Skip to main content

tv   Outnumbered  FOX News  March 15, 2023 9:00am-10:00am PDT

9:00 am
theme song: unnecessary action hero! dad: was that necessary? unnecessary action hero: no. neither is missing this deal. with paycom, vacation is yours to manage. unnecessary action hero: not to mention benefits, scheduling, payroll. it's hr in the palm of your hand. dad: wow. unnecessary action hero: ask your employer about paycom. and make the unnecessary, unnecessary. dad: approved! ♪ ♪ >> kayleigh: hello, everyone, that says "outnumbered" coming here with my cohost harris faulkner and emily compagno, joining us cara frederick, an assistant editor of "the wall street journal" editorial page and a fox news contributor freeman. spock going to let max parking
9:01 am
concerns of russia and the united states, a russian fighter jet a drone over the black sea yesterday, the kremlin claims the surveillance drone was lying too close to its border and crashed into the water on its own following an encounter with russian fighter jets. but the pentagon maintains that the drone was operating in international airspace when the russia war plane clipped its propeller. air force general james hecker denouncing the attack on the united states drone saying this. this unsafe unprofessional act by the russians merely because both aircraft's to crash. defense secretary austen saying this is a part of russian aggression, while u.s. officials call it a violation of international law. here is john kirby this morning. >> we brought the ambassador end that the state department yesterday at washington, d.c., and conveyed a very direct message to him about our concerns over this reckless and unprofessional -- unprofessional
9:02 am
behavior by russian pilots, we have communicated directly through the channels with the russian government. >> kayleigh: it was called reckless, there were environmental concerns mentioned, not sure why. but unprofessional is the world that -- word that stuck out to me. and we have something that will pop on the wall, that stuck out because i recalled a time when jim saki said this, the taliban, and this is in the wake of them taking over afghanistan, and actually the national security spokesperson, said that they han businesslike and professional, jen psaki had these words for the taliban, also making an assessment on what they wante international community to be, joe biden said this about the chinese spy balloon "it's not a major breach" on whether it would affect relations "i don't think so." this weakness against our adversaries -- adversaries need to be put in context as we talk
9:03 am
about an american drone going down, unprofessional is not a word, it's far greater than that. >> harris: i love what you have done here is you show there's a ramp-up, there is a journey that we are on. and they may have the strategy for it, but we has the american people, we don't get it. we don't know why you would be worried about whether or not the taliban to make an assessment about how they fit in the world, why can't we tell them what they are? animals with a lot of weapons, our weapons we left behind because when we pulled out a afghanistan we left everything including all of those people who helped us. all of those people who helped us. many are dead now, they certainly don't have freedom, and of course our own 13 servicemen and women who died at the gates of the kabul airport as we could not figure out how to pull out after 20 years. there's a progression and channel them and china watch that, now we are living through what china wants to do, why do i say china? because russia shoot something
9:04 am
out of the sky after we shot something that was chinese out of the sky. so one was a drone, one was a -- but they were both in russia's zone. russia wants to say to china we took care of the problem you had with the united states when they shot down their expensive balloon. which is what they still call it, so what does russia want? they wanted on the ground, because they have not been able to take down ukraine, it's not hard to figure all of this out. my question is where's biden? why is he less like the taliban, the taliban gets room and space to figure out how they fit in the world? we know who we are? why doesn't biden remind everybody? >> kayleigh: jen psaki said it's rare that he has up before 9:00 a.m. or whatever her words were, but james, it's really important what harris just said as a journey. what we have seen on the world stage over the last two and a half years was a journey, we know that intelligence has shown us that they looked at what
9:05 am
happen in afghanistan, and decided it was time to go into ukraine. now you see taiwan, the jet set of circle taiwan, north korea popping off missiles in the area of japan. this is not the restraint. >> james: i think speaking of signals, the president gave that press conference before the invasion where he suggested, i think inadvertently that the united states might accept a minor incursion into ukraine, obviously that was not doing anything to discourage putin. now obviously a year into the war, reckless behavior by the russians, but it also is a reminder that there is risk here. this is a nuclear arms power, and i do think this is why you see some republicans in congress saying, let's be clearly objective, where do we go from here? because it does carry risk good i think that we have seen the russian conventional forces were overrated before the war.
9:06 am
so there is a natural point here to say, what is the objective? and when people talk about a blank check, they weren't just talking about money, they are talking about risk. >> kayleigh: the pentagon confirming this is intentional, intentional action meanwhile you have the kremlin spokesperson describing their relations at the lowest point, relations that at a deplorable state and it shows how fragile these tensions are at the time, although you have the russian ambassador to the u.s. saying russia does not want confrontation. speak to their actions speak differently, the reason it's an environmental concern, let's be straight, the russian fighter jet started flying around and over the drone, dumping fuel on it, basically trying to thor its intelligence gathering or whatever the drone does, before hitting it and u.s. forces were forced to land in international waters walled fighter jet landed safely in crimea, so to your
9:07 am
point, kirby response and says these aggressive actions are dangerous and can lead to miscalculation, an unintended escalation, he said. this is actually intentional. it is intentional escalation. and it is against a landscape as he mentioned the ramp-up with the exception of your administration that you worked for, which exhibited peace through strength and enjoys being contained in that way, remember that we have exacted sanctions on russia for quite some time including a huge ramp-up and search just in february. clearly it's not working. and clearly putin does not care, so we say on our government websites and through the talking heads of this administration that we made it clear, we won't tolerate, we won't sanction at our border and there, so too does the international community, russia clearly does not care and either does china to your balloon point, and the fact that they can entertain and engage in such a reckless juvenile incompetent behavior to the tune of $32 million on our
9:08 am
part, each costs $32 million, so i don't understand why we don't hands them a bill. hey, russia, here's what we are going to do. we have it with interest for all of the time collecting this in doing this, and let's pull up what secretary pompeo just pull down, he said it was dangerous and provocative, this is a strong response, not weakness that brings more aggression and puts american interest at risk. clearly a contrast between the former secretary of state and the cia's response and once we got from kirby this morning. >> kayleigh: you have 32 million taxpayer dollars, and likely looking at the remnants, so this is a backdrop of biden's budget, where we have the chart and we will put it up, 3.2%, but inflation is at 6%. it's hot from the department of
9:09 am
defense, the department of energy, epa, health and human services as you can see all the above 6% out facing inflation, they get a raise, but the department of defense, sorry, guys. >> emily makes a great point, i worked with them in afghanistan, this is where they were back then, a gucci platform, that should matter to the american people. it was not just something like a predator that was taken down. this matters, and i think that people should be aware of like you said the budgeting constraints that were already under that this is going to knock it down to the benefit in terms of dod, but i also think that there is something bigger, and that is my blood boiled when i saw a chinese representative standing in between saudi arabia and iran, they were this proverbial elder statesman, where we used to be that person and used to be frankly the adults in the room as everybody said, but now china is filling that bout the vacuum, and the journey leaves in us not leaving
9:10 am
like we use to for so long. speak on a part of that ought to be some warships on the sea, we don't have any. >> kayleigh: meanwhile iran just stays into the nuclear weapon, not feeling too safe, the new investigations launched in the sudden collapse of silicon valley bank as we learned that it was reportedly light on the thinking experience, but heavy with democrat donations. psoriasis really messes with you. try. hope. fail. no one should suffer like that. i started cosentyx®. five years clear. real people with psoriasis look and feel better with cosentyx. don't use if you're allergic to cosentyx. before starting get checked for tuberculosis. an increased risk of infection, some serious and a lowered ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor about an infection or symptoms or if you had a vaccine or plan to. tell your doctor if your crohn's disease symptoms develop or worsen. serious allergic reaction may occur.
9:11 am
best move i've ever made. ask your dermatologist about cosentyx®. there■s an old saying in the navy that the toughest job in the navy is a navy wife. and if you've made the deployments and you've been the wife at home, or you■ve been the spouse at home, you understand what i'm talking about. your spouse has earned the right to apply for a va home loan. the newday 100 loan allows you to borrow up to 100% of your home's value. so if you're in a situation where you need some help financially, give us a call. i brought in ensure max protein with 30 grams of protein. those who tried me felt more energy in just two weeks. uhhhh... here, i'll take that. [woo hoo!] ensure max protein, with 30 grams of protein, one gram of sugar and nutrients for immune health. next on behind the series... that run with the champ was magical. i mean the tender chicken, the peppercorn ranch... i love my rings but i'll cherish that lunch... forever.
9:12 am
the subway series. the greatest menu of all time.
9:13 am
9:14 am
speed on some fresh concerns today of a spreading bank crisis following the failure of silicon valley bank, the stock market opens today with the dow quickly falling. down nearly 500 points. following a tumble for swiss lender credit suites, who shares
9:15 am
fell 20% after its largest investor said it could not provide the bank with more financial assistance. meanwhile the department of justice and the sec have launched dual investigations into the bank sudden collapse. now this hour yesterday was when that was breaking, we were finding out exactly what they were going to be going through. one area that may achieve those federal prosecutors involved share, sold before the bank imploded. and we are learning more about spv's board that was light on banking and insurance, but had some with lehman brothers according to maria bartiromo that told me last hour, apparently packed with staunch democrats, check the box of what you can do for the job less important then check the box over there as donor cash dollars
9:16 am
can help some democrat politicians. a fair question i think? >> emily: i want to go back to the shares, we know that the ceo greg becker and daniel beckett shared shares before it collapsed, and becker according to "the wall street journal," his shares are worth 2.3 million, and that's partly why the shareholders have been discussing have sued them, because remember that there is protection and there is insurance, but the shareholders to a degree were not protected, so they are suing civil and also alleging criminal liability. they are alleging concealment of these two, so there is a hefty liability that might be on the hook for, but i want to point out why this is so important in addition to being a page out of paul pelosi's playbook that the day that these guys sold their shares was the day that new rules were put in place to prevent against this happening, that brought in that window to 90 days to ally suspicion of illegal training, so essentially they knew even if they waited one more minute, they would be
9:17 am
subjected to a longer window before getting that income, crazy how that coincidence of time rings through, so the sec has a lot on its hands as does the doj, but just remember how they have been occupying their time up till now which instead of protecting the investor has been requiring businesses to comply with their carbon footprint under esd requirements and the like. so they have been a little bit distracted, i hold them not blameless as well. >> harris: distracted, i do want to get to the politics, because i think it is important to know who was working and who was there not saving the life of that bank and the livelihoods of people who may be did not have -- not everybody had millions, a few people had up to what was fdic's insured, 250,000. but what about the politics in play? >> james: it's disappointing watching politicians panic, if there was a group of people that you really should have allowed to bear appropriate losses it is
9:18 am
this group. it's venture capitalists on the start up say fun, it's the money. above 250,000, they should have taken the loss. and i think that it is a shame that federal officials blinked in this case, but if they want to invest, government officials need to investigate themselves, because government policy is all over this failure. you look at what challenge the bank, it was the inflation in washington and the interest rate increases that resulted, all of those assets on their books that force them to take this loss, bank regulators have been encouraging them to hold for years. treasury bonds, government backed, mortgage-backed securities. to the regulators tell them this is safe, this is the kind of stuff you should own. so this is really a washington failure, and if there is individual wrongdoing at the bank, but this is kind of textbook. and why it's so much better than
9:19 am
regulatory discipline. >> harris: i want to ask the team if we have it from signature on some of the things that they were spending money on, so i don't know the makeup of the employees at signature, but we know the makeup of the people running silicon valley, and when you have a bunch of people who don't know what they are doing, certain things get done because it's what they want. and democrat donors, it's what they want, so can we look at how they are spending their money, it signature that also failed this week. ♪ ♪ ♪ signature ♪ ♪ our bank is as official as signature ♪ ♪ we will soon straw ♪ >> harris: so cara, when he read the reports, they spent a lot of money on this end their bank failed this week too for different reasons than silicon valley bank, but the trends that we see is as james pointed out that the government now is considering even if you
9:20 am
had above 250,000, we will bail you out. that is a gift to that like a student loan handout might have to go to the u.s. supreme court. >> cara: i do think there is an analogy there when the government guarantees that they will be paid off, tuition goes up for a university too, so this is a similar problem, but they begin issue is that this creates a moral hazard, if the government keeps bailing these banks out, they have no incentive to invest prudently, because you are sort of kicking the can down the road, and frankly a lot of the smaller folk will pay the price. and again, it is that the moral hazard if the government keeps doing this, we saw traces of this in 2008 and a sort of the same story but a little worse this time, so we cannot let that hazard be written again. it's been on so kayleigh, who was the flex forward spinning a lot of money on the video with their wants and needs, i don't even know what the point was?
9:21 am
>> kayleigh: i don't know the point, i want to learn more about signature and silicon valley bank as well, particularly these donations, we know that chuck schumer's pack were received money that was connected with the bank or the board member. and maxine waters returned money, i've seen the allegations with hillary clinton from "the new york post," still looking into those, i went to get to the bottom, one board member said after donald trump won the election and '16 she went to a shine and said i prayed for me according to cnbc, and to get around the grieving and chalk and to engage and listen to what happened and get back together. maybe she should've been praying for bank and the practices that were going to get people out of a lot of money instead of praying for the election of donald trump, could this be an ftx situation where sam brinkley sam bank when friede gave millions and millions, that remains to be seen, certainly have those questions and i want to get to the bottom. >> harris: so maria bartiromo last hours said that there is
9:22 am
one thing we need to dig deep into, that is the chinese bank deposits that were going on at that bank, that there are number of companies who may have had above again, 250,000, well, i don't know that we are obligated to make chinese companies hold no matter how much money, but if we have to pay through fdic's, the government says i guess they will do that, but about that, should we be bailing out chinese companies? >> kayleigh: absolutely not, we are just now skimming the surface of some of this reporting period >> harris: coming up, new report showing that new york city police officers are quitting the force at a breaking pace, the crime crisis is spiraling out of control. ♪ ♪ to debate and draft the u.s. constitution? turns out they didn't trust the printing of paper money, but they did trust gold and silver. article 1, section 10. gold and silver. good for the founders, good for me, good for you.
9:23 am
rosland capital - is a trusted leader in helping people acquire precious metals. gold bullion, lady liberty gold and silver proofs, and premium coins, can help you preserve your wealth. call rosland capital to receive your free rosland guide to gold, gold & precious metals ira, and silver brochure. with rosland, there are no gimmicks, no hassles... and they have fast, reliable shipping. ask yourself. are you safe? make gold your new standard. call rosland capital today at 800-630-8900, 800-630-8900. that's 800-630-8900. i was thinking, i should probably set up that 90 day refill. walgreens is all about making life easier. i can help set that up right now for you. i'll be honest, there are days i forget what she's supposed to be taking. hey, i get it... and you're not alone in this, ok? so james, all these prescriptions. are they covered?
9:24 am
that's right. with your medicare plan you get low-cost copays. thank you. let's talk about making things easier. walgreens is here. ♪ i'm jonathan lawson here to tell you about life insurance through the colonial penn program. if you're age 50 to 85, and looking to buy life insurance on a fixed budget, remember the three ps. what are the three ps? the three ps of life insurance on a fixed budget are price, price, and price. a price you can afford, a price that can't increase, and a price that fits your budget. i'm 54, what's my price? you can get coverage for $9.95 a month. i'm 65 and take medications. what's my price? also $9.95 a month. i just turned 80, what's my price? $9.95 a month for you too. if you're age 50 to 85, call now about the #1 most popular
9:25 am
whole life insurance plan available through the colonial penn program. it has an affordable rate starting at $9.95 a month. no medical exam, no health questions. your acceptance is guaranteed. and this plan has a guaranteed lifetime rate lock so your rate can never go up for any reason. so call now for free information and you'll also get this free beneficiary planner. and it's yours free just for calling. so call now for free information. i have sleep apnea. couldn't use cpap. now i have this. this is inspire. it's simple... it's just a button. sometimes i press his button. inspire is a sleep apnea treatment that works inside my body with the click of this remote. no mask, no hose, just sleep.
9:26 am
we go night-night now. inspire. sleep apnea innovation. learn more and view important safety information at inspiresleep.com. kids are so expensive, dad. now katie needs braces. maybe try switching your car insurance to progressive. you could save hundreds. i don't know, dad. ♪ maybe try switching your car insurance to progressive. you could save hundreds. that's a great idea, tv dad. but i said the exact same thing. some day when you're a father, you'll understand. i'm his father. it's not a competition. listen to your tv dad. drivers who switch and save with progressive save nearly $700 on average. >> harris: welcome back, alarming numbers out of the new york city police department, officers resigning from the nypd at a record-breaking price the link and paste, despite
9:27 am
crime surging in the city, "the new york post" showing the months of january and february was shocking increases of officers leaving. in 1400 cops are projected to resign this year before qualifying for retirement. that is a 36% jump from last year, and a massive 117% increase from 2021. a new york city mayor eric adams is doing little to encourage officers despite who vowing to support them. instead the department is cracking down on rules about their beards links and coffee breaks. james, it is such a tragedy for everyone who lives here and most importantly for those communities that are less safe because of the officers that are being treated horribly by our elected officials who have no choice to feed their families and secure their safety, but to leave for numerous reasons. one officer said precinct cops are being forced to work and inhumane amount of overtime including on their days off but while being penalized for
9:28 am
adverse infractions, meanwhile precincts barely have enough personnel to meet the minimum required to safely answer 911 calls. >> james: we've been talking about bank runs, i guess this is a police run where officers no longer have faith in the institution. and feeling like the city government was behind them, it's willing to let them enforce the law, our mayor was elected on this issue, and that's why the voting city elected him. and in 2023 showed some improvement over 2022, we are still not back to where we want to be. preriots, pre2020. but i think he has got to realize that this has to be his priority, and having a well staff motivated police force is job well done. >> emily: one thing that was
9:29 am
so disturbing to me was realizing through this embedded in the toxic culture was the realization and the acknowledgment of how dangerous it is on the streets for our law enforcement, because as another officer said, hundreds are being assigned to hq, because they are considered untouchable for a patrol or duty, because they have high-ranking supervisors supervisors protecting them. >> kara: interesting, i don't see it getting any better. when i first saw this i was breathing a sigh of relief, because i live in virginia, but it's close enough to do you see that this is happening nationwide and we know that when you look at politicians, they are not moving out to help the us police officers at all. 27 of 30 of the most dangerous and violent cities in america are run by democrat mayors, and they are not -- they don't have any contrition. they don't have any acknowledgment to that the use is the reality on the ground, both for employees of law enforcement, and people just walking around like us. so i don't see it getting better
9:30 am
coming to look at lori lightfoot, she was kicked out of office because of the crime rates, and she said no, no, it's because i am a woman, because i am a minority lgbtq whatever. >> harris: she was upset because there were six other black people running in the race and thought that they would take away the vote from her, she should be the only one, no kidding, set it on camera. as you are talking about what we have in terms of our forces, remember what we have lost. we lost some of the most experienced people in the country on the police forces when they were defunding. that's hard to replace. and so you have men and women who are working overtime to put backflips taken away. and they are doing an amazing job with what they have, our suicide rates are up with the nypd, we have them watching that for 36 months, so than the question becomes how much money can you spend to take experience and how do you incentivize that experience with as much rhetoric at that is still polluting the air as it exists today?
9:31 am
democrats aren't all of a sudden going to be silent because eric adams needs to refill his police force. and instead of sleeping at an immigrant shelter, maybe you sleep at a precinct and to figure out what it is like on the saturday night when gunshots are ringing and life it's really like, and you learn from those men and women what would make them better on the job and how to again attract people to want to be with them. >> emily: part of what is so terrifying as the standards have been lowered with nypd, we know what protects officers is stringent training, we saw sort of a terrible outcome of that as reported in memphis when this is what happens when you try to get everyone to join, let's lower the standards because everybody is leaving in droves for nta, other burros that pay better. the manhattan precinct was out of a contract far longer than anyone else, this is the one that should be a standard and it continues failing as such with support of law enforcement and their compensation and their benefits and the like. and that's why the benevolent
9:32 am
association basically if this -- of these changes, this appreciation, if it does not have been very, very soon we won't have a police department left, because everyone has gone to mta, other counties, to florida, anywhere but here where they are in danger and they are not compensated. >> kayleigh: they are going to florida because there is a chief executive in florida who has shown that he respects law enforcement. he said in september of '21, i will give financial incentives for those that to leave elsewhere, and even started to florida -- bf florida hero program, so if you come to florida from another state you get a $5,000 sign-on bonus, down payment assistance for your first time home ownership and $10,000 to adopt a child. he said 6,000 law enforcement officers come to florida, and what have they gotten in return? lowest crime rates in 50 years. what has new york gotten in return? response time going from just over -- just about 7 minutes and
9:33 am
2020 to over 8 minutes now, and every minute counts when you are calling a police officer for help. >> emily: my friend who is an assistant chief police officer in florida, they sent me a photo of the check that governor ron desantis gave to every single first responder as a bonus, did not pat himself on the back or ask for accolades, just general sleep thanked all first responders, because his balance is budget, and he has gratitude for all of those lives on the line. all right, guys, and don't miss the latest episode of my true crime podcast, the fox true crime podcasts and this that just dropped, i dive into the disappearance of 21-year-old mara marie in new hampshire, she has been missing for over 19 years since the snowy evening in february when she was involved in a single car car accident. i had the honor of speaking with her older sister julie to discuss the details of her disappearance and what it is like for a family of a cold case come of a mystery that is going on for almost two decades. take a listen.
9:34 am
>> it's because their phone number was found inside morrow's car. yes, so police knew about that the second day. and when i contacted that person last month, however many, maybe two weeks ago or what ever it was. they said, no one had ever mentioned that their number was found inside a missing woman's car. and that blew me away. >> emily: it was truly an emotional and moving conversation i had with julie, please learn about maura in that situation at mauramariemissing.com. i would be so grateful if you follow the journey. and violent protesters try once again to silence conservative voices. watch.
9:35 am
[screaming] >> whoa,, whoa, whoa. ock. 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 and get the financial peace of mind every veteran deserves. no one takes care of veterans like newday usa. there's nothing like hitting the waves. there's nothing like volunteering. but my moderate-to-severe eczema can make it hard. now i'm staying ahead of it. dupixent helps heal your skin from within. so you can have clearer skin and noticeably less itch. serious allergic reactions can occur that can be severe. tell your doctor about new or worsening eye problems such as eye pain or vision changes including blurred vision, joint aches and pain, or a parasitic infection.
9:36 am
don't change or stop asthma medicines without talking to your doctor. ask your doctor about dupixent. age is just a number, and mine's unlisted. try boost® high protein with 20 grams of protein for muscle health versus 16 grams in ensure® high protein. boost® high protein. now available in cinnabon® bakery-inspired flavor. learn more at boost.com/tv
9:37 am
9:38 am
if your business kept on employees through the pandemic, getrefunds.com can see if it may qualify for a payroll tax refund of up to $26,000 per employee, even if it received ppp, and all it takes is eight minutes to get started. then we'll work with you to fill out your forms and submit the application; that easy. and if your business doesn't get paid, we don't get paid. getrefunds.com has helped businesses like yours claim over $2 billion
9:39 am
but it's only available for a limited time. go to getrefunds.com, powered by innovation refunds. >> kayleigh: more chaos on college campuses, dressed and mostly black, swarming a conservative event at the university of california davis. as you can see, they smashed windows, hurled the aches and blocked the entrance to the venue, at least two people were arrested and one police officer was reportedly jumped from behind, thankfully he was not seriously hurt. the protesters were trying to disrupt an event headlined by a turning point usa founder charlie hurt, this thing has been going on college campuses around the country for quite some time.
9:40 am
last week a dean joined and taunting a conservative judge at stanford law school, did not get to speak. and last year we saw a similar scene at college events featuring our colleague tomi lahren and former texas g.o.p. chair alan west. it's amazing, the charlie kirk protests that have been coming elon musk saw images and said, not a peaceful protest at all. >> kara: and this to me is the embodiment of the nanny state, so you look at how these children have been coddled from junior high school onward, and they have not been forced to reckon with new ideas. and this is how are culture of free speech, you refine your thinking by hearing what other people have to say. even if they disagree with you, i think that is gone now. i don't even really have hope that our higher institutions like stanford law school can retain their original promise. i think that we frankly need to go back to the drawing board when it comes to our education system, because it is clearly failing free and fair discourse in america, and to me it is
9:41 am
something that we really need to redo from the ground up. let's get more hill sales in there, because they are the only ones that are doing the right thing. >> kayleigh: no doubt, emily, the sacramental beat added columnists, before canceling the event, labeling charlie hurt a fascist speaker, and they took down the op-ed and revise some of the language, but my point in bringing this up is the state first amendment that protects the press, protects charlie kirk and his right to speak, but the general ecosystem of a first amendment having discourse on the campus regardless of if it is state funded institution, is an important virtue. >> emily: that is so right, i'm so glad you prompted me, because that's what i was going to say. talk about the irresponsibility that included in the op-ed that charlie had called for the lynching of trans people. and in part by the way, of just two people arrested for this absolutely violent action, one of them was 90 men from davis.
9:42 am
they were newman from california. and that's why, because this level of hateful rhetoric that spreads pulse narratives about these conservative speakers, it spreads, and therefore it attracts all of those people who love to come and destroy, think that officer was not hurt. we just played a video where a woman was paralyzed by being body slammed to the ground. so he was jumped from behind. it could've been so much worse. >> kayleigh: s, so true, harris. >> harris: could've been a student, could've been anybody. who do you sue? and when people stop using their words, anything is game, cops, anybody in the room can get hurt, and i agree with you, we are watching a generation grow up that won't be able to speak to get out of confrontation. that's an all-out war at all times. i don't see them joining the military. i mean, we could use some warriors, but they still have to be able to use their words. they still have to be able to execute what they have learned. i don't want to label an entire
9:43 am
generation of people, but i also want to at least -- i don't know, better than 75% of them to prove me wrong. >> kayleigh: james. >> james: you wonder if you should call them institutional education, this is a campus movement against education, shielding themselves from viewpoints that challenge their own. it is -- it's amazing. i think it comes back to what was talked about at the root of this stopped the student loan bailouts, stop subsidizing this, because what you need is a market where consumers are saying this is garbage, no one is learning anything from this kind of activity, we are not going to pay as much for it. >> kara: can i add on that davis is known for its agriculture, veterinary sciences, and so that tumor has infiltrated these campuses. this is not cal berkeley, this is a campus, these are farmers, these are veterinarians, it's crucial and it should be totally
9:44 am
divorced from all of these absolutely violent activists traveling in from connecticut. >> kayleigh: let me correct myself, they are a public university and says as a public university we must uphold the right to free speech. so i'm glad that they are upholding that virtue. in massive reparations plan for african americans under consideration in san francisco, and includes millions of dollars in payouts and homes for just a dollar. there is no word on how the city will pay for it. 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. ♪ you're in a hurry. i'm off to america's best i heard what you said about not overpaying for glasses. two pairs and a free, quality eye exam starting at just $79.95? the exam alone is worth... 59 bucks. i mean, people deserve breaks, right? yeah, brakes...! [out of control] book an exam today at americasbest.com.
9:45 am
♪ ♪
9:46 am
get $1500 purchase allowance on a 2023 cadillac xt5 and xt6. ♪ visit your local cadillac dealer today. [sniff] ew. gotta get rid of this. ♪tell me why!♪ because it stinks. ♪have you tried♪ ♪new downy rinse and refresh?♪ it helps remove odors 3x better than detergent alone it worked guys! ♪yeahhhh!♪ new downy rinse and refresh
9:47 am
9:48 am
>> the bank failure a localized problem? or a another failure, and 3% less than half of china's increase is the u.s. falling behind? and are xi jinping and vladimir putin walking all over our president? senator bill haggerty joins us. tiktok, science and engineering and math feed as a desperate attempt to avoid being banned, marc siegel on whether tiktok is good or bad for her children. and a vermont christian school is banned from the sports league after they forfeit a girls basketball game rather than play against a transgender athlete. caitlyn jenner has a few thoughts about that. i'm john roberts, come join sandra and me at the top of the hour for "america reports."
9:49 am
>> emily: san francisco's board of supervisors is the ending aid draft plan for sweeping -- but nobody is saying who will be footing the bill. the proposal would award every eligible black resident $5 million. it would wipe out their personal debt, guarantee a six-figure income for the next 250 years, and offer homes for just $1. but the city has already drowned in debt, predicting a $728 million deficit through june of 2025. kayleigh come you can't make up the fantasy ideological nature of this proposal and the absolute derelict toxic budget accompanying it. >> kayleigh: so true, john dennis, head of the san francisco republican party says this is an unserious proposal, the $5 million lump sum payment out seems ridiculous. then went to say that it's the one city where it could possibly
9:50 am
pass, which you think san francisco could possibly pass, but the broader american public, 68% said we are against the idea of preparation, so in terms of a nationwide system, maybe this happens in san francisco. it does happen in other jurisdictions. i don't for see this happening broad support nationwide. >> emily: san francisco is one of the towns where walgreens shuddered all of their locations, the african american and underserved population in san francisco has been disproportionately affected by the crime, the covid wasteland happening in all the more, so if they want to help those residents, i don't think an unserious proposal as a way to do it. >> harris: i wonder how do you actually qualify for this? are we doing a huge genetic study? and my mom was a social worker, and talk about it all the time, we adopted a biracial baby when i was growing up, we had foster care and my home, children from every walk of life, they were with a black family, what they get reparations? by the way in the san francisco bay area for part of that time.
9:51 am
so i'm wondering who actually can check what boxes to get this? and how many in the last couple of generations of blacks actually came from africa? like is that how they are doing it? i have really basic questions here, because as emily just pointed out, there a lot of people, no matter what your skin color or your situation is, economically, you could use some help. and i can't imagine you not wanting to be in a neighborhood where everybody is being helped. a high tide lifts all boats. i don't know, does this make people want to study more? to rise and do all of that? the victimhood is dripping in this. who does this help? >> james: and who are the victims? this is a jurisdiction than ever had slavery, so taking money from people who have never owned and giving it to people who weren't ever, and then -- >> harris: or even immediate descendants of them. >> james: how do you categorize people based on their ancestry? you go to these websites and it seems that we are all related to
9:52 am
each other anyways. so yes, i guess you want to call it a virtue signal, but it's more of an insanity signal, not that we expect sensible governance from the san francisco board of supervisors, but this is kind of a new low. >> kara: it is an illegal and immoral wealth transfer. it's not about compassion are human flourishing, our lifting people up at all. it's about power, it's about the left saying we will give you free stuff if you vote for us, so vote for us. who will foot the bill? we all know, it's a taxpayer and the mass exodus from california that speaks for itself. they are not working, they are going to work even less if this happens. >> and i have not had this discussion with my biracial adopted sister, but i think i should pretty want to know from her perspective too, raised by black parents just like me, who is blacker? this is ridiculous. this divides us in ways that we can even conjure. >> emily: leave it to san francisco. more "outnumbered" in a moment.
9:53 am
♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ to their new mini-van! yeah, you'll get used to it. this mom's depositing money with tools on-hand. cha ching. and this mom, well, she's setting an appointment here, so her son can get set up there and start his own financial journey. that's because these moms all have chase. smart bankers. convenient tools. one bank with the power of both. chase. make more of what's yours.
9:54 am
>> tech: when you have auto glass damage, trust safelite. we'll replace your windshield, and recalibrate your advanced safety system. so automatic emergency braking and lane departure warning work properly. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪
9:55 am
cole hauser is an award winning actor who has starred in good will hunting too fast, too furious and the current hit show yellowstone. beyond his impressive career, he is a proud supporter of the tunnel to towers foundation. i was able to spend some time with cole and his family to reflect on those who have sacrificed so much to defend our freedom. i know how much you care about america and our veterans and all the things. but you have such a platform now. yeah. and to share that with us that we need to get the word out that we have to take care of these great heroes and their families. you know, as i started to be more and more successful, i was like, how can i help? but when i heard of the tunnel of the towers, and i met brandon in idaho and his family, i was like, wow. there's actually a charity where we know where the money's.
9:56 am
going to go. we have 95.1% of every dollar goes to our programs. and i think brandon's a great spokesman for t2t and and his wife, shannon, has two daughters. i mean, oh, my god. they're just special families. so pretty much, if you put your life on the line, if something goes bad, they're there. that's awesome. yeah. they're incredible people, man. you saw all the stuff we put in these homes, right? i was i was blown away. and they deserve it. they earned it. this is not of course, we give them a mortgage free home, but look what they gave up. they gave up their bodies so, cole, why should americans give donate help? tunnel to towers foundation. i mean, is there any better organization to help the people that has fought for this country and the freedoms that we have? it's that simple. it is that let's take care of each other. and you're going to join us on that mission. thank you. hey, i'm cole hauser. i want you to join me in supporting our nation's heroes and their families.
9:57 am
it's only $11 a month. go to t2t dot org. >> harris: last but not least jim z may seem to have more modern technology all figured out but young workers are reportedly coming up blank when it comes to mastering traditional office equipment especially the printer. they just can't seem to figure them out. how they work. they don't know. don't want to be tech shamed for not knowing. what does that mean? they don't ask for help? they just break stuff at work. according to a new report nearly half of all college students in 2022 felt underprepared for the technical skills needed on the job and continued to get stumped when it comes to using preinter
9:58 am
and fax machines. scanners and desk top computers. i guess one argument can be that everything happens now on your phone. maybe they just aren't used to having to plug stuff in. >> you took the words out of my mouth. they don't use cash. they use apple pay. they don't have hard documents. they open pdf's instead. they don't have books, they read e-book. i am giving them a pass on this. they are way better at the iphone. >> harris: as a pass for the gen z, does that mean we have to remove all the fax machines and things that might seem like a hostile work environment if they don't know how to use them? >> i do want to maintain a safe space. maybe a fax machine needs to go. to kayleigh's point one of the gen zers in my house showed me how to use iphone to scan everything into one document. >> harris: tell the irs that. when you're talking to the
9:59 am
government and they want something scanned or you can mail it and it takes them 20 days to process what you mail, yes, they don't care about all your fancy phone notes. you have those two options. >> which your tax dollars are playing for that inefficiency. i am so old apparently that i have made that full circle from the 180. i can't operate anything. i can't even operate a remote. i rely on other people to help me. i feel like everything i touch with a button doesn't work. i need all the help i can get, but i don't mind if i'm shamed for it. i admit whole heartedly when i need help. >> harris: what is the shame in asking for help? i love that. >> i should sit this one out, like you, emily. i worked at the heritage foundation for two years and have yet to set up my printer. >> harris: the heritage foundation just texted me. i'm kidding. >> jesse waters knows how to
10:00 am
work every printer. i have to circle back on this. how did you print? >> it was you guys, not me. >> harris: thanks to our amazing team of people who know how to push the print button. aren't you glad you work at fox? >> yes. >> harris: for so many reasons. okay. if you're not going to be sitting there this time tomorrow, check your dvr so you don't miss a second of "outnumbered." >> lot of people describe what was happening here in south texas as a humanitarian crisis or border crisis. i said we have a bit of a policy process. >> the drug cartels who just captured and killed a couple of americans and are making billions, billion, bringing people into the united states, many of whom, once they're here, have to pay the cartel back with forced criminal labor. >> we are 25 times more likely to have an overdose death than in mexico. >> we have a fentanyl problem and we need to fix

177 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on