed to treating patience here and really come i think it is the kids, not just ones now but in future generations with more pervasive beyond harvard that will be the ones that suffer. is that your concern, too, doc? >> absolutely. and to speak to your point within the course description they talk about creating advocates. they talk about advocacy, which is what this is all about. creating individuals, taking white coats and marching on state capitals and claiming the
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medical profession is fairly behind. when in fact the validity. and i said these european countries which typically have been more progressive than american and lots of social areas have decided to call a halt to these activities because of the great fear that more children are being harmed. i would emphasize we must treat these children, families with great compassion because they go through terrible turmoil, and they need to be supported. to the extent the course teach the medical students that compassion physicians, that is great. but they need to treat real evidence. >> todd: you outlined key evidence but why infant and sexual orientation near each other in the same document? i have an infant now we are not focused on sexual orientation in her learning but that little key thing that is plastic and shake it and that is what infant time should be. dr. standley goldfarb, we thank you for your time come appreciated.
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>> thank you. >> t>> carley: byron donalds speaking out after joy reid made his nomination about asked him this. >> do you not believe the idea was to make a diversity statement? >> actually come up first that was not the idea because i was in a room and the reality is a lot believe in my ability to lead, they do. >> carley: the question came after democrat congresswoman mike congressman cori bush a perpetuating white supremacy. his name being in the mix is not progress. it is pathetic. congressman donalds and wife erica joined hannity to react to all of it. >> i have a problem doing those interviews because it is important to all americans here the ideas that conservatives bush and that we believe in it the beacon of light across the world. >> byron and i have been
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involved in this fight ten years and we are no stranger to the battle against the left. we are not afraid of them. it takes leaders like byron to go on msnbc and cnn m and battle them with ideas, policies, with facts. >> carley: i like the look inside of the family. >> todd: this is how "entity" is going forward from family portraits. speed to an employee at new york city's migrant hotels of the one-time luxury establishment being completely trashed and taxpayer dollars were totally wasted ever since those migrants moved in. >> todd: spending billions of dollars at new york city and not happy about that. individual here live to tell us all about it. ♪ ♪
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and they just go to waste. this is all food. it is going to waste. this is insane. this is fresh, this is good food, good food, but they don't want to eat it because they don't like it. >> carley: hosts hotel staffers are exposing dangerous conditions at a once luxury hotel in manhattan housing illegal migrants and reportedly costing taxpayers upwards of $5,000 a night. felipe rodriguez has been an employee in new york city since 2017 and joins me now. good morning to you. you words of person to film that footage so let me get to that in a minute. first you have been working at the hotel five years now. i understand things are much different. tell us how. >> good morning and thank you for having me. it's a lot different. when i joined in 2017, it was a
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great place to work. you came in and there was no stress here or there a nice environment where you could associate with the guests and the exchange was pleasant but now this is a migrant hotel. we don't have any guests any anymore. they sold the entire hotel from the fourth floor to the 28th floor. some migrants are really great people and they are looking for the american. but unfortunately, the government just the right people to come into the program. so we got people who have been drunk, using marijuana and they are punching and beating their wives. we have teenagers running around wild around the hotel and the
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opening of the fire exit doors and teenagers doing what teenagers do. >> carley: what did you do at the hotel? >> my job entails catering to all the guests. so, whenever the guests get called downstairs and say, they need extra towels, i deliver it. >> carley: so, you are delivering to the people staying at the hotel. i understand you are on disability right now, tell us why. >> i was delivering a small fridge to the 14th floor. and when i went into the room, the room was so cluttered with clothing and all that kind of stuff that when i went to lower the refrigerator, my knee. >> carley: you got hurt unfortunately because of the clutter in the room. let's talk about the ways to appear that footage that you
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posted, it is not something a lot of taxpayers want to see because we are the ones paying for it. tell us how much food gets wasted and why. >> when i seen the waste, i was shocked. it was mind-boggling. and when i asked some of the guests, when i asked them why it's being thrown away, the food, they said they didn't like it. >> carley: it is free food the city provides peer that migrants don't want to eat the sandwiches but would rather cook for themselves. why is the city buying the food that is not getting eaten? >> it is free for them here at the taxpayers pay for it. >> carley: good point, also from about 400-$500 a night per room, do you think that is what this is costing? how many rooms are there? >> 1,300 rooms in the whole
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building. >> carley: wow. if it is 1,300 rooms at 500, that is $650,000 a night. so, overall, felipe, how do you feel about this influx of migrants coming to new york city? a lot of people say they are breaking the law. what are your thoughts? >> i think it is nice to see that we have people that believe in the american. and it is good for them to come here and look for that. but i think that we'll new yorkers and citizens the right to make sure that our neighborhoods are safe. and if we are going to allow migrants to come here at -- >> carley: you don't feel safe at work anymore, is that truth?
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>> no, there is no safety in our job. security is very shorthanded. and we don't know who is drunk and ready to do some crazy stuff. >> carley: this mike it seems like there is a safety issue a money issue as well. although compassion is limitless, resources are not. this is unsustainable when he's referring to how much this is costing. it sounds like something has to give. felipe a, thank you for coming in this morning and joining us. we appreciate you telling your story. todd come over to you. >> todd: border patrol agents in arizona sees more fennel's in the last three month than all of last year. the agents confiscated 2700 pounds of the deadly opioid in october and november. and throughout fiscal year 2022 agencies 4600 pounds of fentanyl which was double the total seized in the fiscal year 2021. we will talk to a superintendent about new york school district where a student had to be
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revived with narcan after using a vaped suspecting to be glazed with fentanyl. and now headed to court, accused of punishing anybody with opinionated views. we talk with the people behind the lawsuit next. ♪ cab ♪ shortening brand! highly recommend it! zifans love zicam's unique zinc formula. it shortens colds! zicam. zinc that cold!
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♪ ♪ >> you wouldn't know it by listening to the news or listening to the haters. but on crime, life has a plan. she's putting more streets on the police and getting more guns off of it. >> carley: oh, wow don't leave your own eyes. a new campaign ad for lori lightfoot says about the mayor's record on crime despite orders in the windy city soaring 40% under her watch. robberies, burglaries also up double digits. the new app wasn't enough, mayor lightfoot being called out for asking chicago public school teachers to help with my oral campaign. her camp sending out this email to chicago public school teachers yesterday saying "as the race heats up, we are looking to enrich our office what we call excerpt program." lori lightfoot seeking resumes for volunteers interested in
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campaign politics. externs would be expected to work 12 hours per week for the program and reportedly terminated after onslaught criticism for teachers unions that called the f are unethical. the native who lost his brother to city gun violence will join us next hour to react to the three election effort. >> todd: i cannot wait to hear from him. listen to this oklahoma state university facing a lawsuit that takes aim at the school's woke policies accusing educators of punishing students for simply having opinionated views. "instead of the robust exchange of ideas, and universities are interested in protecting students from ideas that make them uncomfortable." madison a student and the executive director of speech first, they both join me now. madison, what are the first first amendment protected actions that students have gotten in trouble for under osu
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policies? >> first of all, thank you so much for having me. i think that what is important here is we are seeing students who are going onto campus and going into classrooms where free speech should be encouraged, the free exchange of ideas and robust academic learning environment not being supported when students going into classrooms knowing if the wrong person over here, something that they say, they can be reported on and face consequences for that. >> todd: some of the examples that got kids in trouble, an article build the wall in chalk on the sidewalk. you go on campus there is chalk on the sidewalks and expressing support for president trump peer is literally expressing support for the president of the united states. this is an obvious first amendment violation. how did osu even think to codify
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this violation in their own policies? >> thank you so much for having me here at this lawsuit we launched on behalf of the student members targets these policies specifically to deter, suppress and constantly protected speech. keep in mind, this is a public university, taxpayer funded which means it is beholden to the constitution. when it is targeting speech, there is policies, you said specifically target opinionated speech. so a policy for example as students to report anonymously on anything called a bias incident. any opinion weighted one direction are they out of that is considered to be unfair. a university specifies this can take place in a conversation and writing on or off campus or social media in a time or any place in asking students to report on one another. these are scary tactics because we have seen how these tactics have been used in the past embarrassed regimes like the soviet union or east germany.
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>> todd: madison, how chilly is it for conservatives on the campus? >> i have personal first-hand experience of chilling of free speech on the global states campus. i was editor and chief of the student newspaper until i wrote antimask opinion column and lost my position for that. and it just makes me wonder why the university keeps publishing these statements in response to this lawsuit and to other instances saying they value free speech on campus and support the diversity of thought when they have yet to comment on what happened to me a year ago. even though i'm not directly involved in this lawsuit, i am glad action is being taken for these policies that have been in place for too long. >> todd: osu responded as follows oklahoma state university values and cherishes everyone's right free expression on campus and a central pillar of democracy. their favorite word, free
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exchange of ideas is part of the educational experience and fosters excellent medical thinking inside. how can that be true under their own stated policies which are so vague that they actually encompass first amendment protected free speech? >> that is really interesting they would say something like that and they have a computer policy that specifically forbids students anything related to political campaigns to lose access to email service. additionally, they have harassment policy that says anything considered intimidating or could hurt someone's mental health could be considered harassment. harassment is a serious allegation that can lead to expulsion. when students are worried left and right they can be reported for migration in this day and age as their words are violent how do you know it will not hurt someone's mental health? something as simple as asking where someone is from is considered suppression and the students felt that. when students are worried
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accused of harassment or reported anonymously or lose access to emails, they will stop speaking and engaging with one another. that is what will happen here. >> todd: one final moment for me this exist because of t. boone pickens. look it up if you don't know who he is, you would think the administrators would have a little renaissance putting out something like this that goes against conservatives considering everything you have at osu is because of t. boone pickens. but the left thinks there is no consequence and stood there actions including employment. madison, cherise we thank you for your time this morning. we appreciate it. aoc trying to school on a jackson about stoves. the former white house doctor turn it to a lesson on hypocrisy for her. that is a guest in aoc's kitchen. >> carley: the congressman will join us live and jimmy failla, caldwell on deck of the
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>> carley: the suspect accused of killing four university students will appear in court for a status hearing. bryan kohberger will have a chance to waive his right to a speedy trial, allowing him more time to enter a plea for the charges against him. you are watching "fox and friends first"s, i'm carley shimkus. >> todd: i'm todd piro. one victim, ethan, was a triplet, his mom sharing a heart-felt post as she sends her two kids back to school without them. yesterday we successfully dropped them at the university of idaho, their job now is just be kids, we respond no time being angry, that would be energy not well spent. etha
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