tv Outnumbered FOX News January 30, 2023 9:00am-10:00am PST
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visible musical ♪ ♪ >> harris: this is to be 25, i am harris faulkner coming here with my cohost emily compagno, also joining us rachel campos duffy, carissa thompson, and brian kilmeade. it is on. it's going to be good, baby. >> your first time. >> harris: i got my chiefs read on. yes, it's a good day. all right, let's talk now,
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because we have two to talk about, a staggering new on the biden border crisis, customs and border patrol or telling fox news that in the past four months alone, they are been nearly 300,000 got a ways, the ones that we know about that the cameras on the sensors pick up, plus last week agents told fox news they were having more than 1.2 million guideways since president biden took office, that does not include all of the ones in the country that we have no idea that they crept in. it is not only cities near the southern border that are feeling the effects of this, check out what happened in new york city last night. [screaming] >> harris: okay, protests broke out when dozens of people refuse to leave the watson hotel in midtown manhattan, the city is kicking them out and relocating them to the brooklyn cruise terminal,
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mayor eric adams has ordered construction of a temporary emergency shelter there for people who are in this country trying to stay here after crossing our southern border, some of them told reporters conditions will be inhumane and there won't be enough food for them, so they want to leave the high dollar hotel and go to a structure that the mayor is going to build for them. >> brian: it is outrageous, i think it's more to do with the fact that it will be breaking it out, we saw sex in the hallways, drinking and booze in the lobbyist. >> harris: we did not see it. >> rachel: sounds like col college. >> brian: some colleges, yes. [laughter] >> carissa: tell your friends to leave. >> harris: he is blushing. >> brian: basically i forgot what we were talking about. but i'm just saying, they want to stop the fraternity house, and they want to go to the brooklyn campus for free where they eat for free, where we also found out that 90% of the food that was brought into places
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like this hotel were tossed out because they did not like it. i cannot believe the audacity of somebody who would come to the country illegally, take a free bus ride to the number one city and decide they will pick and choose the free accommodations they are getting. >> harris: your thoughts. >> carissa: the question i have is what now? if these numbers are unprecedented and it's not just from the south now its northern border, when they're going to be enough hotels? when will there be enough accommodations? when will it end? so just looking to the legal immigration part of it, when does the sand and wind as the solution? i am a solutions oriented person, if we have addressed this is a problem, how do we stop it when it is happening at an astronomical pace? >> harris: it is an interesting question to put to the white house, their policies would not dictate that there is an end to any of this, and that is troubling. >> which then becomes an issue of crime and an issue of economic come you know, there is
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a myriad of different issues here, but for me if we are looking at these unprecedented numbers, i have to then immediately asked the question when does it stop, and you're saying there is not a known stop as of yet. >> harris: you mentioned the northern border issue that we are having, so in the last three months or so, we have seen illegal immigrants crossing on our northern border with canada, a number that is larger than what we saw over the last two years, i interviewed senator tom cotton of the great state of arkansas last hour and here's what he said is the problem with being sandwiched between a northern border that has that problem and a southern border that has that problem. >> this is a national security threat in addition to being a threat to our community us with crime and drug tips hardworking americans, joe biden needs to take steps to close the border and tell people not to come, if they do they will be deported and certainly should not be any efforts of immigration reform and the congress until
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immigration laws are changed to control our borders. spencer rachel, what the senator also went on to say is that it does not matter which border this is coming from, everybody is taking their cue from what we have done on the southern border. >> rachel: it is interest income you asked such a great question, when is this going to end? this is operating exactly as it was planned, this is what the biden administration does, and how those who are funding are pressuring the biden administration and it takes our own tax dollars and forces it back into the ngos, this is a big circle that is funding the policy and i want to go to what you said, because you know that i went and reported for fox & friends out of randall's island. it >> brian: they took it out without putting anybody in. >> rachel: some were complaining that randall's island was horrible and they did not want to leave the hotel because they were going to get sent to this other terminal where ever this bus terminal and say that it would be as bad, but
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meanwhile i interviewed homeless americans, many of them veterans who said we wish we had the randall's island shelter, that's way better than what we have at our homeless shelter. or on the streets, and we are not putting americans first, this is absolutely insane, and you know what, everything looks nice to a midtown hotel, i would like to stay there, i don't think fox gives me as nice a hotel. >> harris: that's a different show. quickly to follow up, people are coming here and they are saying that they won asylum, which asylum is a very specific thing, i mean, when you look at the dissolution of government in haiti when they assassinated their present and a couple of years ago, i mean it's not coming here and getting a job, that is not asylum, so what are they leaving behind if they don't want that shelter that is leaving from them, i'm not trying to sell it like it's fantastic, you have, you have seen, how would you compare to the things that they are left behind? >> it's amazing, if you are
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living in a village in guatemala or honduras, where people are eating their pets, this is paradise, but what has happened again, these ngos have empowered and emboldened them to want more and more and they are coming here meaning handouts, that's not the way that immigration used to work, that's not how immigrant mentality's a generation ago. >> harris: emily. >> emily: focusing back on the northern border on moments, it is a misnomer when people say, and now the drugs are coming from canada, you know, it is via, and that's illustrated, the southern border we had reports of over 150 countries and flooding over the southern border, canada is no difference, illustrated horrifically by the fact that an entire indian family froze to death in that terrain as did the swan sector and just to four months, twice as many illegal immigrants as they had in the two years prior,
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and as the border chief points out, not observed only by the migrants who die under those atrocious conditions as they do at the southern border too, at the narco cartels and extremist groups in the terrorist watch list that we have undergone, but also by the border patrol, and specialist bishop, at the southern border, died in the rio grande trying to save the migrants, the same is happening and will happen at the northern border, and i wonder what it will be trying to save someone at the northern border, and every forward operating base that we have been to an iraq and fully operated base coming here in this country, they have a boundary, they have a fortified boundary, so why is it that in our homelands on our home soil, our borders, northern and southern absolutely opened?
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it is preposterous and because of not only weak policies, but of unfortunately our weak president. >> harris: you bring up an excellent issue and that is that we deal with it differently up north than we do down south, because we can be sandwiched between this problem, we are already every single state as a border state because of fentanyl, but what senator cotton says, he sits on the judiciary, all comes together on this issue, and you will need intelligence on all of this and he says it is because of the national security that is under pressure, so we have to deal differently now with what we are doing if we are going to take it for those hundred 50 countries and two different locations, and why would they not put pressure and two different locations? it was cold in el paso just a few days ago, the silver blankets, i mean, snow, ice, it is winter, and they still come, we usually see the numbers cut back, not this year. that's policy.
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>> emily: he said it is a distraction, the intelligence community at dealing with northern and southern borders of our open-door policy means that they are then taking resources away from other areas of grave concern post afghanistan exit et cetera. >> harris: it's a strategy coming up on chairs done and you flood the human at via the cartels in texas and you have two points, now they have another one. >> rachel: and we are emboldening and looking at cartels, that is creating all kinds of problems. a spring we will move forward, lori lightfoot caught on videotape dancing in a parade, well, hey, get your groove on! while the city's crime is up a shocking 60 percent from last year. get it, girl. work that scarf! ♪ ♪ i'd like to take a moment to address my fellow veterans because i know so many of you have served our country honorably. one of the benefits that we as a country give
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♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ >> emily: that chicago mayor lori lightfoot dancing in the streets during a lunar new year parade this weekend, but it's bad optics for the mayor whose safety and tough competition in the upcoming democratic primary because under her watch crime has spiked, and retailers have fled the city's iconic magnificent mile shopping strip. total crime has soared over 60 percent with robberies, burglaries and theft seen significant rises from this point last year. motor vehicle thefts also saw an alarming 165% jump during this
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time. brian kilmeade, bad optics indeed, the vacancy is just a few years ago 2.5%, now it's over 30%. that means that businesses flood because they are unsafe and they are hemorrhaging money under her watch, but she enjoys a good time dancing the street. >> brian: it's unbelievable, she is pretty tone-deaf, and she knows it's going to be a democratic winner and think she will be the one, the only people left in chicago i think are the cubs, and besides that everyone is gone, it's not a safe place to be. but she is in a situation by february 28th she will be an primary, unless some to get 50% you have till april and then she has until april to prove that she is best option, the scary thing is, the people running against her arm or to the left than her as an executive she is not strong, as a visionary she does not add a bit, but the people are even more to the left are permissive and maureen ty cobb, that's a scary thing if you are in chicago. >> emily: what i find ironic, harris, we talked about this a
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lot together, the horrific spike in asian hate crime, and in chicago specifically, so i find it deeply troubling that she is out there celebrating lunar new year when under her watch anti-asian hate crime has soared 73% and it took a privately funded nonprofits to start tracking the data, because she would not do it under her own public office. >> harris: so those facts are right, the facts about the deep on the police are right, we have seen the crime spikes, i always have hope that when someone is at least paying attention to the holidays and the things that matter to a group of people, maybe they will see it, unfortunately that was not true during covid, when everybody else was locked down, she went and got her fro done, because she said it was incumbent upon her to look good, so normally i would say she is out there dancing and she is recognizing lunar, and that culture and so on and so forth, that could be a coming together, we all needed to come together when we were locked down, her city especially, her city especially, but that's not how she rolls, so
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coming you are right, she has some date she has to get, let's see what she does in the meantime, but i don't know. we have a mass killing of more people on a weekend in her city every single weekend in those cities see and months at a time, and she should be in the streets over that. where's the peaceful protesting over that, by the way?led by thg in a what, a rhetoric about the cops that protect us is going to change and i will lead the way with that. i don't mind the dancing if that means she is adhering herself to a culture that does need to be seen and to fight the crime on asian communities, but i don't suspect that's what this is about. >> emily: that is such a great point too what harris is saying, no matter what she does it will be too little, too late for the absolute devastating statistics that represent a life, each one of them, particularly african american young men between the ages of 18 and 24 that have suffered because of our policies, which are shocking given she is a former pros
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prosecutor. >> rachel: the situation in chicago hits home for me, my daughter lived in chicago for many years, lost two classmates to the crime during the time that she was there, so a couple things, you talked about the lunar thing, there is another population, hispanic population, very large, one of the largest hispanic populations in the midwest is right there in chicago, the vendors are getting robbed, i mean, to gunpoint, so these are little old ladies who get up at three in the morning, and make to sell to the blue-collar workers who are probably all over the city for all the rich people. and do you know what her answer was? her answer was, they should go cashless, really, you want to sell tamales with a credit card? many of them illegal don't come with a credit card. >> emily: they would have to pay the fee it takes away money from the income, is ridiculous. >> rachel: it's not even tenable, so what they have to do is they are people in the community, called the brown berets that are patrolling their own place and the vendors are
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taking assistance from the latin kings to protect them, so this is like turning into a third world country. spilled like the cartel. >> rachel: but i'm glad that you brought up her hair, because she is the marie antoinette of america's mayors, she also slashed the budget for the cops at the same time that she had a special squad of 70 cops, she said because her and her wife needed protection, so yes, she is let them eat cake, that's who she gets. and i will say one last thing, she is a better dancer than brian. >> brian: that is absolutely true. [laughter] >> rachel: we had flo rida, and he left the stage. >> brian: i have never met a dance floor that did me any good. >> harris: actually he left the stage. kidding. >> carissa: you can dance if you want to, you can leave your friends behind, i would leave it behind in chicago, because she may be a light foot, but needs to be more heavy-handed, if i am
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one of the 2300 men or women that was killed during her time in office i'm looking at the out and think to myself, and i get it, mirrors where a lot of different hats in the 2300 homicides during her time are not completely her fault, but as your elected by the people and for the people and you are standing up there and you are to me the objects as you mention at the top, emily, are just tough to see when crimes have 61 percent in your city since the beginning of the gear and i think that there are other ways to support every group in your community, but be a little bit more -- i don't know, sensitive to what is currently going on around you. >> emily: perfectly said, coming up, one state is now pushing a plan to ditch critical race theory and its public schools and implements patriotism classes. details on that next. ...will remain radioactive for years to come. well, thank goodness. it's time for the "good news of the week." and, boy, do we need it. [ chuckles ] well, this safe driver saved money with the snapshot app from progressive.
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>> rachel: missouri lawmakers are looking to create a left and plant parts k-11 schools, and classes on patriotism while banning critical race theory, the proposed bill in the state senate band from teaching concepts, individuals with any race, ethnicity, or natural origin are inherently superior or inferior, and also empowers parents to file complaints if they believe a teacher has violated the band, while calling for training, teachers on american patriotism, it states "the department of elementary and secondary education shall develop a patriotic and civics training program to prepare teachers to teach the principles of american civics and patriotism." i will start with you, brian, because american history matter so much to you, and low but they are doing here in missouri, but i think the root cause are the teachers colleges, so it's really hard coming you're getting all of this marxism and crt taught in the teachers
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colleges, then they come out and now missouri is like, well, now we have to retrain them. should the focus really for the missouri governor's beyond the teachers colleges? >> brian: that's a great point, especially up top, columbia uptown, that's where the number one teachers college in the country. i will say for people watching at home, it does not mean they don't teach slavery, you don't talk about segregation, the compromise of the 1870 coming put all of that in america's past, but also what happened to get us where we are today, and what age do you teach it? are you telling kids right away and second, third grade these moments in american history where we had to overcome? there was absolutely a stain on our legacy? absolutely, but in perspective, i think that you should teach american history, the point i think that you are making and what missouri is making is that america is evil and will work our way backwards to tell us where we are good as opposed to america is intended to be great,
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weren't because of these things, and they have been corrected along the way. that's the america that i thought should be taught, but not perfect, that's not right either. >> rachel: we will send them to the school of brian kilmeade. >> brian: it's pete hegseth, i will be the graduate school. >> rachel: i will start with you here on this one, because one of the reasons we are talking about crt as we got to look inside the classroom with zoom, so our police officers have to wear cameras so we can know what happens when something goes wrong, should there be cameras in the classroom? >> carissa: i don't have children, but i know i was a child in a classroom at one point, and if that is what the collective, whether it is the school board and the teachers and starts at home, we need to get parents involved in that decision, there is a lot of other security measures beyond that, which can be benefit, but also a hindrance, so there is a myriad of reasons why everyone needs to be involved in that, but for me, going back to the education part, if we are going to tell the story, let's tell
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the whole story, when i went to a math class my parents did not think like oh, we are going to have carissa learn addition, no subtraction in this class, she is just going to learn that two plus two equals 4, so tell the entire story and i'm not a child psychologist, so i don't know when you bring that end, we all at the parental advisory's when we were younger about when it was appropriate to listen the things, when i watched a rated r movie it, my parents made me cover some of the scenes in pretty woman, because i was not ready. >> harris: i still cover my eyes at some of the "pretty woman. >> rachel: i think that that is an interesting perspective, and i agree, but i personally as a parent, i would like to see the cameras in the classrooms come because i want to see what is going on, by the way, we get a handle on history and all we have to worry about health class, because that's where the damaging stuff is happening, harris coming you do have children, i know that i want to spend my evenings -- i don't
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want to spend them trying to correct a school board, i don't want to go fighting, i also don't want to spend my dinner times deprogramming my kids from what happen. i want to enjoy dinner with my kids, so the solution to all of this a school choice, get parents the funding for their own kids so that they can pick a school that fits their families values. >> harris: yes to a degree, there are no perfect schools in america or anyplace else, so what happens when the one school you chose hire somebody who is divergent to the cause? and then what happens, what you want to know about that? the one thing you mention that it is no longer happening that i have been pushing for as a parent and i guess i'm a domestic terrorist in the terms of the doj, i want to go to a school board meeting and press points, i don't see those permission slips coming, and that's what is missing, it is our voice, and it is our permission, what we allow, and from what you said on the cameras, i get your point, my mom was a social worker, so
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there are a tremendous amount of children who are in domestic situations at home, custody issues come you can't just automatically put cameras in classrooms, but i do want there to be accountability, so could we compromised and have a neutral person in classrooms like you do an air marshal on a plane and have that person coming to need more than a couple in a big environment, but there has to be accountability, my husband has always volunteered as a former teacher to be the parent in the classroom. and we could do that, like i could take a few days off during the year even with the job that i have, we all have vacation time, what would a better vacation be then for me to go and check out and see what that teacher is really teaching my kid. >> i can think of a better vacation. >> harris: i am curious about that one. >> rachel: i do believe in school choice, and we should pick the school that matches our values, smi child to a classical catholic academy, today by the way was murder monday, so they dressed as martyrs, one is
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joan of arc and the other one was st. peter, so this is a school that reflect my values, they are learning, the third grs learning pilgrim's progress, she is reading pinocchio and books that i like instead of all of this other stuff, isn't that the answer? >> carissa: at such a beautiful thing to witness not only her dedication, but your kids thriving in that environment, and my heart breaks are so many families who don't have that opportunity, especially at the hands of the government, which is all increag all bloating and unfortunately has returned the tide against us and identified us via the white house as the enemy, and i would like to dig in a little bit to the statute that you cover in the intro, but there is been a backlash to these laws, the left saying this is terrible and there is been a characterization of they said it is frankly inaccurate, because isn't it a good thing as codified in the statute that no school or school employee should compel a teacher to teach, but individuals of any race,
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ethnicity, color, or origin are inherently superior or inferior? what's wrong with that? and the argument from the left when the issue of crt sort of exploded on the national scene during the pandemic when they said this is just taught at the college level -- so the statute also prescribes to that point that it will not be taught to then at the secondary and k-8 and high school level, so again, if the left maintains that it's just at the college level, why should they have an issue with this subscribing that it is not? it should dovetail neatly and with everything they stand for and everything they say, however unfortunately they are hypocritical. >> brian: there are 12 charter schools ready to go in new york city, all of these families want to go to the charter schools, and the new york legislature won't to green light it because they have elected, their speaker specially because of speakers unions. >> rachel: and elites like barack and michelle obama shut down these kind of problems for
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minorities and the poor. >> harris: i live in a state, arizona, now they have a new democrat governor katie hobbs who is looking at reversing the school of choice, so there are a lot of parents, and i'm just concerned that they want to -- i'm here most of the time on the east coast with my kids in school here, but i have a heart for those people who are really banking on that school of choice, and where did she hear that on the campaign trail i wonder in arizona, or was that just something she was selling? >> rachel: it is really unfair and hurts the private don't make poor the most. >> carissa: i will just end with a 2017, that only 8% of u.s. high school students could name that slavery was essential because of the civil war. that's not left-right, that is just being educated on her history. >> rachel: let's not teach him that the revolution was about slavery, we have to go, they are wrapping me up, coming up the surgeon general out with a warning for parents about the
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>> harris: as we learn more about the dangers posed by social media, especially for our children, the surgeon general is now out with a warning for parents, he is calling for them to keep their kids off the sites like tiktok and instagram until they are at least 16 years old, take a peek. >> what is the right age for a child to start using social media? i worry that right now if you look at to the guidelines from the platforms that age 13 is
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when kids are technically allowed to use social media, i personally based on the data i've seen that believe that 13 is too early and it is a time in early adolescence where kids are developing their identity, their sense of self and skewed and often distorted environment does a disservice on many of those children. >> harris: rachel, i look at all of social media to be a little bit different and tiktok in particular, because all of it requires our participation as parents up until a certain age, but tiktok is mining us more than we are mining it. >> rachel: one of the benefits of having nine kids as you get a lot of due hours, so with my early kids i give them a phone, and i think that eighth, ninth grade, way too early, my current ninth grader does not have a phone and we don't intend her of the high school years. >> brian: does she have a beeper? >> rachel: what we know and are referring to is that the studies or outcome we know that it changes brain chemistry, we know that it is destroying
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attention span, but what you can't measure is how it is destroying childhoods that there are kids that we used to meet our friends at the mall, we used to go outside and climb trees, now they are doing this virtually, they are even looking at concerts through the lens of a camera, they are not enjoying their childhood, and that's what we are robbing them of, there is enough data now, and all you have to do is tell your other parent friends if you have a child go, contact to the other parents and say, let's all band together so they can't say, hey, everybody else has a phone, no you don't, annie doesn't doesn't a jack doesn't, so-and-so doesn't. those are the tricks. >> harris: i'm glad you have nine children, we have a lot of knowledge from you now, nine kids deep, with self-esteem issues, that's kind of where i go, and this is for girls and boys, and life does not come with a filter, and you have to live in real time making eye contact with real people so that you can learn how to deal with conflict, with struggle -- 's before you mention your
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children, i have put myself on instagram probation, because i see it way too long, why do i care who travis scott is dating? >> harris: do you know, i am kidding. >> carissa: well let me tell you, i would end up spending way more time on it than i wanted to to, satirical days a week i move the icon over on the third screen so it's not as accessible, so it's not just for me and not have children, i think it's for all of us, i think that we have all lost and have spoken to a bunch of people whether you -- for me out here in the dating world where you realize that people have a hard time with interpersonal communication because we are doing this all the time. and you quickly learn that we are all prisoners of these devices and i think that if it starts at home and your children see you not on the device as much, then it can be easier for you to teach that to them as well. >> harris: we have a role in our house, try to adhere especially when we are out, but always at home it's easier because i can collect the phones. if i wanted to talk to the talk of your head, i would stand up
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and have a conversation while you sit down. i need eye contact at the dinner table, so there are no devices when we have that meal and we are going to hold hands and pray before we eat, so there is no room for the phone. >> emily: the family time is sacred and so is the importance for modeling exactly how you want them to interact with social media and how to use devices et cetera. and going in my lane for a second i wanted to illustrate some of the lawsuits happening right now, because frankly citizens are doing through the courts are trying to do through the courts what congress is failing to do which is regulated and actually create some structure around them, so there is a huge multimillion dollar federal lawsuit right now against meta and facebook and all the rest come i want to talk about what they are arguing has been done to children, so that one social media is a health risk because of the algorithms designed to make it addictive and the fact that it is designed to fade parental authority, remember new jersey has required public schools to teach literacy, seattle schools, they sued five huge 12-point
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social media company is because they want to be reimbursed for the cost of dealing with these kids who are distressed, depressed, dealing with mental health issues and the like, there are over 1200 families that have pursued lawsuits against social media company is and there is an additional 150 0 all about the addiction aspect and the fact that the problem has become so much bigger than us, and final point, just remember who the largest recorded history and lobbyist has ever been, and the obama administration and it was google, and who is the largest recipient of big media tech funds, that would be kamala harris. >> brian: i think you can get on top of this thing just like you can get on top of distracted driving, text messages so dangerous, but now everybody i know who is texting feels guilty, there is a sense you are going to get pulled over if you will do it, there is a sense of regulating it. i don't think that anybody can pull off what you have pulled off, not many people can do that, but for the most part i think that 13-year-olds are going to be on it, the but the
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question is could there be a time limitation to somehow rein it in? because right now it's a wild west. >> rachel: the chinese know, they are limiting, if they know -- and they are selling us tiktok and keeping their own kids off of it. >> harris: i don't know if i necessarily want to take that queue. there algorithms all over the world are not quite as specific for addiction created by tiktok as they are aimed at the united states, that's a whole nother conversation. coming up... new york football fans are seeing red after the -- of course they are, baby! chief time! it lit up in team colors of their hated rival from the city of brotherly love, so that's philadelphia, obviously, the eagles, they don't like that, but the yellow, white, and red was for the chiefs, so they had that last night too after we won, i'm just saying. it works naturally with the water in your body
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to unblock your gut. ...free your gut. and your mood will follow. oh yeah, that is them. (that is howard) yeah, that's on howard's campus. ohhh, she's so powerful, she carried on the family legacy. we were blown away. (chuckles) i not only was a student and an undergrad, but i've been a professor there for twenty years, so it's really a special moment to know that i had a family member who over a hundred years prior have walk these grounds. it's deeply uplifting. yes, it is. we're walking in their footsteps.
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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. (upbeat music) >> south carolina's double murder trial continues, we will keep our eye on that, and nancy grace will join us with fresh analysis, plus bill belushi and live at the southern border as a migrant crisis spirals out of control and now reaching north of the border, we will have the latest from there, and senator john cornyn on more
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and more lawmakers at this hour demanding answers on the growing classified documents scanned old. we have a brand-new week for you, live from "america reports" john roberts and me at the top of that hour. we will see you then. >> emily: doing double duty, welcome back, guys, it is a great day to have with us for the first time krista thompson, host of fox nfl kickoff, now that the super bowl 50 matchup has been set, harris faulkner's kansas city chiefs will face the philadelphia eagles in the big game live on fox february 12th, but some new yorkers like brian kilmeade are up in arms after the empire state building dared to glow green and white last night to honor the eagles a division rival of the new york giants, "the new york post" calling whoever thought this one up, total bearer terrains. welcome again, we have loved having you all hour, i wanted to
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ask you a burning question that is on a lot of people's minds about the chiefs game last night which is is it true, do you think but for the penalty levied to joseph oh psi for the unnecessary rough nice of tackling harrison's beloved mahomes, what they have won? or was it just an easier amount? would it have altered the game? >> carissa: the closer you can get, the easier to go through the uprights, but there are many different angles, i think the outrage at the officials was from a call earlier in the game where the whistle was blown and it was deemed a dead play and give the chiefs another opportunity, but the play you are referring to was when patrick mo holmes went to pick up the first out of touch, but you can't hit the quarterback because he is running out-of-bounds, but a game is four quarters, and to me it does not always come down to one play even if it is the last play, i felt bad for him, one of his
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teammates was yelling at him in the locker room afterwards and you know, even mic a boy who pls for the dallas cowboys was like, you win together and you lose together, and i always feel bad if harrison bukner had missed a field goal. as to be on the way that he misses after touchdowns coming to me like that? just the reality. >> carissa: at the end of the magnitude where you are going to back-to-back super bowls are not for the cincinnati bengals, so who is to say? but yes, it definitely helped to move closer to the field goal range. >> emily: talking about emotion, how excited are you? will they get vindicated from two years ago? >> harris: i am really excited, i am mostly proud of the people who are leading both of these teams as quarterbacks, i think that jalen hurts. >> harris: making history, but they are the good guys, they are
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not getting into scandals, and i will say the names, jamis winston and deshaun watson. what are you looking forward to you? i just want this moment. i mean, the guy lived around for four quarters, let's not sugarcoat it, it did not look pretty, but they got it done and i think as young people watch the sport, there is a lot of sacrifice that goes into chasing your dreams. i just thought it was great, and maybe i have gotten older and when i watch these things i want people to stay safe, that's the main thing, it is not a safe game, but demar hamlin had a spring. >> emily: something is interesting, the coach andy reid coached eagles, and chiefs, and brother on brother action, so there's a lot of cool undercurrents of the super bowl that any viewer can get excited about regardless of if you know these teams or your team is
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playing. >> brian: back to the quarterbacks, nobody thought that they would be stars had a college, and number two, could be that andy reid or the kelce bowl, and it all depends on how healthy of the kansa city quarterback is, right? >> carissa: ten receivers on the depth chart, seven did not play, seven did not play, and no juju, and you look at val because, there a lot of unsung heroes, that is a great team win yesterday. it's be on a team win. >> carissa: and the eagles had a little bit easier with the devastation of the quarterback position for the san francisco 49ers, but this will be a great super bowl and i can't wait. >> emily: as a raiders fan i say, thank you, eagles. [applause] more "outnumbered" in just a moment. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪
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>> last but not least, most grown-ups claim to be financially independent but looks like mom and dad are paying the bills for many. 35% admit having parents pick up the tab, the top three are rent, groceries and utilities. among millennials, 24% say their parents are paying the rent. >> we told kids they could be on their parents or mommy or daddy's insurance until they are 26, tell them they don't have to pay back their loans or don't get married in your 20s. you get responsible when you get married and have babies for a lot of young people and i think we send them a message of extending adolescence, that's what we get. >> that message was sent to my two ex-husbands, they thought i
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was going to pay for everything. >> oh, love it. >> wow. >> we need a second hour. >> when i turned 18, my parents said see ya, go figure it out. this enabling thing is crossing over and creating issues for someone like myself and having to like take care of people. i say get a job, work hard, pay your own way. >> there you go. >> leave the snowflakes on the slope. "america reports" now. >> sandra: kicking off a brand-new week, day four in the alec murdaugh murder trial, today's cross examination kicking offer with the special agent who oversaw evidence collection in that case. >> john: the defense suggested the scene was contaminated by officers, prosecutors have focused on the 911 call and murdaugh's state of mind. nancy grace has been in the courtroom. her take on all of it coming up. >> sandra: her fresh analysis on is that, b
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