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tv   Americas Newsroom  FOX News  March 28, 2023 6:00am-7:00am PDT

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>> reporting from nashville. he will be back there tomorrow for "fox & friends." >> such a sad story. those families in our thoughts and prayers. police officers were heroes. >> i'll talk more about it on the radio. see you in a moment. >> bill: thank you, guys, good morning, everybody. the makings of a massacre. inside the hallway of the mass shooting in nashville. the shooter roaming the halls of the christian school where she was once a student before murdering six people. tough way to start today. good morning. good to have you with us today. bill hemmer. dana has time off. from washington, d.c. welcome back to new york, aishah hosni here. >> i'm aishah hosni on this tough morning. "america's newsroom." that shooter began by blasting her way into that school. you see it there.
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she is shooting through a set of double doors and then punching her way through the broken glass. she then makes her way through the halls of that school. she is armed with two ar-style rifles and a pistol. police say she had drawn elaborate maps of the school and call this attack calculated and planned. >> bill: when she was over she shot and killed six people. three small kids. names evelyn dieckhaus, hallie scruggs and william kinney all nine years old. cynthia peak was a substitute teachers. katherine koonce was the head of the school and mike hill was a custodian. audrey hale was the shooter. her motive is unknown. she bought two of those guns legally. she also left behind a manifesto which hopefully we'll see soon and she recently began to
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identify as transgender. >> bill: we're learning the names the officers who shot and killed her. they are on the screen now. police are praised for a quick response arriving on the scene inside the school in only 14 minutes. >> those heinous killings are shot areing families in that community searching for answers. and we are as well. here is the police chief. >> we had officers coming out, hands bleeding. emotional. i hugged one of the officers who almost collapsed in my hands. i saw little kids coming out and that was really tough for me because they looked like a little bit above knee high. they were waving and my heart just dropped. it is like why? why? >> bill: we'll talk to retired nypd inspector paul morrow in studio but first live to
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nashville. c.b., hello. >> our apologies on the audio. we'll get it sorted out. here is paul morrow with us now. trying to piece this together. manifesto has a lot of information and not made public. one item police talked about from this whatever she left behind. her written word that she had planned to go to several locations. beyond that we haven't been told much. >> manifesto is going to tell us a lot. clearly it was planned and her motives here will be key to how everybody assesses this. one of the things i would point out that you bring up is her original target she decide ed was too hard but she went to the school. we had this here in the city.
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a recently convicted the west side highway attack. his original target was the halloween parade. when he saw the level of scrutiny and the level of security around it, the nypd had put out a lot of assets so that somebody like him would see that and decide to go elsewhere. i was on scene for that. it could have been a lot worse that day. the point is defensive measures do work. in this case she didn't entirely work. unfortunately the defensive measures that might have worked were not in place here. >> we'll find out the why at some point and that's important. whatever the motive is, six people are dead and there had to have been warning signs. there were some. if we can pull up this instagram private message the shooter sent to a friend. the shooter writes basically i'm planning to die today. this is not a joke.
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you will probably hear about me on the news after i die. we know that the mother also knew something was wrong. so a lot has to have happened from someone being suicidal to going into a school to shoot a bunch of kids. >> a very pertinent question. the debate we always have relates to the second amendment. sometimes we forget that very embedded is the debate about the first amendment. is anybody watching these sort of exchanges? in this case my understanding is that her friend immediately called the police. it was too late. the idea of see something say something did work. the response time was very quick. 14 minutes until this thing was terminated. kudos to the cops. but there are -- these sorts of people, the people who end up going kinetic and do these shootings leave a trail. when you look back you see things that are missed. the tension is how much can government keep an eye on that
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without violating the first amendment? we didn't have these sort of incidents for a long time in new york city because the terrorism program was heavily lawyered. i was in the middle of it. as a lawyer and operationally. and we did everything we could under the limits of the first amendment to keep an eye. i can't tell you how many possible threats like this we were able to interdict without having to go kinetic ourselves and storm the school. >> bill: you mentioned government. the reaction from the white house on this from yesterday. the president and press secretary. >> president biden: we have to do more to stop gun violence. it is ripping our communities apart. we have to do more to protect our schools. i call on congress again to pass my assault weapons ban. it's about time we begin to make more progress. >> how many more children have to be murdered before republicans and congress will step up and act to pass the assault weapons ban?
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>> bill: paul, you can react to that. we also know, since it was a private school, they did not employ a resource officer at that school. >> unfortunate. i hate to put it this way but you can get a retired cop who is at the end of his career. licensed to carry a firearm. it's a cheap date. take a retired cop and put him in a booth and you will stop most things. it won't be very expensive. i would advocate that. regarding assault weapons. i don't know what they mean by that or if they know what they mean by that because an ar shoots single shot with each trigger pull. people the end to think at automatic assault weapon, a machine gun. that's not what an ar does. this is a very nuanced discussion. realistically what it comes down to is if you are going to put these measures in place, we have to trust the referee. we have to trust the people who are going to enforce this stuff, okay?
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if such a ban were ever put in place. if they managed to get over that hump. in light of things like russia collusion, hunter biden laptop, the focus, the incredible focus on donald trump to the exclusion of other things. the fact that portland and seattle have burned down. all those seem to have gone away. how will we trust the referee here? think about just the i.r.s. for instance. showing up at matt taibbi's door after the twitter thing? the weaponization of the irs going back to the lois learner a affair. when we are supposed to trust the government to enforce the second amendment that's a big ask. >> bill: this debate continues and has for some time. a lot of people are asking the same question that police captain is asking in nashville. why repeatedly, why? we get a news conference today. thank you for being here. >> the lights flickered and i
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just hollered. and my husband opened the door when i said cooler and he started shoving us all in. as he was closing the door he looked up and said i see the sky. >> incredible stories coming from the scene of this massive tornado. rescue and recovery efforts underway across the southeast now after one of the regions deadliest tornado outbreaks in a century. two dozen dead. 1500 homes and businesses gone. charles watson is live on the ground in amory, mississippi with the latest there. >> good morning, aishah, a bit of good news from the emergency management agency. monday folks were able to conclude the search and rescue efforts. after that were able to downgrade the death toll in mississippi from at least 25 to now down to 21. walking around amory this
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morning, it's amazing how much progress they've been able to make in the last few days in terms of cleanup. a lot of debris hanging around in the streets and on sidewalks has been moved out of the way. they have a long road to go with big items like this building here behind me. you can see it has extensive roof damage. lots of metal shingles hanging down. you see a lot of bricks hanging around this building. out in the neighborhoods folks are working tirelessly to clean up their homes and going through their properties just trying to salvage whatever they can. what is really amazing as these folks wait for their insurance adjusters and fema to come give them assistance, they really have positive attitudes. i spoke to a woman named stella who was in her home when the tornado swept through her community and ripped her home apart. she said she is in such good
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spirits because she didn't expect to be here today. listen to what she said. >> i didn't think i would make it out. the house is cracking up. it sounded like a box breaking loose. >> they are making good progress but still need lots of donations down here, water, hygiene items, canned goods. for folks looking to donate go to msmec.com. there is a list of locations where folks can drop off the items and items that are needed at this time. >> good point there. charles watson live in mississippi. we appreciate it. mississippi governor tate reeves will join us at the top of the hour. we'll also talk with jimmie burrow, father of joe burrow whose childhood home was flattened by this tornado. devastating for so many families. >> i care about the veterans and
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gold star mothers. marine sergeant andrews, arm and had the suicide bomber in his fight and wasn't permission to engage. that's what i care about. if they don't deliver by monday close of business i'll serve the subpoena. >> that was yesterday. michael mccaul passed the deadline of monday living up to his word on the subpoena for antony blinken. will there ever be accountability for the kabul care yes >> what a government watchdog is revealing about pennsylvania lawmaker senator john fetterman. >> bill: dozens killed in a fire at a migrant facility just south of the border. mayokas gearing up for a tough round of questions before a senate panel today. everyone, os complete balanced nutrition. together we provide nutrients to support immune, muscle, bone, and heart health. yaaay! woo hoo!
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>>a >> bill: update from the hill. government watchdog revealing john fetterman largely missing from senate action. the democratic lawmaker has missed 53 of 64 senate roll call votes since checking himself into a hospital last month to get treatment for clinical depression. 83% of votes missed. the lifetime record is 2% for all senators. 18 past now. with this. >> we need this. the american people deserve to see it to know what in the world is going on in those critical weeks. i have the subpoena. it's right here. i'm prepared to serve this. >> aishah: he has done it. house foreign affairs committee michael mccaul following through on that threat from last thursday. he has signed a subpoena now to
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be delivered to secretary of state antony blinken first thing this morning for failing to turn over that key document this committee is looking for. mccaul now joining us live from washington. good to see you and have you on the show. so you've signed, sealed and delivered this thing. let me read the response really quickly from the secretary of state's office. the state department's office saying the state department followed up with the committee to reiterate its willingness to provide a briefing about the concerns raised and the challenges identified by embassy kabul including in the dissent channel. the committee chose instead to issue a subpoena. they are saying we tried to work with you and then you made this move. what is your response to their reaction? >> well, we negotiated in good faith. the fact is, aishah, they would not provide the dissenting
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cables even in a classified setting, which is what i agreed to do. the fact is all they agreed to provide was a summary of the cables, which would be a filter, if you will, of the state department's interpretation of these dissenters. remember, this dissenting cable is an extraordinary event. 23 individuals on the ground at the embassy were warning secretary blinken and the administration about the policy that they objected to the policy. dissented from the policy coming out of the white house and were put in such a dangerous situation that they sent this classified cable to washington. the response was also recorded. they will not show us that rick either. i will not just sit back and take a sort of sanitized format of the state department's filtered version of these cables. we made that clear all along. we agreed to redact the names if
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they would give us the content of these cables, which they refused to do. unfortunately i was a federal prosecutor for many years. you have to go forward with your case and that's what we're doing right now. >> aishah: is there a smoking gun in these cables? what if you're right and what if you think are in the cables is true once you get ahold of them? what happens next? >> we don't know. that's the problem, aishah, we don't know what are in these cables. we know it was very extraordinary. it gives you the state of mind at the time kabul was falling and collapsing and the state of mind of the secretary of state and his response. but why are they so adamant about not providing these cables even in a classified setting, which i agreed to do? that raises my suspicion as a former federal prosecutor as well. there is something in these cables we're just -- that we need to know. i think, as i said, you know,
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you showed the clip, the gold star mothers, the veterans, the ones who gave their lives to this cause, they need to know as well and marine sergeant vargas andrews, the blast from the suicide bomber when you had the suicide bomber in his sights but was not given permission to engage. that is just horrific. >> aishah: let me ask you about the families but a lot of americans feel like nobody was held accountable after this botched exit. it has been nearly two years and nothing has happened. so i want to play for you the sound from a mother of a marine who was killed at that suicide bombing at abby gate. listen to this. >> i don't have any questions. i know what happened. i want justice. so i don't believe that they will be the truth. they come to my house, lied to me in private. i don't think they'll tell the
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truth on the world stage. i can hope. serve the subpoena and get it to them and get what we can get and let's see but i don't think they will be honest. >> aishah: what will you do with this committee to get some accountability? >> exactly what we did. we served a subpoena. i want accountability. the american people and mothers like you just saw deserve this. we had a gold star mother at the hearing whose daughter marine sergeant was blown up in the blast. devastated to hear the testimony it could have been prevented and yet nothing was done to stop that suicide bomber. they deserve answers. and you know what, one came up to me just yesterday and gave me a big hug in tears and gave me her son's brace let and said keep fighting. we deserve answers. it's the people left behind that
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deserve answers. this administration is stonewalling and i will hold them accountability and i will not rest until we get that dissent cable. >> aishah: 144 americans left behind in afghanistan. chairman mccaul, thank you for your time and for being here. >> thank you. >> bill: 24 past following the money. what newly obtain records reveal about hunter biden's chinese business dealings. plus this coming up here. homeland security secretary mayokas testifying on the hill at the top of the hour. lawmakers call to impeach him over the raging border crisis. senator lindsey graham on what we can expect at today's hearing live. >> they claim that it's a sovereign nation. that's stupid to say when the country is on fire and when the country has been taking half of the regions and territories have been taken by the cartels so we are in war with them. i had periodontal disease,
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>> aishah: tragic news we're following out of northern mexico this morning. a mexican official says 39 people have died and 29 hurt after a fire at a migrant detention center. it broke out late last night just across the border from el paso, texas. homeland security secretary mayokas is set to appear about the senate judiciary committee at the top of the hour facing tough questions about the ongoing border crisis. senator lindsey graham, ranking member of that committee joining us in a few moments. first we go live to mission, texas, where alexis mcadams is sta standing by with the latest on that tragedy. >> a few moments ago the president of mexico had a press conference where he said it is a tragedy that all that has happened in that facility saying the migrants who were inside that facility that died were set to be deported and started a fire. this comes as tensions have been
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building there near that facility as thousands of migrants are waiting to enter the united states. take a look here. these are pictures and videos where this all happened near the mexico border near the border with the united states. inside of the dormitory at a mexican immigration detention center near the u.s. border. it left more than three dozen migrants dead and 29 others injured. that was in mexico across from el paso, texas. one of the most deadly incidents at an immigration facility in mexico. at least 68 men from central and south america were being held in that facility when the blaze broke out. we don't know how many people were inside at the time. the body bags are on the ground as officials try to find the cause of this fire. the migrants being held in that facility in mexico were part of the thousands of migrants waiting to cross into the u.s. wanting to enter through el paso, texas. border patrol tells fox news that sector is the busiest in the country with more than 1,000
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migrants crossing in every single day. >> between october 1st and the end of february we have over 224,000 apprehensions. that's going to be 156% increase from the same time frame of last year. >> this morning officials calling for a full investigation as this is one of many detention facilities in mexico that just continue to struggle with major overcrowding there and take a look at this video. remember this. fox news cameras captured this two weeks ago when 1,000 migrants rushed across that bridge near this facility that we are talking about with the fire to try and get into the united states. they were stopped before they could get into el paso but it shows you how there are so many issues on both sides of the border and how many people are tying to get here every day. 1,000 people a day. >> aishah: it's chaotic. >> bill: senator lindsey graham
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with me now. thank you for your time. your hearing starts in 30 minutes. mayokas will be there. what is your first question? >> well, i'm going to paint a picture before we ask questions. the case that america is in a war with drug cartels. our nation is under attack by drug cartels. the president of mexico denies that they operate in mexico freely in certain areas. some will make the case we're under attack and what will we do about it? i will make the case we lost operational control of the border. we went from the lowest illegal crossings to december of 2020 to the highest on record. and point out to the secretary the number of people on the terrorist watch list apprehended at the border is going up like a rocket ship. my first question is do you agree you are failing miserably and what will you do to change? >> bill: well, i think we already know how he will answer that. we know how republicans want him
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out of his job. that comes at a higher level, frankly. but just two days ago we got this tweet and this on instagram from the president. his official account said maga house republican proposals would slash funding for border security. a move that could allow nearly 900 pounds of fentanyl into our country. we need more resources to secure the border, not less. your reaction on that. >> here is my reaction. whatever problems the house republicans may have, if you think being soft on immigration is not one of them. this is offensive to me that the president would suggest that the republican party is weak on the border. mr. president, since you've been in charge, everything has gone to hell in a hand basket. you have had the largest number of illegal immigrant crossings on your watch in the history of the country. the drug cartels are poisoning
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more americans every year than are killed by car wrecks and gun violence combined. you have no solution to these problems. you withdrew from afghanistan and general, the sent come commander said within six months isis members in afghanistan can attack america without warning and one of the easiest ways to do that is come through a broken border. so this is an effort to deflect that will fall flat. >> bill: fentanyl is now the leading cause of teenage overdose deaths. look at this number here. between 2010 and 2021 the number of adolescent deaths from black-market fentanyl grew by 20-fold to 884 in 2021. now the president of mexico was quoted the other day as saying the u.s. and canada have more fentanyl than mexico. that's what he said. >> listen, he also urged people
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to vote republican in the united states. he said hugs are better than law enforcement. what i would say to the president of mexico, you are in denial. you denied a statement by secretary blinken where he acknowledges that parts of mexico are under drug cartel control, not yours, mr. president of mexico. he is not a reliable partner. so what is going to change? i have legislation i will introduce to make drug cartels foreign terrorist organizations. we need to put our military into the game to stop this and destroy the labs on the ground in mexico. try to work with mexico to come up with a different solution. the law enforcement model is not working. we are under attack. there are more americans being killed by mexican drug cartels than isis, al qaeda, the germans and japanese combined on the homeland. the biggest loss of death in the history of america by foreign powers is occurring on president
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biden's watch at the hands of mexican drug cartels and we are doing nothing about it. >> bill: political campaigns might change that. we'll see what happens at your hearing. lindsey graham, thanks. >> aishah: we're watching this. senate armand services committee holding its own hearing this morning on the pentagon's budget request for 2024. asking for a lot of money. defense secretary lloyd austin, under secretary of defense michael mccord and chairman of the joint chiefs of staff mark milley facing tough questioning on the growing threat from china and russia and whether their defense budget accounts for inflation and questions about our naval fleet as well. we'll monitor their testimony and bring you highlights. >> bill: the i.r.s. paid a visit to the home of matt taibbi as he was testifying in congress. the backlash at critics raise
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concerns over possible government intimidation. a new poll is out revealing that the importance of traditional american values has fallen. could patriotism and hard work become things of the past? shannon bream is here today to talk about it. ♪ ♪ this feels so right... ♪
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>> the one and only chocolate oreo. >> bill: scientists are on a quest want to answer an age-old question. what is the best way to twist apart an oreo? you came up from washington, d.c. for this. stumping researchers and taking on the challenge. they tested more than 1,000 cookies in search of the perfect method. all concluding there is no method to the madness. filling was split down the middle. two in ten or yoseos and strong than sticky and less likely to be pulled apart. >> aishah: mine are not even.
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i didn't get enough. this is not the best way to eat them. the best way is deep fried. you have had deep fried oreos, right, at the fair in ohio? >> bill: no. i could not stand the chocolate. one more. try that. >> aishah: when it's in the dairy queen cakes. >> bill: let's do one more. a fail. two in ten. m.i.t. is correct, that's our conclusion. i would only eat the cream. >> aishah: what is your favorite cookie? >> bill: peanut butter. >> aishah: illegal marijuana shops are flooding new york city neighborhoods. law enforcement said they bring crime and other drugs with them. fox business correspondent madison allworth took a ride with the sheriff. what she learned. >> yes, we got the chance yesterday to ride along with the sheriff's department as they went after the nearly 1400
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stores that have been told by the community for potentially selling marijuana illegally stores like the one behind me that is shut down because of multiple citations. our investigation would be focused on the borough of queens. be wary. our day ended in a shop that officers found did not possess a license to sell any tobacco products whatsoever and found something else underneath the cash register. >> did you find the location dirty. we checked the different compartments. looked inside the box and it is right there. >> even more product was proudly on display. edibles and 69 thc vape pensacola in the open. >> it is all about legislation getting back to what we can
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enforce and what the individual can sell. they are out here prematurely selling these items without licenses. everything is illicit and out here doing our job. locations close to schools and churches. >> since the task force started in november there have been over $10 million worth of assets seized and 35 arrests. marijuana is legal in new york city but the thing is there are only four legal dispensaries located in new york and there are 1400 shops given these warnings from the community that they might be selling tobacco products illegally or marijuana illegally and the sheriff's task force is making their way through that long list. >> aishah: great reporting. >> bill: the chinese american bank behind biden family transactions handing over records to investigators. ron johnson spoke about the republican probe on sunday. >> a multiple tier system of
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justice. one for the kid glove treatment that hunter biden experienced. is that the chinese communist party, a shot across president biden's bow saying listen, this is some of the information we have. if you don't tow the line and do things that please us, we're going to provide more information? >> bill: byron york is here and so is "new york post" political reporter john levine. talking about cafe back out of hong kong. and this is financial transactions, i believe, 2017 through 2018. this would be joe biden coming out of the white house. >> critical period after joe biden leaves the vice presidentsy. hunter and business colleagues were looking for ways to monetize him. i don't know exact will i what senator johnson has in his possession. we're in the information business and it is a good thing to know more and see what's there. hopefully they will come out to the public. a limit to what he can do on the
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senate side. they're in the minority and why all the energy has been on the house side. especially given how recall is trent providing information banks will be what tells us if there is a there there. hunter and friends were not running around with bags of money in dollar signs. all their businesses were conducted through banks and there are financial transactions and banks can tell us how much people were getting paid and when and who was getting paid. what we won't know is the why. these are questions ultimately with the investigation. >> bill: byron, what are your questions now? >> the big question is was joe biden somehow involved? if you listen to representative james comer of the oversight committee, the very day the republicans took power he said we're looking for bank records. that's what we're trying to get. and one extraordinary thing that senator johnson said in that interview on sunday was he said are the -- is the justice
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department conducting a serious investigation? we have no idea. this is something in which members of the house, republicans have the majority, are very much by themselves. to the degree that they can get some cooperation and actual records, things on paper, data, they will have a case to make even if the justice department completely ignores it. >> bill: we'll wait on that. as i've said it has been five years, no answers yet. now donald trump. john, what do you think comes out of the southern district of new york, if anything? >> the truth is, i have slotly no idea. i have been on pins and needles for two weeks. we remember former president trump said he would be arrested last tuesday. that came and went. the grand jury has met and then it hasn't met and met on monday again but no charges. and maybe it will meet later this week, maybe it won't. the universal consensus i am getting it is a very political
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investigation. even democrats in new york will be the first to say that. andrew cuomo said it is undermining public trust. people like alvin bragg are elected officials. state attorney general james is an elected official. they ran on platforms to prosecute or bring litigation against trump. so the american people are looking at this saying is this the real deal or are you fulfilling a campaign promise? >> bill: byron. >> to tie it to our first topic you have representative comer again seeking information and jim jordan as well of the house judiciary committee seeking information from alvin bragg about this. bragg is stonewalling and told them to get lost. it appears -- it appears that bragg is exploring some sort of hybrid charge in which trump would be charged with falsifying a record, a new york state charge, but also for covering up
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a federal crime, an election crime. if bragg is alleging that trump broke some federal law, then the chairman of the house judiciary committee has a reason to look into that. so no matter what happens here, i think republicans in the house might be able to find out a little bit of what is going on behind the scenes here. >> bill: we wait on both. nice to see you both. thank you for coming in today. aishah, what's next? >> aishah: more violent crime in the nation's capital after a staffer for rand paul was stabbed. what we know about that brutal attack. people remember ads with a catchy song. so to help you remember that liberty mutual customizes your home insurance, here's a little number you'll never forget. ♪ customize and save. ♪
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>> aishah: a new poll finds a major shift away from traditional american values. support for patriotism, religion, starting families, all of it falling from a generation ago. joining us now is "fox news
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sunday" anchor shannon bream, author of the new book "the love stories of the bible speak." shannon, good to see you this morning. i want to start with your book. it comes out today. it's everything, the good, bad, ugly of all the different stories in the bible. what was your biggest takeaway? >> it reminded me of god's unconditional love for all of us. we have stories of romance and friendship and god's love that is unconditional and so struck in the last 24 hours a new round of grief and suffering in this country and in nashville, specifically, about the story of job. his friends came to meet him and comfort him. when they saw him from far away they were stunned about by the bad shape he was in and devastating. they began weeping. they showed up and sat with him for seven days without saying a word. so often when we know somebody who suffered a terrible loss we
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hesitate to reach out because we feel awkward or worry our words will come out wrong. just do it. looking away from a friend's pain. plunge into the anguish with them. just show up. i'm struck by that message of being there for our friends and loving each other the best we know how in these really difficult circumstances. >> aishah: people are already fighting over that situation in nashville. perhaps people need to read your book. we have a crisis of faith in this country. if we can pull up vivek ramaswamy editorial. if you ask most people my age what it means to be an american today you get a blank stare in response. students across america today are taught to apologize for our country's history rather than be proud of it. so he is sort of saying this starts in the schools. what do you make of this? >> it's really disturbing and
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sad to see the polling that says to the younger generation things like faith, family, hard work, those things are all receding as things that are important in life and finding community bonds. we've had such tough things. economy is bad, covid has just wreaked havoc and caused so much loss and pain for so many of us. people are feeling untethered from each other and the things that give us support. it was sad in the polling that shows also that one thing that's grown in importance for people as this polling has gone faith is down, family is down, community is down and hard work is down. money is the one thing in the poll that is up. the importance of money. i think it just -- we all need to take a little check on our priorities and really check on each other, that fabric of those important things and how they bind us together and support each other. >> aishah: money and likes, social media, we are so addicted to it. >> the fact tolerance is down. tolerating each other and
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different ideas. this country you can say what you think and hold the beliefs you want but we have to respect the space for each other to do that. it is way down in the polling as well, the idea of tolerance. >> aishah: it is what i love most about this country. we can have discussions. thank you so much, shannon bream. we appreciate it. your new book out today. it will be another best seller i'm sure. thank you for being with us. >> thanks. >> bill: 10:00 a.m. in new york. fox news alert at the top of the hour. several hearings now underway on capitol hill. top military leaders in the hot seat as america faces growing challenges around the world. dhs secretary mayokas facing pointed questions about the raging border crisis. the senate banking committee looking into the recent collapse of two american banks. there is a house hearing digging into learning loss during the pandemic. all important topics. we watch all of it and we'll bring you headlines unfolding on the hill. to our top story t

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