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tv   FOX and Friends  FOX News  March 23, 2023 5:00am-6:00am PDT

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- double check that. eh, pretty good! (whistles) yeek. not cryin', are ya? let's tighten that. (fabric ripping) ooh. - wait, wh- wh- what was that? - huh? what, that? no, don't worry about that. here we go. - asking the right question can greatly impact your future. - are, are you qualified to do this? - what? - especially when it comes to your finances. - yeehaw! - do you have a question? - are you a certified financial planner™? - yes. i'm a cfp® professional. - cfp® professionals are committed to acting in your best interest. that's why it's gotta be a cfp®. find your cfp® professional at letsmakeaplan.org. >> republicans ain't got no swag, they want to get on tiktok. >> testified and lawmakers will grill him. >> bowman is in the minority, protect american's information. >> criminal charges are a tough sale because of weakness of the
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case. he will not bring the case and trump announces he is running for president. >> making progress in the death of stephen smith. >> initially ruled a hit and run, but his mom believes buster murdaugh brutally murdered stephen. >> nothing to indicate there was actually a car accident. >> rare tornado tears through industrial area 10 miles east of downtown los angeles, leaving one person hurt. >> it was so bad it being looed like the windows might break. >> we run outside to see. >> give it up to draymond green. the game is over. ♪ ♪ >> brian: special thanks to
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kesha for providing this. she will be i think issing throughout the entire testimony, it was signed off on. looking at the streets of new york, all the people are actors, extras. >> steve: wow. >> brian: we are playing this ourselves, they are actors, they can disburse. >> ainsley: no, we know some of them, they are our employees. >> steve: those people are real people and have attitude. >> brian: mit has done a study and i find it fascinating and ap approval rating of the president, 38%, all-time low, he can't feel good about that. >> steve: you covered a lot of ground, the mit thing and joe biden's poll numbers. >> ainsley: and best way to eat an oreo. >> brian: i didn't know we were going to give it away. >> steve: a tease, brian, she
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got it right. other than just a study. >> ainsley: study and conclusion at the end. >> brian: i gave very little, i was coy, you were honest with the audience. >> ainsley: you said mit did a study. >> brian: if you're home at the edge of your seat when i said that, take a picture of you at the edge of your seat and send it in. >> steve: maybe the actors in new york city. >> ainsley: everyone can relate to an oreo cookie. >> steve: and kesha singing tiktok. later today on capitol hill, they have hearings and will talk about the threat of tiktok. tiktok is owned by bytedance, a company in china and china has all tech companies share data they gather with the communist regime. if your kids or if you have tiktok, there is a real good possibility they could be sharing information about you
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and your family with china. >> ainsley: there are a hand of congressman that are against tiktok. the president signed legislation back in december. they are worried about china sending our information, getting information about our kids, phone numbers e-mails, your wifinetwork and americans are worried they can get information. communist party, what if the president says, i want information on xyz, these americans, do you think they will tell him no? >> brian: since they are embedded in 100 million phones at least. >> ainsley: 150 million in america. >> brian: make sure it is like china foreign policy, it doesn't make sense. ainsley, this is not just theory they could do this, the fbi caught, they were investigating
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them and caught them, two journalists. they were looking at ip's and location of the tiktok employees and go, we're sorry about that, it won't happen again. sorry issue the cat is out of the bag. i don't know what the ceo will say today. one person he sold is jamal bowman, a congressman from new york, he thinks the fact we want to ban it is racist. >> republicans in particular have been sounding the alarm, creating a red scare around china. they have been doing it in a variety of ways when it comes to economic competition, when it comes to semiconductor manufacturing and when it comes to technology. in terms of tiktok's behavior and its risk to national security, it poses about the same threat that companies like
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facebook and instagram and youtube and twitter pose. so let's not marginalize and target tiktok. >> i just realized something, republicans ain't got no swag, that is why they want to ban tiktok. republicans ain't got no swag. >> steve: apparently bipartisan joke -- >> ainsley: not about swag, about them spying on us. >> steve: it is bipartisan in outrage. also, what happens in washington, d.c., when going get tough, the tough hire people with insider connections. according to punch bowl, tiktok hired a bunch of dc insiders. michael beckerham is staff director, head of public policy for tiktok, one staff director for fred upton, aide to john
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dingell, freddy barnes, with kevin mccarthy is involved in tiktok, members of congress, jeff denham, also a friend of the speaker is involved in lobbying effort. trent lott involved and so is john broh, democrat from louisiana, all insiders on capital hill working for tiktok. >> ainsley: a lot of people behind jamal bowman were influencers, make a ton of money on social platforms. the difference is facebook and instagram, they are not owned by a company in china. the company bytedance is out of beijing and we know the communist party, they are rulers there. if they want information, they're going to get it. congressman bowman calls it racist if you're against it, he
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says do not be racist against china and express xenophobia. everyone was upset when china sent the spy baknow loo, why are they not up in arms about them stealing this information. i get it, tiktok is fun. have to think about national security and have the conversation. here is congressman august fluger, he commented on bowman's comments. >> mr. bowman is in the minority for talking about a racist claim with tiktok. his other democratic colleagues are coming along side us, they have questions and we want to protect american's data. they were using tiktok as an app to spy on american journalists and we said in our commitment to america, protect america, our physical borders and our cyber
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border. this seems like a trojan horse, what are they doing with this information? 150 million americans are on this, are they using the data for personal information? is the ccp ready to use that to influence using maligned bots in any way they see fit. >> brian: keep in mind, too, they are dumbing it down for us, they try to keep us distracted. we spend too much time on it. in china, they knock it off at 11:00 and it is an educational tool. they know what they are doing, poisoning our minds we'd like to poison our minds ourselves with our own products, not let them do it. chinese government weighed in, they are against the sale of tiktok, that is what the president is weighing in on and
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governor morgue told piers morgan. >> would you buy tiktok? >> i think so. >> for everybody in america? >> it is security risk, they are harvesting data and there are other apps and stuff out there, i got young kids. i don't want our young kids on this stuff. >> steve: american teenagers are on tiktok average of 99 minutes per day. average adult on tiktok 56 minutes per day, about an hour. later today, the ceo will say about bytedance and tiktok, we're not an agent of china and going to talk about how they have things in the united states and singapore and in ireland, as well. this afternoon, 4:30, if you have fox nation, you will be able to see piers morgan interview with governor
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desantis. we had a number of clips overlast couple of days, check it out on foxnation.com. >> ainsley: region rocked by heavy snow and flooding and mudslides cleaning up after being hit by tornados. rare twitter going through east of downtown l.a. >> brian: another tornado touched down near the beach, leaving a mobile home park in shambles. >> steve: live from montebelo, california, max, tornados are bear. >> los angeles is not known as tornado alley, in montebelo, ef-1 tornado touched down yesterday morning with winds up to 110 miles per hour. it topples trees, ripped apart roofs and this being los angeles, the media circus you can see around me. this is cell phone video from
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the incident showing debris being lofted up into the air. a spokesperson says calls to 911 started coming in around 11:20 in the morning. tree signs were bent and heavy metal gates toppled over. thankfully no one died and only one person was taken to the hospital with minor injuries. 11 buildings red-tagged because they have been so heavily damaged. one man found himself inside sporting good business as the twister destroyed his warehouse. >> around the back of the warehouse and asking them, are you guys okay? yes, we are okay. okay, that's -- that is the most important thing, man, to survive and be alive.
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we'll be all right. >> it was incredible talking to that man, he was not concerned about what he lost, just he, his family members and employees were okay. this is aftermath of a tornado in carpenteria, ef-0 tornado hit with winds up to 75 miles per hour reeking havoc in a mobile home park there. guys, back to you. >> steve: max, thank you. follow that by downloading the fox weather app to your connected devices. >> ainsley: over to ashley for headlines. >> ashley: the trump grand jury set to return to court today at noon, this afternoon manhattan da alvin bragg cancelled yesterday's hearing. we're learning about major dissension with the district attorney's office, speculation
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about potential charges against the former president and another source says the da is having trouble convincing the grand jury on financial charges due to weakness of this case. live look at the white house, biden administration plans to disband covid response team in may. this is after rand paul grilled the ceo of moderna about heart inflammation. >> you are saying their risk of myocarditis is less than people who get the disease? >> yes. >> that is not true, six peer-reviewed papers that say complete opposite of what you say. >> ashley: the president of moderna revealed to him there is connection between shots and heart damage, the kentucky senator calling the ceo's unwillingness to admit it
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publicly disturbing. detroit automakers expect to lose 3 billion this year. this is first detailed look at the profitability of electric vehicles or . tomorrow ceo jim farley will join us on the curvy couch to discuss. scientists at mit twisted apart 1000 oreos in search of the perfect strategy. the scientists set out after oreo vice president said there is no perfect method in twisting the popular cookie. research found after pulling the cookie apart, filling sticks to one side 80% of the time. we have oreos on set to conduct our own twist test. i don't know if i twist, i just bite.
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>> brian: they use similar content. they use yogurt and toothpaste and see if they can pull it apart. what is this, filling, nuget? >> steve: people twist it apart, remember that song, do you know how to eat an oreo? you unzu it and do it. >> ainsley: one doesn't have anything. >> steve: the average way, more on this one than that one. >> brian: we are using the race to china because students at mit are working on oreos. >> ainsley: they are not curing cancer, and they never came up with conclusion, however you like to eat your oreo is the best way. >> steve: with coffee. >> brian: tuition checks, my scientist son or daughter turns out like 80% of the public. >> ainsley: okay, leave it in
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the milk and it gets soggy and melts in your mouth. >> steve: you have milk? i have coffee. >> brian: a lot of people dunk it in water. >> steve: name one person? >> brian: next generation. >> ainsley: when i was a kid, i would do this and i would soak it and get a spoon to dig it out. >> brian: you would think you would learn how long to hold it under. until it starts bubbling. >> steve: oreo is a delicious cookie. >> brian: did we invent this? >> nabisco. incense i'll bet china did. tobin says i've been doing this same research for a lifetime. >> brian: absolutely, in between segmentes. >> steve: nabisco plant located for 25 years about a mile from our house. >> ainsley: made in america.
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>> steve: made in new jersey on 208. you can tell different cookies, if it is snackwell or -- >> ainsley: how? the smell? >> steve: oh, it is nilla wafer day. >> brian: you can hear the keebler's, you can smell the tree. >> ainsley: next to snap, crackle and pop. >> brian: did a baby formula company raise prices after shortage that sent new parents to a panic? know ares are working to hold major supplier accountable. >> steve: and new gift for illegal migrants, free college. we are live with how much that will cost america taxpayers coming up. >> brian: guess they all have late classes. ♪ find your beat your moment of calm find your potential
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>> ainsley: baby formula brand infamil under fire for raising prices just months after shortages that sent parents into a panic. this -- slamming it as a "superficial attempt rather than effort to bring accountability and make meaningful changes," and lisa mcclain joins us along with louisiana mother amber bergeron. good morning. congresswoman, this was a big problem in 2021, a year and a half, two years ago and parents were panicked. i want to find out what congress is doing to fix this so parents aren't worried.
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>> what we're doing is holding investigations, two years later, to find out actually what happened and hold people accountable and most importantly, fix the problem. this has been a complete and utter blunder by the biden administration and the fda. they knew about this problem nine months, did nothing, swept it under the rug and more importantly, they didn't send regulators to this facility they knew was a problem for two years. we still can't get to the bottom of what the problem is, how are we going to fix it? more frustrating for me, you have private industry held accountable, why don't we have the same standard for government to be held accountable? the biden administration's solution is to spend more money on the fda to tune of 350 million more to pay people to do
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the job they should have done to begin with. that is frustrating, maddening. this should be some of the best times in a mother and father's life and they are worried about how they will get baby formula. that is why we're doing investigations to hold people accountable. >> ainsley: so enfamil said we continually invest into cost-saving initiatives to contain cost for our consumer. at times we must increase prices to continue to bring high quality and services to the marketplace. we do not take regularly scheduled price and we recognize how worry some this is and working to produce as much infant formula to feed babies everywhere. amber, you are a mother of four, live in louisiana and you h twins. they were in the nicu, and you
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needed premie formula. was it easy to find? >> not at all. it was terrible. i even called the nicu, to see if they could help me find it to see if -- at that point, i was down to half a can, they are on preemie formula. skye has a heart condition, it is vital for her to have all the nutrients she needs. storm's iran was getting low, it's been a nightmare. >> ainsley: for parents watching that haven't had children, you can only give them this one type, if you switch, it could mess up their tummies. if they are preemie, or have allergies. thank you congresswoman for
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trying that so moms and dads don't have to worry. have a good day, ladies. coming up, portland lady fears for her safety after homeless man sets up camp behind her house. police say he is not breaking any laws. she is next.
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>> steve: let's talk about this, new york city mayor, eric adams wants to sunday migrants in the country illegally, to college and have taxpayers foot the bill. our sister network fox business joins live from the college in upstate new york, where supposedly, they may be heading, right? >> yeah, exactly right, steve. migrants could be attending college here free. new york city mayor eric adams will send as many as 100 migrants to 12 months of classes, room and board included. the training program will likely exceed $1 million in the first year alone, based off the price of prices at the college. they said the program is in
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discussion, but nothing officially signed. it is important to point out democratic governor kathy hochul is in discussion to raise rates for students in state. state lawmakers are furious a new york city problem is being pushed to rural new york and those who cross into the country are being rewarded without any requirements. >> there is no guarantee the folks will attend classes, going to create or get a certificate and be employed. once they leave new york city, like when they left the border, they will disappear and become a burden on local communities, thanks to mayor adams and his plan. >> we reached out to the mayor's office for comment on the program and for statement or interview, we have not heard back. steve >> steve: thank you for the report >> upstate. on the other coast, a portland woman fearing for her own safety
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after a homeless man set up camp behind her house. when she confronted the guy, she says he threatened to burn her house down. despite the threat, cops would not arrest him because they said he is not breaking any laws. well, she joins us right now from portland. good morning. >> good morning. >> steve: that is really close to your house. >> it is. right behind my house. >> steve: i know you have had people in your yard, they have thrown trash, needles. when you went and talked to the guy and said, what are you doing, what did he say to you? >> well, i generally talk to all of them that camp there because it has been a long-term problem and i'd say 1% of the time, they will move and 99% of the time,
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they basically tell me to buzz off. so it's really frustrating. i've gotten to the point where i'm justice done, just done. >> steve: i understand why you would be scared, within 100 feet of your house. he did tell you, i'm going to burn your house down and he said it four times? >> yes, four times. >> and he's a real threat, right? >> i feel he's a threat, yeah, i've had people threaten my life from that camp. this isn't the first time this has happened, this is an ongoing issue. it's been two or three years and i don't feel safe. he had a conviction in his voice that he's going to burn my house down. >> steve: you talked to the cops and the cops said lady, he
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hasn't broken laws. >> i called the police and said, isn't that a direct threat? they said no laws were broken. >> steve: how frustrating. this has been going on in your backyard for a couple of years, you said. why do you still live there? i think my family would get up, pack up and move. >> i was born and raised in this house. i'm long-term, been in portland 59 years. i'm raising my children in this house and it's home. >> steve: yeah. >> it's always been home. i'm starting to lose that feeling. >> steve: yeah. i understand if you were born and raised there and been there almost 60 years. it must break your heart to see how portland has descended into all these homeless people and camps in everybody's backyard.
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>> yeah, i think there should be some rules to how close a camper should be able to position themselves to a house. that tent is within 20 feet of a bathroom window where there are young children in that house. that is my nieces house, i live right next door. it is frightening, something is going to happen. something is going to happen. it already has, but actually where something is going to physically happen. >> steve: we understand your concern and it is too bad the cops can't do anything. they have a million ordinances, you would think one would help you out, you pay taxes. >> i think police don't have control over camping, it is not illegal to camp, you can't tell a camper to leave. we're kind of stuck. you want to trust administrators
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of the city and that is not going to happen. we're on our own. >> steve: good luck to you, thank you for joining us today and good luck and keep us posted. >> thank you. >> steve: that is crazy. coming up, east palestine mother gives chilling testimony on how the toxic train derailment traumatized her young child. >> my seven year old has asked me if he's going to die from living in his own home. what do i tell him? >> steve: what did they say? that mom joins us next. we start with sustainably grown cotton from the rich red soul of north alabama, here on our family farm. then we partner with family owned mills from maine to mississippi to manufacture our cotton into quality american made fabrics that become our heirloom inspired bedding, towels, blankets and apparel. experience our 100% american made luxury linens for yourself.
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he is going to die from living in his own home, what do i tell him? this preventable accident put a scarlet letter on our town. people do not want to come here, businesses are struggling, home values are plummeting. if we wanted to leave, we couldn't, who would buy our homes >> brian: that mom joins us now. sounds terrible, you are just saying the facts as they are. how can we help? >> thanks for inviting me to be here today. i appreciate the media attention in regard to the east palestine train derailment and i think it has helped put some pressure on norfolk southern to do the right thing, so thank you. >> steve: it is heartbreaking, your little boy said mom, am i going to die from this. you just mentioned the fact your
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home prices are plummeting. is there a movement in east palestine where people are up to here with the railroad and the government and saying, you caused this, you need to buy our houses? >> there definitely is some frustration and i would say rightfully so. norfolk southern keep saying they are going to do the right thing. as i said yesterday, who gets to determine what is right here? i would say east palestine residents want a couple of guarantees, that include says short term and long-term healthcare monitoring and home value protection and to help our community and economy recover and thrive. i know norfolk southern has made a lot of promises and we hope to hear something soon about what they actually plan to do to make it right for the long-term. >> ainsley: lawmakers did hear from the ceo of norfolk southern, listen to this clip.
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>> the impact this has had on the community, i know it has been traumatic. i was there during the benton burn and saw the plume and know what it looked like. there is ongoing testing by the epa, ohio and pennsylvania department of environmental protection. they all show the air is safe and water is safe to breathe. >> ainsley: your reaction to that and you told the producers, a lot of residents were feeling symptoms and then they evacuated again. >> that is true. recently the epa did require norfolk southern to rip up the track and get rid of the contaminated soil under the tracks. when that did happen, a lot of residents live closer to the site than me, who started getting sick again and they had chose to re-evacuate.
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>> brian: you are 1.2 miles from the actual crash in particular. with all the attention on there, do you think the best scenario is continued testing and come up with a figure for people who are in this area and will you be consulted on that? >> i hope the residents are included in those decisions for what is right. i think that litmus test shouldn't be decided by norfolk southern. hopefully residentses are included. norfolk southern has been talking to community leaders and residentses, that is true. i hope we are consulted to see if it is something that really hits the mark with residents. >> steve: thank you for joining us after your busy day yesterday. keep us posted. >> ainsley: we wish you the best. >> steve: janice dean joins us. it is a nice day outside.
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>> janice: a beautiful day. i have friends with me, who is your name? >> peggy harvard. >> janice: is this your first trip to new york? >> much. >> janice: you are famous on tv. are you sisters? >> that is my mother-in-law. >> janice: beautiful, my friend. >> she is taking me on vacation. >> maureen and bob. >> janice: michigan fans? what happens if they win today? >> if they win the 16, they go to the elite eight. >> janice: good luck. quick check on the forecast, it is beautiful in new york. that is the main thing, tornado report outside of los angeles yesterday. first time tornado in l.a. county since 2021 in september. quick look at the forecast for today and tomorrow. severe storms for southern plains and mississippi valley. foxweather.com. say hi.
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>> hi. >> hi, guys. >> steve: good morning. >> you're great. >> good morning. >> good luck michigan state. >> steve: thanks for introducing us to them. tiktok ceo will testify in about an hour, our next guest is a computer science expert warning china is weaponizing the app to steal your online stuff. check in with dana, she has a show coming up in 12 minutes. >> dana: i think it is 13. you had a great show so far, we will try to continue the trend. is tiktok on the chopping block? the ceo is on capitol hill. fed hikes interest rates. ron desantis, how does kellyanne conway assess his moves this week? she will be here. that plus update on possible
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>> brian: hour from now tiktok ceo will testify on capitol hill to convince congress the app is protecting not stealing
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american's data and banning the app on government devices in many nations. one rallying to support it. >> tiktok as a platform has created a community and space for free speech. ban on tiktoks would be devastating. >> tiktok ban would put my business at risk, 95% of my livelihood would disappear. >> tiktok has promoted inclusion and changed the world. >> brian: change it for the worst. humane technology tristan harris joins us now. what should everybody know about tiktok today? >> well, i think what people should know, it is an unbelievable national security threat if the chinese communist party influences tiktok that if china were to invade taiwan tomorrow, they could shape what people, who people thought started the war.
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in every country, including the u.s., they could amplify voices saying the u.s. started the war. that is not invasion. they have capability to immediately shape the moral consensus, the question is, would you have allowed the soviet union to control western television programming for the entire western world including saturday morning cartoons and sesame street. if we allow tiktok to run information in this country, that is like letting at&t debot buy chinese influenced company. >> brian: take this as fact because it is. the tiktok in china is different than the tiktok we see in america. it goes to show influence they have, in china learning device they shut off at 11:00, how
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different than what we see here. i didn't believe until there was a friend in china who showed me this, he had two versions of the app on his phone, opened chinese version and it was spinach, patriotism videos, videos about who won the noble prize, financial advice, about quantum physics and opened up the u.s. version and it was nonsense. the line from fcc commissioner brandon carr, they ship spinach version domestically and the digital fentanyl version to the rest of the world. if i walk away from your society and come back in 10 years, it is already the case number one most aspired career in china is astronaut, the number one in u.s. is social media influencer. >> brian: right, unbelievable. if we dumb ourselves down, do it ourselves. you want to ban it, do you hope that emerges out of this?
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>> i do, it is important, as we talked about on the program, india banned tiktok, others have banned tiktok. you realize and see consensus among experts it is a fundamental threat to coherrence. >> brian: ai, what are dangers that have you worried? >> ai is you have mooing at such a pace, faster than our government apprised of it. people that builtlet new version of ai, chat gpt, large language model apis, have ability to synthesize language at scale. democracy runs on conversation and language. if i can synthesize language and conversation at scale, i can hack democracy. we're seeing that in videos, photos of manufactured photos of trump being arrested, which were not true. imagine if i'm a foreign
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adversary, china or russia, i can flood your open society with untruths much faster than you can apprehend it, we need more control and guard rails. >> brian: lawmakers need to talk to lawmakers, they can't have expertise, i am glad you are in washington. thanks so much. more "fox and friends" in a moment. bring you this she■s a hero moment. new york city. you have to have the skill and the drive to make it here. not all chefs are men. oh, she can't do that. she's a girl. women bring creativity balance into a kitchen. no one should go hungry. it■s a human right to know where your next meal is coming from. we're changing our community one bite at a time, and we're not done yet. if you can see her. you can be her.
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>> nice morning. thanks for watching us today. >> see if you can run to the radio. >> everyone have a great day and we'll see you on friday. >> dana: tiktok on the chopping block. the company's ceo is about to testify on capitol hill as it tries to avoid being banned. bill has a day off. i'm dana perino. >> john: great to be with you again on friday eve. tiktok ceo chew scheduled to be before congress in an hour facing intense questioning from lawmakers who say the tiktok app gives china

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