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tv   America Reports  FOX News  April 7, 2023 10:00am-11:00am PDT

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four of you. happy easter. >> thanks to everyone for watching. don't forget to dvr the show. here is "america reports." >> they took a life. are you comprehending that? they took a life without thought. they deserve the full extent of the law. >> john: emotionally charged moment in marion county, florida, arrests two boys, age 12 and 17 in the murder of three teens. >> after the deadly shootings of three teenage friends, their bodies turning up one by one over the span of three days. the sheriff called the killings work of a wannabe game. ted williams is in florida following the case.
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he'll join us with his thoughts on the arrests and the nation's growing crime crisis coming up. >> so you are saying the option to authorize war powers is on the table? >> if communist china invaded taiwan, it would certainly be on the table and something that would be discussed by congress. >> john: house foreign affairs committee michael mccaul making it clear the united states will uphold the pledge to protect taiwan, saying it could empower the president to use military force if the island is invaded. this is "america reports" and anita vogel, welcome to friday. >> beijing strongly opposed taiwan's president visiting the u.s. and meeting with house
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speaker mccarthy. >> john: and lawmakers will meet with tsai ing-wen in her country, a move to certainly embolden the chinese government. and how the u.s. might respond if china invades taiwan. >> aishah hasnie is on the ground with more on this. hello, aishah. >> hi there, anita and john. chairman mccaul, in order to avoid conflict but told me that authorizing war powers not out of the question here. >> so speaker mccarthy and yourself have said that multiple times now, that we need to arm taiwan now before there is any sort of invasion. what about u.s. troops? >> then you are talking about authorized use of military force that would come out of my committee or a declaration of
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war, which we have not utilized since world war ii. >> would you support that? >> if china, communist china invades taiwan, i think that is certainly, if the american people support this, the congress will follow. >> so tensions have been ramping up ever since taiwan's president met with house speaker kevin mccarthy in california this week. in fact, that meeting has now resulted in china slapping sanctions on any one who helped to put that together. the hudson institute, the ronald reagan presidential library, and the four leaders of these two locations are all sanctioned now, means they can no longer engage in any activities with china. the ccp is claiming that these places and people provided a "platform and convenience" to taiwan separatist activities. back here in taipei, this bipartisan delegation is getting
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ready to meet in-person with president tsai and wait to see what china does next. john, anita. >> good job there on getting the interview. >> john: dan davis, senior fellow and military expert for defense priorities. thanks for being with us. play more of the interview with the chairman, repeats what he said and expands from there. >> if communist china invaded taiwan, it would certainly be on the table and something that would be discussed by congress and with the american people. are they prepared to do this. is taiwan worth it. i can argue for a lot of reasons why it is. >> john: put him on the same page as president biden who said i believe it's on four occasions that the u.s. would militarily
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come to the aid of taiwan if china were to invade. is this the strong message that china needs to hear? >> no, i'll tell you what we need to cool the jets right now on any kind of talk like that because i can assure you that the cost to the united states to make good on those kinds of threats, whether it's from president biden or from chairman mccaul will not help us, and it will not deter. these statements make war more likely, not less likely. like he says we are not going to be intimidated, china is the same way. this is not the 1990s we can tell them whatever we wanted, they had no power to do anything about it, the rules have changed. conditions have changed and we are going to have to change our policy right now very quickly to focus on things that can deter
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conflict and benefit our country so we are not in a destructive war to do no good for our country or taiwan. >> john: what about the peace through strength and if china thinks there would not be any consequences to invading taiwan, it might go ahead and do it. >> peace through strength and wisdom, and blindly saying all we are going to do is use the threat of military force without using wisdom and how or when you apply that and engaging in diplomacy and understanding it means you don't get all of your way, you have to give and take in order to get the good things and that's the part of the equation we are missing and that could drag us into a war that we otherwise should never have to fight. >> john: i want to ask you about this summary report the white house released and the after action report regarding the withdrawal from afghanistan. john kirby, defended the
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president's actions in the withdrawal, listen to what he said here. >> for all this talk of chaos, i didn't see it, not from my perch. at one point there was an aircraft taking off full of people, americans and afghans alike, every 48 minutes. and not one single mission was missed. so i'm sorry, i won't buy the whole argument of chaos. >> he says there was no chaos there, but then two years ago that's the very word that he used to describe the situation. listen to this. >> the crowd size is smaller now than it was in those first few days, and so we are not experiencing to the degree we did, you know, last monday the physical crush and chaos. >> john: was it chaos, not chaos. the one thing he did say, he was proud the way the president handled this. what do you say? >> yeah, i say -- i don't know what definition of not chaos you
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can have when you have those images that are iconic we have all seen, people are chasing the aircraft as it's driving across the tarmac, you know, the crush of people that are trying to get into the airport and then of course the catastrophic explosion that killed a lot of u.s. marines. i don't see how anybody could say it's not chaos and it was chaotic, and a lot of this stuff deteriorated and disintegrated so rapidly that it was -- there was a lot of good things about the way the u.s. military handled this. but man, lots of things were bad that need to be called out and so basically white wash all that i think is a problem. >> john: the other thing the report suggests the intelligence community did not realize that the afghan president would fold like a cheap suit and high tail out of there, that the afghan military would fall apart and the taliban would take over in a fortnite. and as director of national
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intelligence, stated, the collapse was more quickly, more rapid than either the taliban or the afghan government expected. i'm sorry, but i knew it was going to happen, how is it the american intelligence did not know? >> that's a great question, john. i'm right with you on that. i mean, when i was stationed there in my last combat deployment in 2010-2011, i personally observed how the taliban were making deals with the afghan national security force in certain places to not have combat engagements, and we already knew in the months leading up to this disaster they were not doing a lot more of that, so it shouldn't have taken anybody by surprise. but i personally have a problem with the fact that kirby is saying no one is going to be held accountable for anything, they are not even talking about
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the fact that the pentagon failed to make a plan from the trump administration for the may 2021 plan, you know, he's blaming that on trump. the pentagon has hard questions to answer as well. >> john: apparently kirby said they were not left with a plan, mike pompeo says oh, no, we left them with a plan. but the plan would not have included a pullout because the taliban were not living up to their part of the bargain. dan, great to talk to you. thanks for getting your thoughts out here. appreciate it. happy easter. anita. >> fox news alert, john, and word coming moments ago that vice president kamala harris will travel today to meet with tennessee state lawmakers in nashville. it's after the legislature there voted yesterday to expell 2 of 3 democrats accused of breaking rules of decorum during gun control protests last week. the extraordinary step taken by the gop super majority has only been used a few times since the
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civil war. charles watson is live in nashville with more on all of this, and charles, are we expecting more protests today, what do you think? >> well, hey, good afternoon, anita. we have not seen any protests just yet but it is a possibility they could materialize some time later today. in the meantime, we are hearing from the tennessee black caucus which is expressing its outrage at successful republican efforts to expell two young black democratic lawmakers. members of the black caucus say it was akin to a jim crow trial but they say they have confidence that the people will have the last word on this. >> these two men, i have every confidence their counties and metropolitan areas are going to send them back. they are going to bring them back here. >> and so the move was retry --
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retribution how they broke rules on the gun reform in the wake of the nashville school shooting where six people were killed, and protestors have marched on the capitol since and thursday night loudly voiced their support for the trio as they walked into house chambers to defend themselves, many describe as an assault on democracy. >> sad day for democracy in tennessee and the nation. it could happen anywhere in the nation. a dangerous precedent across the nation. >> and representative johnson, who is a white woman, survived her expulsion by one vote. she says race clearly played a role in the outcomes. meantime, republicans say there's no truth to that. >> i think it's pretty clear i'm a 60-year-old white woman and they are two young black men. >> it's unfortunate, she's
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trying to put political racism in there, there was nothing on this. they were all given due process. she separated herself from the other two and said i didn't have the mega phone, i didn't yell, i didn't scream, i just stood there with them, alongside them. >> and as you mentioned today, vice president harris will travel to nashville to speak to lawmakers and advocates on how to push gun reform forward. as for pearson and johnson, under tennessee state law they are eligible to run for re-election for their seats when the special election is held probably in a few weeks from now, anita. >> and justin jones says he will be back, so we'll of course be watching all of that. charles watson live in nashville for us, thank you, charles. >> john: interesting to see, anita, the vice president is going to nashville to meet with the two expelled along with a number of protestors, i don't
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believe there is plans for her to meet with the families of the children murdered. >> i didn't see that yet, john. we will have to see. it is interesting, though, how this scene at the statehouse started as a protest over gun reform and really went into something else completely. >> john: we should also point out that neither the vice president nor the president visited east palestine, ohio either after the derailment of the train. clearly they are picking and choosing where and when and what issue to show up on. the murder of a tech executive not far from where you are in san francisco, anita, fueling calls for change from some of his friends who are fed up with violence in the city, and update on the investigation as police there continue to search for a killer. >> shocking murder there. plus, a big break i want murders of three florida teens with police arresting two juvenile suspects in connection to the case. former d.c. homicide detective ted williams will join us on that and the troubling trend of
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youth offenders in the u.s., coming up next. >> gangs don't go to church con sunday and then preach the gospel for the next six days. they are gangs because they commit crimes.
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>> john: police in san francisco have yet to identify a suspect or motive in the murder of cash app founder bob lee as disturbing new video shows what happened after the attack. the tech executive was stabbed repeatedly early tuesday morning in the rincon hill neighborhood. senseless murder shining a light
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on the crime crisis that's plaguing the city. claudia is live in sausalito, california. any new leads in this case? >> well, john, good developments, how police chief bill scott put it last night, expressing confidence the case will be solved and comes as we witness the final moments of bob lee's life. on video, nothing short of heartbreaking. surveillance footage obtained by "daily mail" website shows lee right after he had been repeatedly stabbed in the chest, staggering along the sidewalk bleeding, trying to flag down a driver or door man to no avail. new york post obtained dispatch auditor general following the frantic call to 911, he screamed help, somebody stabbed me. dispatcher tells emergency responders "advised he's bleeding out." reportedly a kitchen knife with a four inch blade was found in a parking lot but police have not
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confirmed that was the murder weapon and tight lipped about the investigation. yesterday some of lee's friends launched a change.org petition to seek justice for bob lee and make san francisco safe again. calls on city leaders to take stronger action against violent offenders and to improve public safety. lee had recently moved to miami, his friends say he did not feel safe in san francisco anymore. he called it "a cesspool" but had to come back last friday for a meeting and then extended the trip to see friends. it has drawn attention to a rise in violent crimes including four stabbings in four days, even in nicer parts of the city where he was attacked. a meeting last night, the police chief bill scott hinted arrest could come soon with the mayor and district attorney promising to hold those responsible fully accountable. john. >> claudia, thank you.
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>> the fact is, society fails them. we do not hold our juveniles accountable. we minimize their actions. >> anita: a florida sheriff calling for accountability amid a rise in youth violence. two suspects are in custody and one on the run in the murder of three teenage friends in marion county, florida. big questions remain as family and friends mourn their loss. ted williams, i know you've been in florida covering this case. this was just a stunning news conference this morning from the sheriff displaying a sense of candor that we don't normally see. he talked about the kind of punishments that these suspects should face. take a listen to what he said.
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>> full extent because they took a life. are y'all comprehending that? they took a life without thought. they deserve the full extent of the law. >> anita: ted, he's talking about the juvenile suspects arrested, aged 12 and 17, what are your thoughts on what the sheriff said? >> you know, anita, i've got to tell you. when you look at what the men and women of the marion county sheriff department did within a small period of time to bring these criminals to justice, you have to take your hat off. sheriff billy woods was very, very emotional and he spoke out and i think he spoke for america. anita, we see juvenile and
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juveniles committing incessantly in our society these days and times. and the unfortunate thing is that juveniles on many occasions get a slap on the wrist and they go back out and they repeat crime. sheriff woods was right on target. and you got to understand what he was faced with. it was last thursday that they located the body of one of the juveniles that had been shot, a 16-year-old girl. she was still alive, but unfortunately she passed away. and then on friday there was a young 17-year-old victim that they found dead. and then on saturday in the submerged car of the first victim they found another victim. this is the backdrop of what
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sheriff wood and his men and women were faced with, and they went out there and they did the job and they now believe that they have the suspects in custody, they are still looking for one of the three suspects. >> anita: yeah, ted, you were talking about the timeline in which the teens were found. we have a map that we can bring up to show the distance apart where these teens were found and the timeline there. it's -- it's kind of a tangled web of a case, and you are right, the sheriff was extremely emotional. he thanked his investigators for doing a topnotch job, even thanked the media, but they are looking for another suspect so what do you think comes next in their investigation? what will investigators do next to try to find this third suspect? >> well, they will continue to process the physical evidence that they have found at these various crime scenes.
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and what they are doing now is they are asking for the citizens here in florida to help them to locate this third suspect. and what you found, anita, in this case, was that the citizens work with law enforcement to bring about a conclusion here as it pertains to the arrests of two of the three individuals that they are looking for. this was excellent law enforcement work. >> anita: yes, it certainly was, and we certainly do hope that they find that third suspect soon. ted, please keep us up to date there on the ground in florida. ted williams, former d.c. homicide detective, thank you, ted. >> my pleasure. >> speeds at 115, speeds at 115. >> john: shocking new video of human smugglers leading authorities on a dangerous high speed chase with one texas
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d.p.s. trooper lucky to be alive. live at the border with the latest. next. >> anita: squatters tormenting homeowners, one group helping landlords to get them out. on the front lines of this issue, we are going to be joined next. >> the legal process is so slow than at some point when they are in there, you will feel like that they have more rights than you do. my name is brian delallo. i teach ap and honors economics in pittsburgh, pennsylvania. financial well-being to me is knowing that i can be free to do the things that i love to do. i hope when i retire someday, they say, that guy made this place a special place to come to school and gave as much as he could to help the community.
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if you're anything like me, you love spending time scrolling through your feed. whoa, check out this blast from the past. oh, what's this? the sofia vergara collection at america's best? wow, amazing styles and unbelievable prices? now that's quite the duo. get two pairs of sofia vergara frames plus a free exam for $89.95 for a limited time at america's best. book an exam online at americasbest.com. speaking of duos, i hope she checks her mentions. almost done...and...post. >> anita: welcome back. shocking new video shows a dangerous pursuit in texas that nearly cost a texas d.p.s. trooper his life as a suspected human smuggler leads law enforcement on a high speed
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chase. matt is live in eagle pass, texas with more. and you know, it seems like every day or every week we see these jaw-dropping pursuits along the border. >> yeah, anita, sometimes they end up in horrific crashes or mass casualties, that did not happen in this case. a texas d.p.s. trooper lays down strike strips and then jumped to save his own life. >> he just tried to run over the trooper. >> silver passenger car will be westbound on 80. >> a texas d.p.s. trooper, the chase reaches 120 miles per hour. another trooper on the ground throws down the spike strips and then the driver of the silver car appears to try to run over the trooper narrowly missing him. the driver eventually lost control and was arrested.
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he had a previous warrant for assault with a deadly weapon and was involved in a human smuggling operation. in a separate high speed pursuit yesterday morning, if you look closely on the right side of the screen, several illegal migrants baling out of the truck in dark clothing. driver was arrested and ten migrants were apprehended. we have been on many ride alongs where deputies have to give chase in the thick texas brush, it's not easy, and often times whether they are on foot or by car, authorities end up arresting people with previous criminal records or make major fentanyl busts. >> that is just incredible video, i don't know if the troopers train for anything like that, but thank goodness the trooper will be ok. john. >> they took over the house and
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we couldn't collect not even a dollar rent. i can't get in a war with these anymore, i'm losing the battle, i'm going to let go of our property and lose everything. >> the legal process is so slow, and at some point when they're in there you are going to feel like that they have more rights than you do. >> john: squatters are making life miserable for homeowners and landlords across the united states. more laws in favor of squatters than homeowners. megan, squatters appear to have the upper hand. megan, good to talk to you. how big a problem is this becoming where you are? >> thank you for having me, john. it's an astronomical issue, experiencing at least five cases a week in philadelphia alone. >> john: and what's driving this? is it an increase that was driven by covid, or something
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else? >> i believe that the pandemic had something to do with it. i just know that we are sending out agents and they are figuring out there are squatters in these properties and i don't really know what the main issue is, but i definitely know it's hard getting them out afterwards. >> john: a patch work of laws across the country when it comes to dealing with squatters. in your area, removing them from the premises can be a costly process. first of all, $3,500 in fees just to begin the court process. and then it's $1,600 to move the squatters and you have to store their belongings for a month, and then as we saw from the pictures there, the mess that sometimes people leave behind. that person either was keeping dogs or breeding them, not sure which. and the cost of refurbishing the property on top of all that. >> yeah, that's right. the storing of the property, they just want us to hang on to these people's things, we are hanging on to people's things and then landlords cannot take
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back their property, it's causing more issues with the mortgage and everything like that. so, and then you go in to do a turnover, all the repairs that are needed, it's just -- it does take a lot of time on top of a lot of money. >> john: you would like to think you can reach out to law enforcement for help but in many cases they can't offer much. here is what the owner of your business told fox. this is walter, he said we might actually have a court order to remove a squatter but the sheriff gets there and if the squatter refuses to leave they will not want to escalate the conflict so the sheriffs say ok, stay where you are, we are going to back off. in that case, if you send law enforcement to get somebody out of the property and law enforcement doesn't want to get into a big tussle with them, what do you do after that? >> in most cases, my vendor, the contractor i'll send out to change the locks plus the sheriff, they'll call the police, the police will get out there and some cases, most cases they can't get out there because of the high rise in crime here,
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so they'll get out there, and they don't want to escalate either. >> john: there was a local ordinance that was passed by a member of the city council by the name of david oh which would have increased the fines for people illegally squatting, $300 per day, given law enforcement more authority to deal with them, but another member of the city council passed another ordinance that basically gutted that one, and david oh said that he believes that his opponents, opponents to his bill believe that squatting is a way of dealing with the homeless crisis. is that true? >> yeah, if you go through any given city block there are more people that are homeless at this time, people living in huts or just living on the street in a sleeping bag. but still, at the same time, you can't really occupy people's houses that, you know, pay for these things every month and coming out of their pocket, i don't think they think of all
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those things when they, you know, break into somebody else's house. >> john: a lot of issues to consider. megan, good of you to join us. appreciate your expertise on this. >> thank you for having me. >> anita: pope francis will skip tonight's scheduled good friday ceremony due to cold weather. officials say the 86-year-old will watch the way of the cross procession from his home instead of the vatican. the pope was discharged from a rome hospital on saturday after receiving treatment for bronchitis. pope francis presided over an early evening prayer service in st. peter's basilica to mark good friday, which commemorates the death of jesus by crucifixion. >> john: probably the most important week in the church calendar. we wish him well. the lowest number of jobs added since december of 2020.
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rising interest rates among stubborn inflation. we will dig into those numbers ahead. >> anita: the white house releasing the first report on the chaotic withdrawal from afghanistan in 2021. but why did they dump it on a holiday weekend? and put a lot of the blame on the trump administration? we will break it all down in the next hour. >> our allies saw it, they felt humiliated by the united states and our adversaries have been taking advantage of us, brian, ever since that decision. when you have chronic kidney disease. there are places you'd like to be. like here. and here. and here. not so much here. if you've been diagnosed with chronic kidney disease farxiga reduces the risk of kidney failure which can lead to dialysis. farxiga can cause serious side effects including dehydration, urinary tract or genital yeast infections
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♪ we're going on a bear hunt. ♪ ♪ going on a bear hunt. ♪ bear? ♪ we're gonna catch a big one♪ ♪ we're gonna catch a big one. ♪ ♪ look out for the water. ♪ ♪ can't go under it. ♪ ♪ the rocks and the mud. ♪ ♪ can't go over it. ♪ ♪ gotta go through it! ♪ ♪ we're going on a bear hunt.♪ ♪ we're going on a bear hunt.♪ ♪ oh going on a bear hunt!♪ ♪ going on a bear hunt! ♪ ♪ yeah we're going on a ber hunt! ♪ -bear! ♪ going on a bear hunt! ♪ - such a good boy. ♪ going on a bear hunt! ♪ ♪ oh what a beautiful day.♪ [ dog barks ] >> anita: u.s. job growth tapping the brakes. u.s. employees adding 236,000 jobs in march, down from 311,000
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in february. as the once rock solid labor market slows down in the face of high interest rates and stubborn inflation. edward lawrence reporting for fox business live at the white house now with more on this. edward, what's behind these numbers? >> anita, this was a great jobs report for the federal reserve. slower growth is what the fed wants to see and if you look at the trend over the course of the year, you can see job growth is slowing but it's still growing, and that's the important fact of this. the last time the economy added fewer than 236,000 jobs was december of 2020. in this report, more sectors are showing job losses. the president is in investigating in america tour, pushing the focus on manufacturing. jobs report shows manufacturing lost jobs two months in a row. retail sales, warehousing, lost, and leisure and hospitality led for the job growth last month.
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>> what worries me in this report, we did see a loss in manufacturing jobs, a loss in construction jobs, which really surprised me, i'm going to watch next month, does the number get revised. we expected to see growth. >> in a statement from the president he says the jobs report shows his policies are creating good jobs to raise a family on. the statement goes on, or does not mention i should say inflation, but you see on the screen, cpi inflation at 6%, average hourly wages 4.2%. that means america's pay is losing ground. an what really worries me is where we are headed right now. i think that this -- the euphoria in the markets over falling inflation, i'm not sure we are going to continue to see that. inflation sticky in the months ahead. >> 70% of the markets now believe the federal reserve will
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raise interest rates a quarter percent at the next meeting in may. that means more slowed growth as well as job losses as the economy slows down. back to you, anita. >> anita: edward, appreciate that note you put out about the jobs numbers going into a little detail and explaining them a little bit. one of the things you mentioned in the note and in your story right here is about the loss of manufacturing jobs. i want to take a look at what the president had to say about this jobs report in manufacturing. he says because of my agenda, companies announced new manufacturing investments in georgia, new mexico, michigan, pennsylvania, south carolina, tennessee and wisconsin, but let's take a look at the numbers for february and march. we have lost 1,000 manufacturing jobs each month. so that doesn't exactly square with what the president said and the analysts in your report said she was very concerned about the loss of manufacturing jobs. >> analysts are looking at that
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and scratching their head, the president touting all of these manufacturing jobs, he says, that he is promoting. but again, the numbers are showing job losses. i stopped white house economic adviser out here in front of the west wing and asked and said hey, you know, what's going on here, are you concerned at the white house, is the president worried about this and the answer to me was the president is not worried as of yet, because we'll see things going up and down. they do brief their policies will eventually have job creation in that, but we are looking at slower jobs going forward as the federal reserve keeps raising the rates. unemployment rate is 3.5%. and they say it at 4.1%, that means job losses. has to come from somewhere. >> anita: certainly does. thank you, edward. john. >> john: anita, as hiring slows down also learning more about the work habits of people who do have jobs and just how much time
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they spend actually working. lydia hu reporting for fox business. are people working less while they are at work or working more? >> hey, john, you know, this new research shows that people are working less. the average u.s. work week shedding about half an hour over the past three years. this is it according to economists from the university of maryland, and they say this research now sheds new light on the broad shift in people's attitudes toward work. the pullback, they say, comes mostly from people working long hours before the pandemic, especially higher educated, white collar workers likely not paid hourly, and some speculate the recent advancements in technology may make the reduction permanent. >> there are certainly longer term trends that i think do suggest that the work week is likely to decrease. you can think about the role that automation is playing and
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helping people do their jobs a little more efficiently. >> now, the pullback in working hours may be good for the workers some would argue, but it's not great for the fed as it's continuing the fight on inflation. the short fall in hours keeps upward pressure on wages spurring the inflation worry. while some are shrinking the work week, older americans continue to get back to work and they may have some advantages now. wall street journal reports that older americans are more in demand by companies as they are valued for their experience and work ethic. a recent survey shows that 75% of people over the age of 65 say work ethic is hard work, rather, is very important to them, that drops to only 61% of people ages 18 to 29, and seems like employers are noticing, comes at a good time for older americans as people ages 55 and older are
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the fastest growing segment of the workforce, according to government data. john. >> john: hear it for the mature workers. lydia, thank you. >> anita: many people feel their faith is not compatible with science. a new exhibit at the museum of the bible is challenging that. we are going to talk about what that entails coming up next.
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>> john: the student athletes have the right to cash in on their talents, ncaa wants congress to get involved after the supreme court changed the rules. chad pergram is monitoring all of this up on capitol hill and chad, what does the ncaa want congress to do? >> well, john, the push is for congress to regulate how college athletes make money off their name, image or likeness, nils. different states have different rules, if rules at all. >> some agents will garner up to 80% of the student's income, which is pathetic. there's no regulation there. and i'll put it to you this way. based on what i've seen over the last couple years, it's clear
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that the courts nor the states can establish uniform rules. >> the house recently held a hearing on nils, the federal government determined that athletes are employees of their schools. so far it's the wild west of sports. >> the concern in the -- in the community of the college sports industry is very thinly veiled pay for play situations that looks pretty much like they are getting paid for playing sports. >> some student athletes command millions by monetising themselves, especially in revenue sports like football and basketball, but students can make money in other sports, too, that helps down the line. >> so one of the deals that i'm involved in is helping me actually pay for nursing school, super huge. when i start nursing school i
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won't have the partial scholarship. >> john: don't they fix everything, chad? >> debt ceiling, government shut down, we'll get to those later this year. >> john: they are a model for resolution. chad pergram, have a happy easter. anita. >> anita: well, new at 2:00, critics calling out proposed changes to title ix saying it undermines the measure's original intent to protect women's sports. fox news sunday host shannon bream will join us next on that. we'll also hear from lieutenant general keith kellogg on the afghanistan withdrawal report. bill daly will join us on the tech executive murder in san francisco. and byron york will weigh in on the fallout from the protests in nashville. all of that and much more as "america reports" rolls on. with caplyta, there's a chance to let in the lyte. caplyta is proven to deliver
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