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tv   Americas Newsroom  FOX News  January 23, 2023 6:00am-7:00am PST

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you are still a brand ambassador, not officially, but flo rida, thank you for joining us and we look forward to grilling steaks. will will have a great big complement for you all swats with the summer concert series in the summer. >> definitely, look out for the artist as well, the label, the international nephew.another ba search of president biden's home. good morning. hope the weekend was grand. i'm bill hemmer. >> dana: i'm dana perino. this is "america's newsroom." last week i said there were more shoes to drop. six hours later we were proven right. the white house is saying it requested the search. it took place on friday. the fifth batch of documents
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found since november and the fourth discovered at the president' home in delaware. >> the d.o.j. calls it a plaplanned -- the white house is cooperating but not extending to lawmakers who have a ton of questions. >> we need to know who had access to those documents because this is an ongoing investigation for influence peddling. we're disappointed that the administration is not working with us on anything. they're stonewalling everything. >> the government has a tendency to overclassify. you have to see what's the scope, how serious, did anyone have access, those questions have to be answered before we decide is this -- how significant an issue is this. >> dana: team fox coverage. andy mccarthy with analysis on deck. first let's go to the white house, jacque heinrich is standing by as we come on the air for an update. hi. >> good morning. president biden plans to spend next weekend at camp david amid
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reports the justice department is considering asking to search other locations linked to the president. but we know from the white house counsel's office that the wilmington search on friday began with an offer from the president to scour everywhere. >> after the lawyers conducted their original searches the president said offer up d.o.j. access to the house. i want to make sure they have the information they need. the president's attorneys reached out to d.o.j. offered access to the house and it was provided. >> "the new york times" is reporting the justice department hadn't tried to find materials in locations other than the penn biden center for the last two months because initial interviews with former officials involved with packing and shipping his belongings did not indicate that classified material could be anywhere else. the discovery of the material from biden's time in the senate
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causes more questions about how they ended up in the president's possession. >> the only reason you could think of why anyone would take classified documents out of a classified space and home is to show them to somebody. this will be crucial to the special counsel's investigation. why did the president have these documents? who did he show them to? is it connected to the biden family businesses? >> as the news unfolds fox can confirm president biden plans to replace his chief of staff ron klain, who has been working with him since his time in the senate. biden has tapped jeff zients the former covid czar. >> bill: the attorney for president biden is a fellow by the name of bob bauer. part of his quote goes like this. d.o.j. took possession of materials it deemed within the scope of its inquiry including
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six items consisting of documents with classification markings and surrounding materials. you had a big issue over the weekend with the phrase including six items. explain that legally. >> well, bill, we don't know what an item is. an envelope, a box, my recollections with the search of mar-a-lago was that the bureau said at the time there were 19 items and by the time the dust settled i think that had translated into over 100 classified documents if i remember the numbers correctly. they aren't being really being straight with us about exactly -- i wouldn't expect them to tell us the content but we don't know the number of documents found that have classified markings. >> dana: this is president biden last week if he had any regrets. >> president biden: i think you'll find there is nothing there. i have no regrets. i'm following what the lawyers have told me they want me to do.
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exactly what we're doing. there is no there there. >> dana: i read today in one of the news articles that even the d.o.j. itself is not exactly trusting the biden private lawyers in this situation. >> well, they shouldn't have trusted them up until now. i think it was irresponsible for the justice department to let the private lawyers who don't have security clearances look for these documents in the first place. you and bill mentioned there was a planned search. people should understand all that means is consensual means the person consented to the search. that happens under where the government has the grounds. they say you don't have to go to court, you can look. planned only means they knew they were coming which is probably why the president spent the weekend at his beach house.
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>> bill: we were told there is nothing at the beach house. i don't know if that's still the case or where they were on friday while the 13-hour search was held. they might have been at the beach house and maybe that comes next. to dana's point about the comment about no regrets came up a lot in sunday shows. >> he had said he had no regrets. any advice for him? >> i think he should have a lot of regrets. i would think that. >> bill: i imagine you get more of that. what stunned me the most, andy, is that there were apparently document or items however we define it going forward at some point once it's explained to us that were there when he was a u.s. senator. what's that make you think? >> well, they're not allowed to take those out of capitol hill. you have to review stuff in a scif on capitol hill. a pattern of being cavalier with
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national security information. i think to dana's point i think he is saying he has no regrets because now that the problem is a biden problem rather than a trump problem we're back to the hillary/comey rule which means we don't apply the espionage act as written which says if you exhibit gross negligence in handling classified documents you can be prosecuted for a felony. now we're back to well, you know, she wasn't really trying to sell the country out to the chinese. they didn't really intend to do anything wrong. we don't really know if national security was harmed. so i think we're back to the hillary/comey rules because we have a democrat who is, you know, in the sights. >> dana: quick last question. the dni admiral haines was supposed to be doing intel assessment of the document from mar-a-lago. we have yet to see that. i don't know how long it will take. i don't think it should take this long. should the same be applied to
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biden? >> of course, yeah. i mean, there needs, dana, to be a damage assessment for national security purposes irrespective of who is involved and whether anyone ever gets prosecuted. the most important thing here is if you have top secret documents where you could lose methods and sources of intelligence if they fall into the wrong hands, for the country's sake the intelligence community has to assess that regardless whether it's trump, biden or whoever it is. >> bill: thank you. we'll call on you about every day this week, i think. thank you so much for running us through that with us today. >> dana: when you are lawyers this is good for business. the biden private lawyers now we have more to do. >> bill: paid by the hour. hang onto that phrase what andy said. what's an item? is it a document or is it a docks of what could be documents? right now we don't know. >> dana: we'll endeavor to find out and keep you posted as well. now to california.
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there is a community shattered when police say that the suspect in a mass shooting at a lunar new year celebration near los angeles saturday night, the suspect is dead from a self-inflicted gunshot. ten killed and ten wounded before the suspect went to second location. bystanders got his gun away before he could kill again. >> this could have been much worse. the weapon is a magazine fed semi automatic assault pistol. not an assault rifle but an assault pistol that had an extended large capacity magazine attached to it. and that is the pistol that was recovered at the location in alhambra. >> dana: christina coleman is live in monterey park,
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california. everyone is very upset as they should be about this. we now have a suspect. tell us more, christina, about that. >> hi, dana. authorities say the 72-year-old suspect shot 20 people, killing at least ten of them and 14 hours later shot and killed himself. take a look at the suspect. police identified him as huu can tran. tran opened fire on people in the star ballroom dance studio in monterey park saturday night after a lunar new year's eve celebration took place in this predominantly asian community. reports are circulating it was a domestic violence. he was invite -- police have not confirmed information or not released details on a motive for the shooting just yet. 30 minutes after the first attack, police say tran entered
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another ballroom in alhambra with a gun. two community members were able to wrestle that weapon away from him. stopping him from possibly killing someone else. >> he went to the alhambra location after he conducted the shooting and he was disarmed by two community members who i consider to be heroes. >> witnesses reported the suspect took off from alhambra in a white van. sunday morning police pulled over a white van about half an hour away in torrance after they got a hit on the vehicle from a law enforcement license plate reader indicating the plates on the van were stolen. officers say the suspect shot and killed himself as they approached the vehicle. >> they exited their patrol vehicle to contact the occupant. they heard one gunshot coming from within the van.
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>> police say a handgun was recovered from that vehicle. one of the ten victims who were killed was identified by local residents as dance instructor, seen here in the picture. seven of the ten victims are hospitalized and some listed in critical condition. we're told their ages are in their 50s and 60s. yesterday a few residents told me how they are trying to grapple with this senseless tragedy. >> people should be celebrating today. this is lunar new year. everybody is supposed to be home celebrating with their families. the chinese and korean and vietnamese families. this happens. how do you process all this? >> also a victim's resource center has been set up to help people in the community impacted by this horrific crime. dana. >> dana: christina coleman in los angeles. thank you. >> bill: nancy pelosi blaming new york lawmakers for
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democrats' losing the house. remember they flipped four seats, republicans did, in the state of new york in november. she says the democratic governor hochul was too slow to act on crime. does she have a point on that? >> dana: major ukrainian ally appears to be rethinking its position on some key military aid. what could it mean for the ongoing conflict? we'll ask general jack keane. >> a record month of illegal crossings prompting a bipartisan group of mayors to plead for help. is anyone at the white house listening? >> the white house must deal with the immediate emergency we have now. >> we're asking for a long-term solution. this problem has to be fixed. get ready for a shock. the rate on credit cards is now over 22%. if you want to save hundreds of dollars every month, pay off the balances on your high-rate cards with a lower rate va home loan from newday usa
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♪ every search you make ♪ ♪ every click you take ♪ ♪ i'll be watching you ♪ - [narrator] the internet doesn't have to be so creepy, the duckduckgo app, lets you search and browse pria blocking most trackers all forf 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. >> bill: so the daughter of the
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number two democrat in the house arrested for assault at an anti-police protest. police in boston say they were trying to arrest riley dowel when an altercation broke out. an officer was hit in the face and injured. she is the daughter of katherine clark, the congresswoman saying it is a difficult time for her as a parent. 19 past. >> dana: germany says it is considering whether to send tanks to ukraine and is expected to make a decision soon. kiev waits for weapons russia claims it is gaining ground. let's bring in general jack keane. this has been going back and forth for several days. a big meeting friday. germany is having this public on the couch being psycho analyzed by what they are going to do. will they land on a decision to send the tanks? >> i think they really will. this kind of public rift really could have been avoided.
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germany said right from the outset. it is frustrating that they didn't want to send the tanks and be the first country to provide main battle tanks because they didn't want the rose pinned on them in escalating capabilities. they've been very sensitive about that from the beginning. what they wanted the united states you provide main battle tanks and we'll follow suit. we should have provided them that political cover. it is not that big a deal. send them some nominal number of tanks. we took a very technical position saying our tanks are logistic and maintenance challenges, therefore we should not send them. if you ask the ukrainians about that they would take the tanks regardless of what kind of challenges they are. i'm surprised we weren't sensitive to providing cover for germany publicly. that's the issue. >> dana: what they need in order to achieve the goal. >> i think they'll get there. >> bill: they'll get there, where? >> first of all poland will
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provide the tanks. germany has control over the tanks they sold to other countries in terms of export out of those countries by virtue of a contract. so i think there are 2,000 of these tanks in and around europe. germany has 300 in the hands of their troop and 200 in storage. it's likely that a few hundred main battle tanks will eventually get to ukraine. the problem is and critical in the past, the ukrainians have been asking for these main battle tanks for months. now the offensive operation that they want to conduct against the russians has been delayed by the lack of a main battle tank. >> bill: a couple observations, finland and poland are all in. they're encouraging a lot of this. i didn't realize the leopard was as popular as it is. 2,000 tanks in europe and they want us to give the abrams
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tanks. early on germany was jumping at increasing the military spending. i don't think that has come through just yet. they also made some big promises 2% of gdp to meet the nato obligation. i don't know if they are getting cold feet on this. it appears now and play a clip from over the weekend. it appears that if you are going to tank warfare on both sides, this war will be decided in the trenches. i want you to answer that in a moment. first mike mccaul on sunday. >> the tanks are vitally important. why? because we know with the new general putin put in place they will start a major offensive on the eastern flank in the donbas. >> are you arguing for the u.s. sending abrams tanks to ukraine? >> 100%. we don't have to send very many. just send enough to unleash what
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germany has and what the ten other countries in nato have. >> bill: he concluded by saying nato has to share the burden. what do you think of that? >> i do. so everyone understands. the russians failed to take the capital city last year and surrounding environs and then focused in the spring and early summer on the dan donbas region to take control of that region and establish the land bridge to crimea. they were not able to take the whole don bass region. they have been in defensive pa positions every since. low morale, poorly trained. many in trenches as you mentioned. they're vulnerable to the kind of attack that zelensky and his generals want to conduct here and break through and take more territory. there is also a thought the russians are planning later in the year some kind of offensive
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to demonstrate that they can retake territory that they may have lost or take new territory. that's where we are. the opportunity, though, is in the hands of the ukrainians to go on the offense and take back and liberate part of their country. they need these main battle tanks to do it. why are tanks important? you have people defending a trench line and want to penetrate that. you bring the tanks up supported by infantry carriers. they get the tanks through the obstacles that will be there. the penetration weapon is the tanks and supported by artillery. we refer to that as combined arms warfare because of the different kinds of weapons being used. that's what is needed. i'm confident this will eventually happen but once again it is much slower than it should have been. >> bill: put a fine point on this. this is where the war is going would you agree? >> absolutely. >> dana: we seem to get them
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what they need and we're one step behind. >> we've seen the horror taking place in the cities. they requested sophisticated air defense systems beyond the stinger missile months before that began. now we're getting in there and it makes a difference but the suffering between those two decisions is pretty significant. >> dana: thank you, general. thank you for being here. >> always good to be here. >> bill: protestors marching through atlanta over the weekend throwing rocks and setting fire to a police cruiser. watch this story. what led to the tensions there in atlanta. damar hamlin attending the buffalo bills game for the first time since his collapse three weeks ago. what a moment for buffalo, cincinnati and the nfl. the crowd went nuts. at red land cotton. our traditions are grown and sewn right here in our hometown of moulton, alabama.
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break being another record. more than a quarter of a million migrants arrested last month. i repeat. more than a quarter of a million migrant arrested last month. the single highest month on record. no sign of slowing down. fox news cameras capturing footage of the humanitarian disaster unfolding there. matt finn is live in eagle pass, texas, to begin what is another week there, matt, hello. >> here at the southern border we see illegal migrants use all types of tactics to try to get further into the united states whether it's a close boxed truck, private jets and we shot a video of 20 migrants hopping on a train. they illegally crossed the rio grande river in eagle pass. those migrants telling griff they're from guatemala. they're seeing an increase in the legal train hopping right now. especially in the del rio sector coming as u.s. customs and
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border protection released its numbers from the month of december revealing 251,000 migrant encounters in the month of december alone. the highest number ever. totally 717,000 encounters in the first three months of the fiscal year of 2023. if you add those 717,000 encounters plus the 260,000 known got aways we've hit about 1 million illegal migrants crossing into the united states in just three months since october. >> bill: thank you, eagle pass, texas today. >> dana: the migrant crisis extends far beyond the border as you know. mayors from around the country are urging the white house to step up as their cities face a flood of illegal immigrants. >> are you starting to see more bipartisan frustration. you are seeing the mayor of new york city and chicago and denver
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are all top of their agendas now is talking about the problems being created in their communities as a result of the migration surge. >> this should not happen to any city in america. this is a national problem and our national government, congress and the white house must do a long-term comprehensive immigration policy. >> dana: my co-host on the five joins me. geraldo, it's very pretty. when the mayors start to band together i think it was a little more bipartisan. regardless. you have the mayors pushing to the white house. will they be able to have an impact here? >> well, they certainly hope so, dana. they are strapped -- first of all i would invite you to come to my winter wonderland. i wish we could think about fantasy and things like that. a grim reality that the cities,
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particularly the big cities have to deal with right now. i was very much against the stunts by governor abbott and governor desantis sending migrants to places like martha's vineyard or to washington, d.c., new york, chicago and other big cities. but it is -- the stunt worked because it certainly caught the attention of the u.s. conference of mayors. they are unanimous in asking president biden, federal action on what is a national problem, as they say over and over again. the numbers are real, the pictures that fox news captures at the border are undeniable. this is a huge problem. the world is in motion. many millions of people want to live here. we need control of our southern border. and i think that president biden is finally getting the message. i think title 42 will continue to survive. they have to really restrict
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asylum, speed up the process, give some order to the border because right now, dana, only chaos reigns. biden spoke to the mayors on friday. >> president biden: we have oh choice. they can keep using immigration to try to score political points or help solve the problem. immigration reform used to be a bipartisan issue. we can make it that again in my view. >> dana: i feel like i could write both sides' arguments. they keep saying the same thing over and over again. a change is coming at the white house. a new chief of staff. ron klain is leaving. jeff zients coming on board. he solved the problem of the obamacare website and implementation. is thereth a moment you might see a reset? >> i certainly hope so. as supportive as i am of
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president biden, he has been woefully inept in terms of dealing with the border. the fact he waited two years to go to the southern border is such glaring testimony to his indifference or his fear that if he went close to the problem it would be associated with the problem. there is a glimmer of hope. you did have senator cornyn and senator coombs in a senate visit to the border. they must get together. we need comprehensive immigration reform. we need to speed up the asylum process. all the people that were reported sneaking over that bridge this morning, the guatemalan most single men it looked to me or young adult men. they really have no right to remain under the current implementation that president biden is using. i think most of them will be deported. what do you do, for instance, dana, if you have an unaccompanied toddler? an 8-year-old crossing the bridge? what do you do then?
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you need humanitarian feelings, you need pragmatic approach to this thing. you need bipartisanship. what i would do, i would couple the paycheck payroll protection scam with the hundreds of billions of dollars that were robbed during the covid relief, use some of that money to deal with the border. give the border a higher priority. it is not going to go away. the world is fractured. the world certainly our hemisphere is not dealing with its own humanitarian crisis. the people are fleeing coming to the promised land. we need to understand the priority of this problem. >> dana: 251,000 migrant encounters in december alone. a record. the problem not going away. good to see you. don't shovel too much today. >> bill: not your imagination, price of eggs has gone through the roof and now a farmers group wants the feds to investigate.
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plus new york governor kathy hochul pushing for a ban on gas stoves in new homes while she still uses one in the executive mansion. another case of rules for thee and not for me. jimmy failla has his take on a monday. jimmie is next. >> jimmie is here. ♪ people remember ads with a catchy song. so to help you remember that liberty mutual customizes your home insurance, here's a little number you'll never forget. ♪customize and save♪ only pay for what you need. ♪liberty liberty liberty♪ ♪liberty♪ hi, i'm michael, i've lost 62 pounds on golo and i have kept it off. most of the weight that i gained was strictly in my belly which is a sign of insulin resistance. but since golo, that weight has completely gone away, as you can tell. thanks to golo and release, i've got my life and my health back. my name is douglas.
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♪ every search you make ♪ ♪ every click you take ♪ ♪ i'll be watching you ♪ - [narrator] the internet doesn't have to be so creepy, the duckduckgo app, lets you search and browse pria blocking most trackers all forf 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.
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join tens of millions of people making the easy switch by downloading the app today. duckduckgo, privacy simplified. >> dana: a group of farmers is demanding the federal trade commission investigate the skyrocketing price of eggs. a dozen eggs cost $4.25 last month up 138% from the year before. fox business's grady trimble is
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outside of happy foods grocery store in chicago. are they happy this morning, grady? >> in the egg aisle of happy foods, the rising price of eggs. the reason for that depends on who you ask. this group farm action which represents farmers and ranchers across the country is blaming a large group of producers for essentially working together to fix prices. they sent a letter to the ftc saying this. the real culprit behind the 138% hike in the price of a carton of eggs appears to be a scheme to turn inflationary conditions and avian flu outbreak into an opportunity to extract big profits reaching as high as 40%. it is true the price of eggs over the past year has more than doubled but barb eastman is the owner of happy foods. you are hearing from suppliers about the avian flu outbreak and that's their reasoning for the higher prices.
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>> yes. the supply and demand. we were talking about before. egg prices have gone down. we did it in front of you. >> you just lowered the prices today. some relief is apparently on the way. there have been tens of millions of birds, hens taken off line for lack of a better term because of this. do you think conditions are improving? >> it has improved already and you can see it as the prices have gone down. >> the white house has blamed other large companies like meat packers and the gas companies for price gouging but so far, dana, none of it has been proven to be true for the cause of inflation. >> dana: i love it when you bring us the people like barb. great to see her and good luck to her at her store and thank you very much. >> bill: america's crime crisis hit our fox news family in new york city. our meteorologist adam over the weekend at 1:00 in the morning early sunday morning was
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viciously beaten by a group of teenagers oh than a subway. half a dozen, he tells us. the suspects then were arrested and released without charges here in new york city. >> last night coming home from watching the giants game at a bar on the subway this older gentleman was being hassled by a group of 7 or 8 teens and i said cut that out, guys. they decided if he won't get it, you're going to get it and boy, did they give it to me. they had me on the ground. my ribs are bruised. they got their hits in. >> bill: he whats a good attitude. i saw him earlier today. >> dana: it is courageous to stick up for people more vulnerable than you. i am proud of him for being brave and i wish the city would get its act together. >> he saw a kid smoking a marijuana joint on the subway and then went to light the hair on fire of an elderly man next to him.
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adam said you can't do that. that's when the 5 or 6 group of teenagers went after him and gave him a beat down. they stopped the subway. nobody even interfered while he was getting whipped on that train. but kids ran off, later arrested. >> dana: and then let go. i'm sure they will probably do it again. we'll continue to talk about this a little bit. new york governor kathy hochul was slow to admit her state has a crime problem and according to former speaker nancy pelosi it cost democrats dearly. pelosi blames her and other democrat politicians for the democrats losing the house. we'll talk to jimmy failla about that. interesting that pelosi now feel liberated and no longer the speaker and she can say the governor screwed up. >> it's not act like pelosi was sergeant joe friday out fighting
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crime tooth and nail. nancy pelosi played a big a role in shaping this society as any democrat did in a post 2020 world where the left was so anti-cop they wanted to defund the guy in the village people, okay? the bottom line is this. everyone -- the bottom line is this. every democrat knew crime was a problem so they didn't like get-orb they knew it was an issue that didn't favor them and they played a role in creating the conditions. they stayed away from it. they only had to tack back because hochul made the blunder debating zeldin and said why is this so important to you? i don't know why, call me old fashioned. i like getting on the subway instead of being pushed if front of it. >> bill: cashless bail will be a problem. prisons were built for a reason. apparently she wants everybody to get rid of their gas stove and we caught this action shot of her using a gas stove to which dana and i asked what is
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cooking, all right? >> i'm surprised anybody needs a stove. gore said the fish are coming out of the ocean cooked. news flash, no one pushing a climate initiative is following the initiatives. we call out the jets, the stoves. giving the guy telling you to eat bugs is eating bugs? no, he is listening to the beatles while you are eating them. give us money so we can follow none of the things we tell you to do. >> dana: what is worrisome about this, the gas stove story goes cross-country, everybody is talking about it. it is happening in new york city and other municipalities saying any new construction you can't have gas. how did it happen that natural gas became as dirty as coal? >> climate change is like comedy. you don't open with your closer. in comedy he ease them in.
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the closer for climb climate change with banning stoves. then it goes to banning oil vehicles. >> bill: i would rather have our oil and gas than anyone's in the world. >> dana: you save some of your deepest jokes for twitter. follow him. you might be a little shocked. sometimes i have to text and say jimmie, whoa. wow. >> you are the best. >> dana: there is one round left in the nfl playoffs before we head to the arizona state in the southwest, bill where they will have the super bowl this year. two teams ending their season with a dramatic finish. fans fists were fists after the
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cowboys lost. they haven't been to the nfl championship since 1995 and bill's cincinnati bengals returned to the afc championship for the second year in a row. did you know that, bill? they dominated the buffalo bills 27-10. the teams meet in three weeks after hamlin's cardiac arrest. he made a return to the stadium yesterday. cheers ringing out from the stands when fans spotted him cheering on his team. everybody was cheering on bill hemmer. >> bill: survive in advance is what you do this time of year. four really good teams. >> we're all glad you got a face paint off in time for today's broadcast. >> bill: it is going back on this weekend in kansas city. thank you, clay travis is coming up, too. talk about who is favored, et rah. opening arguments in the case against mexico's former top cop accused of taking bribes from the cartels he was supposed to
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>> bill: there is a debate over how to best help people overcome drug addiction. lean on medication or abstain all together? good topic and interesting question with douglas kennedy. what did the experts tell you? >> every year we spend billions of dollars to fight addiction. the question remains are we just making the problem worse? you were trying to get off drugs and they kept putting you on more drugs. >> that's correct. it wasn't working. >> this florida resident jason found himself addicted to vodka and percocet. i attended nine separate treatment centers, all per described him more medication.
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they told you to take other medication. >> that's correct. >> i have an alcohol and drug dependency and you are substituting one thing for another. >> five years ago he got clean and sober without any medication and works as a drug counselor for serenity springs, recovery center that emphasizes complete abstinence as the best way to treat drug addiction. this is a philosophy that ends up hurting your bottom line. >> we aren't making as much money. >> justin pike is director of operations at serenity springs saying america has a real problem with modern residential drug treatment rooted in government policy and shorans company regulation. >> they are incentivizing prescription medication over abstinence. >> the more medication the potential for a longer stay in
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treatment. >> if fact x, 2 or 3 times as long and pay more per day for medicated patients. policies that are fine with this person. >> addiction medication is a good or bad thing? >> not only a good thing but central treatment. >> she is a world renowned expert in addiction and president of a group that advocates for medication as treatment. she says the science proves prescription drugs are simply more effective than abstinence-based 12-step programs. there are some who say if you give addicts more drugs you are preventing them from getting in touch with the reality of the causes and conditions of their addiction. >> that's a myth. medications allow people to stabilize. until they are stable they can't begin to start addressing this. >> industry experts are claiming the drugs help addicts deal with reality. what do you say?
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>> it's not my experience. it blocks me from the truth is my experience. >> he needs to stop taking all drugs in order to stop thinking like a drug addict. back to you dana and bill. >> bill: thank you for bringing us that. very interesting question. thanks. >> dana: thank you. mexico's former top cop in the war against drugs now facing trial in the u.s. charged with taking millions of dollars in bribes to help the powerful sinaloa cartel. welcome to a new hour of "america's newsroom," i'm dana perino. >> bill: i'm bill hemmer. it is a monday in january. how are you feeling? >> dana: late january. getting through it. >> bill: federal prosecutors are telling us that luna gave the sinaloa cartel sensitive information to evade mexican forces attack rival cartels and move drugs safely into our country. >> criminal cartels is the new issue that is getting bad in the united states. the cartels in mexico are more violent now than ever before

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