tv Fox News at Night FOX News March 27, 2023 9:00pm-10:01pm PDT
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>> greg: we are a out of time. -- are out of time. [cheers and applause] >> trace: good evening and welcome to "fox news @ night." i am trace gallagher in los angeles. we begin with breaking news and branded video that i am just now seeing for the first time showing the 28-year-old nashville school shooter who police say is a transgender woman stalking the halls of the covenant elementary premeditate. not only did the shooter leave a detailed manifesto, but also had detailed maps to the campus. it turns out the shooter shot at
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a side door and blew out the glass to get inside. chief correspondent jonathan has new information. what are we learning? >> reporter: we are learning that they believe this was a well-planned attack by the 28-year-old shooter. now identified as audrey elizabeth hale who police say was transgender. >> did she identified as transgender? >> she does identify as transgender. >> as a man or a woman? >> woman. >> jonathan: and tonight, we are seeing as you mentioned the moment when hale shot out a door of the school to get into the building and then roamed the hallways of covenant school. a private christian academy for about 200 pre-k to sixth grade students. hale killed three children identified as nine world, in dieckhaus, hallie scruggs and william kinney as well as three
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adults, cynthia peak, 61, katherine koonce, 60, and mike hill, 61. in the shooter's home, police say they discovered clear signs that this was a premeditated attack. >> we have a manifesto. we have some writings that we are going over. space that pertain to this but there's the actual incident. we have a map drawn out of how this was all going to take place. >> jonathan: police say the shooter drove to the school in this car and used these three weapons to shoot the victims and to open fire on police vehicles as they arrived, despite that, officers ran into the school and took the shooter down, 14 minutes after the first shots were fired. president biden reacting to the shooting by once again calling on congress to take action. >> president biden: we have to do more to protect our schools. they are turned into prisons. the shooter in this situation
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reportedly had two assault weapons and a pistol, ak-47. i call on congress again to pass assault weapons ban. >> jonathan: there obviously a lot more to learn here. police say they will be processing the scene throughout tuesday and we may well see even more video from surveillance cameras and perhaps, trace, from police body camps. >> trace: i'm guessing that manifesto has information. >> jonathan: they seem to know what is in that manifesto. they are not ready to tell us. >> trace: let's bring in fbi executive assistant director joshua scull and mo kennedy. thank you for coming on. to you first, i'm talking to jonathan about that manifesto because it has to have some key information. you do this. you know, what do you believe might have been inside that manifesto that police can lean about what the motive might have
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been? >> i think that manifesto is going to shut a lot into this person's mindset. they are also going to be matching it up with their social media interviews they are doing with family, friends, coworkers and really looking at the totality of this person's life and what drove them to this violent behavior. >> trace: it is interesting because you look at the video that we are seeing for the first time and we were told earlier that this person had detailed maps of the school. went to school there and had detailed maps of the school but ended up having to blow open a side door and break in the glass to get inside. what do you make of the different mistakes we have seen in the reporting all day? >> well, obviously, in this situation, it appears that the doors were secure and so in any circumstance, that is the right thing to do. this is eerily similar to the sandy hook massacre where the shooter shot his way into the
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school. so again, a situation where the parameters are secured as they should be but this is hard to defeat what you have a person shooting their way in. >> trace: we talked about a female shooting being rare. we talked about the fact that a private school is very consistent 90% of the schools that are shot up our private schools. near post writes the following here, i will get your take on it. quoting one local said hale lived in the house of her mother who works at a church nearby and father ron who was self-employed and they had seen her on sunday. the source told the post we are just shocked we would see hale from time to time. she was very reserved and very quiet. and that last part fits, right? a lot of school shooters we have seen over the years have been very reserved and very quiet. >> that is true. but there are going to be things in her life that cause this type of triggering to conduct a violent attack. you're going to get that trace, as you mentioned out of that
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manifesto. you will get that off of social media and you will have indications from family and friends when things start to go bad in her life that caused her to target this location. >> trace: it is interesting to me, mo, because i know, i mean, the officer went in there in uvalde, it was 90 minutes before they went in. was 14 minutes. the police did yeoman's work on this school shooting here. it seems to be like police resource officers, school resource officers are really kind of needed more than we thought they were a couple years ago. >> first of all, a huge praise for metro police on their response. a good call like that and 14 minutes later have it ended as -- it is pretty phenomenal in terms of a response. here when we look at it and break it down a little further you know, what difference can an sro make? i will say a lot because we look at cases like st. mary's county, maryland, where the sra did, in
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fact, stop the shooter, just one of many cases. >> trace: and you go back to you all day, joshua, and you think that was an entirely different set up. but they did not go in. they were taught to go in. they did not go in. so we are kind of as we learn going back from columbine, we are still evolving and how these things, they are all different and how we handle all of these various shootings. >> nashville pd is most's -- did a phenomenal job to have it secured within 14 minutes is a phenomenal police work. huge bravery and courage to those officers. they ran to the sound of gunfire and unfortunately we have seen incidents where they did not do that and they should be held to account for that as well. we should get praise where praise is due. >> trace: and they deserve it. joshua, mo, gentlemen, thank you both. >> thank you. >> trace: coming up, robert jeffers of the first baptist
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church will join us for insight on why he believes a christian school was targeted. an nguyen i got congressman jim jordan wants to know why an irs agent visited the home back on march 9th while the twitter journalist was testifying before congress. , chairman of the house judiciary committee sent a letter to the irs commissioner and treasury secretary seeking their cooperation about that irs visit and whether it could be interpreted as an attempt to intimidate a congressional witness. water near a grand jury considers charges against former president trump, they met again today. no word on whether an indictment is imminent. nature boy is live with the very latest from new york city. nate, good evening. >> reporter: former president trump calls the investigation election interference. he calls it a new ballot stuffing for the democrat party. he also made clear he is not calling for violence as a result
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of a possible indictment. here he is tonight on hannity. >> i did not say do something bad. i said, i am afraid that people will do something because people are very angry about it. >> reporter: printing trip also talked about a truth social post that he took down. you see it here. he posted the link to an article. it showed a picture of him holding a baseball bat next to another picture of d.a. bragg. >> i posted an article. the picture they put up, my people did not put up the picture. maybe it was either in the article or was put in the article later. struck the former publisher of the national enquirer, david pecker testified before the grand jury for a second time. first was back in january. during the first appearance, he recalled conversations with president trump's former lawyer, michael tobin, about paying stormy daniels for her silence. it is believed pecker is the
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last witness scheduled to testify before a grand jury. this comes after criticism. house leaders of three committees are requesting the bragg testify about his investigation into potential. bragg because of congressional overreach. the republican leaders maintain this investigation has significant federal interest and it could even result in new legislation being drafted. this grand jury meets on mondays, wednesdays, and thursdays. they are hearing multiple cases. so there's no guarantee that they will hear the on wednesday. it appears that is the earliest that a possible indictment could be headed up. trayce? >> trace: very interesting. thank you. let's bring in for chief counsel for the judiciary committee, mike davis. is great to have you on. james comer sent this. make this point about alvin bragg. watch. >> because he crossed over two levels of government from the level of the federal level to try to prosecute something that clearly if there was a reason
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for prosecution, it should be done by the department justice on the federal level. >> yes, it is a reach. >> this is a soros funded manhattan d.a. who had previously told the previous manhattan d.a. not to prosecute this case when bragg worked for the new york attorney general's office. the u.s. attorney for manhattan declined to prosecute this case. the federal election commission did not do anything about this case. this was potential of settling a nuisance claim back in 2016 that bragg is trying to resurrect as a federal election felony. it is nonsense. >> trace: i think you make a good point because public opinion was starting to go against bragg thinking this was very political and then you had former president trump post that social media thing. michael kerr -- michael guzman of the near post writes, it is not news that donald trump is the rest of his own enemies. but he outed himself with his latest bizarre behavior. his social media warning early
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friday the death and destruction can follow if he is currently charged in the stormy daniels case came as he posted an image of himself holding a baseball bat next to a photo of manhattan d.a. alvin bragg's head. was it ill-advised? is there something that, her him going down the road here, michael? >> a dick preston trip was correct in his explanation. he took a news story. add or take heed for does he do not put the picture up there. so potential has made it clear that he does not want any violence here and all of trump supporters are not itching for violence. it is quite the opposite. so i think this is just democrats trying to make, you know, trying to politicize this. >> trace: here he is being asked about a potential indictment and his response. watch. >> that there be a mug shot, fingerprinted and maybe even handcuffs. now, when you think about being
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in 1600 pennsylvania avenue and to juxtapose it to that, how do you deal with that? >> i deal with it, we are dealing with the dishonest people. we are dealing with thugs. i think they hate our country. >> trace: your final thoughts on this? >> i agree with president trump. the democrats have completely politicized the justice system, whether it is manhattan d.a., alvin bragg, special counsel, fulton county d.a., they are trying to indict trump because they are afraid they can't beat him in the polls. >> trace: thank you. if you feel like some of the core values that make america and america have been eroding in recent times, a new survey confirms that you are correct. for example the percentage of americans who say patriotism is very important to them just 38%. that is down almost half in the last 25 years. kevin corke has the numbers and prospective. he joins us live in the nation's
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capitol. >> reporter: a very interesting to check this all out. some would say it is not just interesting. it is actually sad, frankly. this batch of new data collected by the wall street journal showing a dwindling number of americans see values the way perhaps their parents saw them or perhaps the way they were seen throughout the years. the poll reveals a very steep declines in things like patriotism as you put it out, also, religion. down 32 and 23% respectively. even having children took a hit. coming in at a low 30%. the only priority that has actually grown in importance according to the poll, cash money. 42% of people saying it was very important to them. it is up from 31 person who said the same thing 25 years ago. the question remains, why the change, a number of theories. it is worth noting major events have happened in our country since 1998.
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which to varying degrees may change the way we view our safety, or institutions and yes, even our values among them, the 911 attacks, the 2008 economic downturn, the rise of president donald trump. covid-19. george floyd. russia/ukraine. massive inflation today. so on and so forth. now, for any lawmakers, it is not so much a surprise as it is a great disappointment. it needs to be addressed. >> why can't we be proud of america? america is an idea and there is no other nation in the work that is conceived in liberty and dedicated the proposition that we are all equal. we are not perfect. but we strive to be a more perfect union. we have to change this course. >> kevin: still, whether and how to reconnect our people with the country's historic values is certainly a debate that will likely play out in homes across america. not so likely in the halls of congress, trace. >> trace: we will talk more
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about this as the evening progresses. let's bring in person and partner -- lisa carter. it is great to see you. i want to start with patriotism. as kevin was talking about. 1998, 70% of americans thought that patriotism was very important and now it is down to the 38%. what do you make of this, we? >> well, i think in many ways, looking at this polling is really -- it sort of explains the way that we view the world right now and how depressing in many ways it is. only 38% of americans are patriotic. what is even worse is that numbers of young people. if you look at your honor 30, only 23% consider themselves to be patriotic. there's a huge, huge change and shift and outlawed in a short amount of time. if you look even in 2019, 61% of americans are patriotic. so we see almost half the shrinkage. it is unbelievable.
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>> trace: do and i think it is because of the distrust and the institutions of america? >> i think there's a few things at play. i think there's huge mistrust in the institutions and we have seen that on the decline since 2001 and 2008 significantly more and then of course, was put to him, more division. i think it is hard to know exactly if it is just that mistrust in institutions. there's also a huge divide after you know, the election for the 16 and 2020. >> trace: i want to move on to a religion because you, you can look at the difference. 1998, is religion important to you? 62% say yes, very important. and 233, it is down to 39%. i mean, the numbers, by the way, are much lower for democrats but these are kind of the overall numbers. what are your thoughts? >> they are much lower also for young people. i think this is surprising to me. i saw a lot of studies that said that during covid, people, more religious, not less. that is not what this point is
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suggesting. it is saying fewer than have the people, 49% know that there's a god. so there's really a huge difference, not only in just how people are spiritually but also how they view religion and many perceive it as a very negative thing and that is a huge shift over time. >> trace: and lastly, having children, back in 1998, 59% said yes, very important and now it is almost half of what it was. your final thoughts on this, we? >> this is one of the things you really see how the view of the family has shifted so much. few are marriage is also shifted significantly over time. this again is even worse among young people. so what does that suggest about our future? i think you see this play out in politics. we are going to see this play out culturally. but this kind of change leads to a real sense of, or who are we, and what are we going to be? that is the question that as we see with this generation coming up is looking towards. >> trace: we will talk some more about this. thank you.
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>> thank you. from an intimate's crime round up, staff member senator rand paul was brutally stabbed in dc. the staffer was attacked in broad daylight and suffered life-threatening injuries. the suspect was arrested. in dekalb county, georgia, near the so called kasidi where police are building a controversial new training center, authorities found some dangerous contraptions. no stated boards hit it in the apartment prompted the county ceo to close the land. police arrested creed iii start jonathan majors after the woman claimed he slapped her and choked her. majors lawyer says he is innocent and she expects the charges to be dropped. now to the gwyneth paltrow trial. the man suing her took the stand on monday trying to make his case that she was at fault for their 2016 ski crash that he says left him with four broken ribs and postconcussion sometimes. jackie ibanez is live with more
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on what exactly happened in the court. jackie, good evening. >> reporter: that evening. the man is suing gwyneth paltrow for $300,000. took the stand in park city utah and terry sanderson claims the actress left him with severe injuries following a 2016 accident where the two collided at this looks at deer valley resort. >> i just remember everything was great and then i heard something i have never heard at a ski resort and that was a bloodcurdling scream. >> reporter: sanderson was question on why he wrote, i'm famous, in the subject line of an e-mail he sent to his children on the day of that extant. paltrow's team argue that he was taking full advantage of paltrow's celebrity status. >> all i was trying to do was desperately communicate with my kids before they heard from somebody else. so i did not pick my words well.
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not at ohio i felt and i was trying to add a little levity to a serious situation and it backfired. little did i know that this is where it would lead. >> reporter: paltrow says she is suing but denies any wrongdoing. during her testimony on friday, she claimed she initially thought for a moment that she was being sexually assaulted when the two collided. >> that was a quick thought that one through my head when i was trying to reconcile what was happening. i was skiing and two skis came between my skis, forcing my legs apart and then there was a body pressing against me. and there was a very strange grunting noise. >> trace: sanderson initially sued paltrow for $3.1 million but later admitted his complaints. paltrow is a countersuit for one the plus attorney's fees. her husband and two children are also expected to survive. back to you, trace. for when we look forward to that. jackie ibanez in new york, thank
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you. it has been 20 months since the biden administration's field withdrawal of u.s. troops from afghanistan. now house republicans are demanding state department hand over classified documents. and we told you earlier america seems to be losing its traditional values like patriotism. religion, having children. we are focusing on patriotism. are reducing pride in our country? if so, why? let us know, social media, trace gallagher way and, we will show you the results. we switched to liberty mutual and saved $652. they customize your car insurance, so you only pay for what you need. with the money we saved, we thought we'd try electric unicycles. whoa! careful, babe! saving was definitely easier. hey babe, i think i got it! it's actually... whooooa! ok, show-off! help! oh! only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪
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thank you for coming. truly enjoyable op-ed. you think it is time for the government to be held accountable for the botched withdrawal from afghanistan. what is specifically, sir, are you pointing to? >> well, thanks so much for having me back on, trace. firstly, i think the american people are looking for transparency and accountability when it comes to this botched withdrawal and i think that really starts at secretary blinken. you know? we have asked for the dissent cables and representative mccall, the chairman of the foreign affairs committee has explained possible terms that these dissent cables are very clear to understanding what it was that these 23 diplomats in around june. of her to incidents occurring had an issue with from a state department policy perspective and what was not adhered to? the fact that antony blinken has yet to actually provide that tells us or shows that there is something that seems to be hit it and i think that the subpoena
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is unnecessary because their logic, if it was the site cables had presidential or executive privilege, that would mean that every dod every u.s. state, every memo and cable and document would not be accessible to the congressional members. and so, i think the first phase is to get the subpoena. the next phase will see where it goes based on six treblinka's response. >> trace: this is a reflection for all of us who went overseas. only to have the demonstration turned their backs on us. this was a failure by the suit, not the boots and our brave men and women in uniform should hold their heads high and they should because they did amazing work over there. >> that is exactly right. you know, unfortunately, one is far too many and we saw a spike in veteran suicide rates as a result of this failed withdrawal where very many veterans were asking, what was the purpose? what was just what was the recent not just for their military service but also the
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service of many members over there? people who died like cia veteran african veteran michael spann, one of the very first that was killed in afghanistan. many were asking, what was this about? are suicide rates biked as a result of this. this is my message. it is not your fault. you served with honor, distinction. you carried out the mission as it was given. this is the fault of the suits making the decisions could not the boots. >> trace: this is lastly what you wrote and it says, while democrats seek to downplay the consequences, i've lived the actual experience on the ground. this actually made us look weak on the world stage and has led to increased aggression by an adversary those adversaries because we have lost as a global leader and we see our adversaries taunting and touring with us all the time now. we got about six -- 15 seconds. >> that is exactly] you are seeing, china and russia, geopolitical moment. you are seeing the weakness. you are seeing the stands in taiwan. you are seeing is taking place in ukraine.
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you are seeing that use economic coercion against honduras and strengthen our hemisphere in south america. so we see where this is actually shown it to be weak on the world stage and america has to take back our stance. >> trace: best of luck to you. thank you for coming on. we appreciate it. >> thank you so much. ♪ ♪ from the first of its night's real news roundup, npr has issued a correction to a story on the road athletics council barring transgender athletes from competition against women. mpr tweeted quoting there is limited to scientific research to support the idea that males have a physical advantage over females in competitive sports. now npr says correction, earlier tweet and quickly stated there is limited scientific evidence of physical advantage. existing research shows that higher levels of testosterone to impact athletic performance. but if there's a limited research involving elite trans
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athletes. a mississippi news anchor who was taken off the air after resetting the lyrics to a snoop dogg song is now being defended in the media. the talkshow host said monday it should not be a viable offense and on the view even whoopi goldberg who says all kinds of stuff slammed political correctness. watch. >> we don't know everything you are not supposed to do. if there's something someone says, if you're not going to give them the opportunity to explain why they said it, at least give them the grace of saying, you know what? i'm just -- i have just been informed that i should not have done that as opposed to, you are out. >> trace: per the biden -- they plan to roll out executive orders and climate mandates in an effort to reduce emissions by 50% by the end of the decade. the same interview, defending business and government leaders
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who travel to climate summits on gas guzzling private jets saying those individuals are working harder than most to fight climate change. how is that? ♪ ♪ meantime, the fox news at night common sense department had to reread one of president. 's recent tweets that said, quote at republican proposals would slash findings for border security." didn't democrats already feel when they tried to blame the gop for defining police? and now they are at it again saying republicans want the border less secure? chris walker the border be secure? it was parroted biden who laid out a 51-point plan to roll. president biden or president trump's porter apartment -- and the border wall was priority one. so it is interesting that this month biden's own border patrol chief told congress, we desperately need a border wall. trump's porter awad.
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the wall biden halted. and sons con since constructiond 2.5 million illegal immigrants have entered the u.s. along with tens of millions of fentanyl pills, tens of thousands of americans. listen, those are horrifying numbers and i certainly get why the president is trying to pass the buck. and there was a time when biden would blame maga republicans and the media fell in line. some found his claim falls. common sense thinks that beeping sound you hear might be president biden backing up. and coming up, is america losing its religion? more on that new poll that shows how the country's priorities are shifting. but first, check out this verbal grandma who says you are never too old to learn. plus, is shocking moment on an l.a. highway. today's best viral videos next. . known for loving the outdoors.
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>> trace: first up, a wild scene on the los angeles highway when a tire flew off a truck and caused a nearby car to catch a huge amount of air and flipped over several times. the stunning accident caused a lot of damage. but amazingly, no major injuries. the driver of that semester. walked away just fine. local reports is the trump tower ' off because of the lug nuts being sheared off. >> and you are not even aware. >> trace: that is the 79-year-old tiktok sensation with 2.3 million followers. she is back in college pursuing a creative writing degree and using her platform to encourage many nearly alternate darian has 16 grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren. and is poking her education back up after 40 years after her slogan, i can do hard things.
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[cheers and applause] >> trace: it looks like a contest, but it is not. closer to durofil because of miners s9 men got out of the collapsed mine. in this case, it was a great ending. all nine got out alive. >> that is a good one. [laughter] >> trace: do you think she is excited? that is nine-year-old allie on her first bass fishing trip with her dad.
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she reeled back in the big one. you know what, she could have picked up anything she wanted to on that. meantime, moving on, if you have a pro video by the way, hit me up @tracegallagher on social media. ♪ ♪ when a catholic church in your sphere, connecticut, was vandalized earlier this month, it marked a 300 attack on a catholic church in the u.s. since the spring of 2020. and there appeared to be very few consequences. here is the chief religion correspondent, lauren green. >> reporter: chopping -- desecrated altars, arson, vandalism, according to the organization, 6-foot, there have been more than 300 attacks on catholic churches across the country since 2020. >> it is trying to punish and to scandalize catholics in a way
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that is especially worrisome. >> reporter: the attacks started during a 2020 riots sparked by the murder of george floyd and last year, increased after the late supreme court decision on roe v. wade. blaming the fbi and the doj for failing to act. >> for any other institution, this number of attacks with this level of frequency, we would see more aggressive action and i think we know why. >> reporter: he suggests that a recently leaked memo from the fbi field office in richmond, virginia points to a culture of prejudice within the largest law enforcement agency in the country. memo linked conservative catholics to extremist groups labeling them radical traditional catholics. the fbi apologize and removed the document from the strs systems and began a review for its basis. >> it is not enough for us. spark several state attorneys general and members of the house judiciary committee sent a letter to the fbi director demanding answers. >> we need to know who generated this, why, who was involved in
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it, what was the rationale. the fbi has shown what looks to be a partisan bias. >> reporter: representative johnson says it sets a dangerous precedent for federal law enforcement to be centers of religious activity. the violation of for those first amendment rights. trace? >> trace: thank you. let's talk more about the tragic news out of nashville today in the deadly shooting at a christian school that killed three students and three adults. the pastor of the first baptist church in dallas. fox news contributor robert jeffers, it is great to have you on. you heard the story about the catholic church's attacks. and we have the awful story of a christian elementary school being attacked. what is going on here? >> this is the age-old story. what is going on between good and evil. between the kingdom of god and the kingdom of stated and we are living in the crosshairs right now. and in the war between good and evil, times, it looks like evil
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is winning especially after today's horrific events. but this was a christian school as you noted, trace. and these parents know that this is not the final chapter of a story. there is a day coming. the bible promises when people will be vanquished forever and christ will be victorious and these families know they will see their loved ones again and that is what easter sunday is all about. the great resurrection. >> trace: we have been talking about the poll and this is one of the things that jumped out at me. you feel confident or not convinced that life over our children's generation will be better? and look at the numbers here. only 21% feel like their kids will have a better year than they did and 78% are not confident. you can't get americans 78% to agree on anything. pastor? >> and there's a lot of doom and gloom right now. about what is ahead and i think the most significant thing and i
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-- you mentioned the fact that only 39% of americans believe religion is important when it was 62% back in 1998. and i think there's a relationship between that poll and what we saw in nashville today. i mean, when you try to obliterate god from the public square, they are going to be -- there are going to be consequences to that. like dostoyevsky wrote, without god, all things are permissible. there is no sense of right and wrong without a god. and it is only through relationship with god that we can transform people's heart to do the right thing, today it was not basically a gun problem. it is a heart problem. and only god can change a heart. her works patriotism, religious, faith, priorities for generations. are we seeing an importance to americans, final thoughts on this, pastor? >> well, we need a better character among the american
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people and you know i think of the french diplomat after touring america, said america is great because america is good. if america ever ceases to be good, she will cease to be great. the only way for america to be good is through relationship with god and that is why faith is so important. in american life. >> trace: yeah. pastor robert jeffress, thank you, sir. >> thanks for having me. >> trace: coming up, would you agree that traditional health values in this country are fading away? tonight, we focus on patriotism and why our national pride is on the decline. there's still time to weigh in on twitter and instagram @tracegallagher. the nightcap will deal with that next. i think i changed my mind about these glasses. yeah, it happens. that's why visionworks gives you 100 days to change your mind. it's simple. anything else i can help you with? like what? visionworks. see the difference.
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♪ ♪ >> trace: we are back with the nightcap crew. for the first time, nate foy big round of applause. we are talking about the new wall street journal survey that shows traditional values have dropped dramatically. 70% of americans thought patriotism was important. now it is about half the. so would you agree that americans now are less patr patriotic? nate foy, what do you think about this survey and what you think is happening in this
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country? >> reporter: it is unfortunate to hear, trace. i think an example of this playing out, if you get back to famous speech where he said, ask what you can do for their country and you juxtapose that with ed markey just a few years ago who campaigned on quite literally the exact opposite message saying it is now time to ask, what your country can do for you. but i notice about the results of this poll is that it is a rejection of the group over the cells. you look at things that are down, religion, community involvement, family, patriotism. they always involve putting a group over yourself and so possibly based of the results of this, if they are accurate, it appears maybe we have a narcissism problem. >> trace: i was criticized, kevin corke, for having a flag in front of our house. we had a flag flying and people that are criticizing that. do you think, really? because you have a flag, it is the symbol of some nefarious deeds? >> kevin: it is so frustrating to me to hear that. i'm sorry you went through that.
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because i consider myself among the patriotic americans. i think it depends, though, trace, where you live. you know? some parts of our country, we have not lost a step. and other parts of the country, i think we have lost a lot and that i think that is reflected in the polling. >> trace: twitter, are americans less pedroia? 68% said yes. instagram, 80% say we are less patriotic. shana of our, millennials have been taught to be ashamed of everything they are including american. jackie ibanez, your sauce. >> reporter: your point about the american flag, i was asked to take down the flag pole and a flag from in front of our house when we put the pictures up on land because it was just too catholic, the divide was too much, which was really sad. that they wanted me -- and we did end up taking it down. i was asked to do it. >> trace: and jonathan hunt. >> jonathan: as someone who came from the uk, came to be an american citizen eight years a
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ago, i would just say there's. this is and always will be the greatest country in the world. i'm absolutely honored and privileged to have been allowed in. there's nowhere better. >> trace: hear, hear. divided country to focus more on pronouns rather than what our enemies are doing it. thank you all. kevin castaneda, welcome. johnson, jackie, and thank you all for watching america's late news. we will see you back here. good night. ould do. bp, illinois, takes on their web site, uploaded everything, and i was blownyourb away. us >> what they could do,alify yo get refunds, .com to help go t businesses get over a billion businesses get over a billion dollars and we can helo ped. your business. innov yoatu qualify your business for a big refund in eight minutes. to get refunds .com to get started powered by innovation funds before their choice. >> my dental health was so bad
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