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tv   Americas Newsroom  FOX News  April 14, 2023 6:00am-7:00am PDT

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could start raining any time. >> watch minor league baseball or hockey or the jaguars. >> it will take you to neptune beach eventually. >> the other direction. >> that way. have a good weekend. >> have a great weekend. join the morning crew on the couch tomorrow at 6:00 a.m. eastern. stay within yourself. >> bill: here we go now on the loose no longer, the f.b.i. hunting down and arresting the young man suspected of leaking u.s. military secrets. he will make his first court appearance today and well oh he be there to see it as we welcome you on a friday morning. i'm bill hemmer. >> dana: this is dana perino. a lot of news this week i realized. >> bill: closing it out. >> dana: this was the scene yesterday in southeastern massachusetts. armed agents converged on the home of jack teixeira, they arrested him at gun point and
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told the f.b.i. had been watching him for days but then the f.b.i. was forced into action when the media published his name. >> he is 21 years old. joined the national guard in 2019. he held the highest level security clearance granted by the u.s. government and he now faces charges under the espionage act. >> dana: "new york post" headlines geeky leaks. why the military entrusted this information to a 21-year-old guardsman? the pentagon defending its protocol. >> it was a deliberate criminal act. violation of the guidelines. you receive training and you will receive an understanding of the rules and requirements that come along with those responsibilities and you are expected to abide by those rules, regulations and responsibility called military discipline. >> bill: reaction, john ratcliffe. peter doocy and we begin in
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boston with alexis mcadams. >> good morning from boston. we expect the suspected libellinger in court for the first time in a federal courthouse in boston and hear what charges he is facing here. very serious charges after the ongoing investigation. it comes as the d.o.j. tries to figure out how a 21-year-old with a high school diploma got his hands on top secret document. video we've been talking about. the 21-year-old was arrested 30 miles outside of boston. they raided his house yesterday. the f.b.i. arrested the massachusetts air national guardsman at the house he shares with his home outside the city. it shows teixeira wearing red shorts and green t-shirt walking down the driveway as federal agents waited with weapons drawn. the f.b.i. raided that house as the u.s. government investigates what's being called the biggest national security breach in at least a decade. neighbors are shocked.
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>> i went to high school with him and knew of him. good kid. not really a lot -- i would never have taken somebody like that, kind of crazy. >> teixeira worked as an i.t. specialist for the air national guard. at the time he held the highest level security clearance granted by the federal government. those clearances revoked before he was taken into custody. he had detailed maps from ukraine and assessments of russia's army posting that very sensitive information in the online messenger app discord. it compromised our intelligence. he is charged with transmitting national information. >> today the justice department arrested jack douglas teixeira in connection with an investigation into alleged unauthorized removal, retention and transmission of classified
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national defense information. >> sources tell us they don't believe this stops with teixeira. other people were involved as well. we'll keep an eye on that. >> bill: thanks, good to see you lead you are our coverage in boston today. >> dana: now peter doocy in ireland with president biden still in ireland. he says he is not concerned with the leak. >> well, that was the yesterday. he hasn't said a word about this, dana, since down playing the impact of the leaks during a stop that he was making here in dublin. down the chain of command intel officials got a reminder view from the email part of it says do not access or download documents with classified markings from unclassified websites either from home or work. officials at the white house have been referring us to the d.o.j. they want the focus of this story to be on the pending charges. others want the attention to be on a faulty system.
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>> this individual was able to access information that is not only top secret but top secret and compartmentalizeed. if you aren't on that project you shouldn't have any access to that information. but somehow this continues to happen. >> white house officials are telling us the u.s. has been reaching out to allies to explain the content of these leaks that makes it look like the u.s. is spying on friends and foes alike. we have not been told of any specific calls for concerns shared by world leaders. >> right now if you are an ally you are thinking i wonder if the united states can keep secrets safe. if they don't think they can trust us we're all a lot less safe. >> president biden is flying to county mayo. the list and buy owing -- we'll
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update if he talks about this. >> dana: any compelling national interest over there. >> bill: john ratcliffe former director of national intelligence. welcome to our program here. i was just checking the boxes. israel, south korea, israel, china, ukraine, when you look at this today and listening to peter's report right there, what's the damage? >> catastrophic, to be blunt. and profound. i think the reporter did a good job of sort of encapsulating the fact this is bad from every angle. the fact that a 21-year-old kid -- let's face it, living with his mother, has just had a profound impact on world events and diplomatic relations everywhere in asia, in europe, in the middle east and so, you know, obviously the issues that
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relate to that and how it was possible is a problem. then the intelligence itself in addition to the damage, the strain to relations with our allies and the propaganda win for our adversaries are the questions about the biden administration. he talked about the fact they aren't taking this as seriously as they need to but also revealing the fact that some of this intelligence shows they have been dishonest with the american people about our intelligence and activities around places around the world. >> dana: one question about his age when you see his picture on the front page of the post he looks very young, a little baby face. many of the men and women who served in iraq and afghanistan in those wars were younger than he is. many were killed. some were injured. i think that the punishment here you would wonder if he is convicted, then can the punishment be such that it deters others from doing this? it seems like it was so easy for him to upload these things to a
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chatroom. >> well, you know, my perspective is that what jack teixeira did here, much like edward snowden and chelsea manning and robert hanson and aldrich ames. there out to be bipartisan condemnation for what this young man did and the consequences and the fact there sometimes haven't been consequences are what contribute to this. i would expect and hope there would be unanimous -- no way to look at this and nothing heroic about this even if you are apprising the american people of something they weren't aware of is far-out weighed by damage to national security and lives lost. the fact that i can't name the americans and the people supporting america who will lose their lives make it no less
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agreyishous. i hope the consequences would be extreme and a deterrent effect. >> why did a 21-year-old have access to so much intel? it appears that he worked in i.t. and part of the reason why he gets access to all this information is because he can get inside the computer system. nothing against the air national guard or the commonwealth of ma mamas -- massachusetts, why would they need this access to such high level intelligence? >> great question. it will be asked by folks in congress with oversight over this issue. i don't think there will be a good explanation for that. his title is cyber systems journeyman. a fancy word for the i.t. guard. chances are the clearance he had. i don't know whether it was
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temporary, provisional or permanent but likely to provide his commander access to the joint worldwide intelligence communication system, the dod uses. i will say one of the things that dod looking at this issue on the civilian side, when we talk about agencies like the c.i.a. and the n.s.a. and the f.b.i., you have to go through and be polygraphed. insider threat protocols to limit these things. not so easy on the d.o.d. side where you see young men and women because they are helping provide access across the military at the unit level, some of those insider threat precautions that would prevent this aren't in place. probably need to be in place. an overcomprehensive review of how on the d.o.d. side we're sharing information and who is getting access to this tssci most sensitive information is
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really going to command a hard look and some drastic modifications. >> bill: you raise great questions. thank you for your time, john ratcliffe with us today. >> dana: we remember general keane said yesterday when you are a contractor you don't have to swear and oath and maybe that has to be looked at as well. the other thing that ratcliffe brings up was the government not being straight with the american people about the situation in ukraine. maybe more to come on that. >> bill: i remember keane saying that yesterday how much military relies on the contractors on the back end to make sure they can do their job. the deep read earlier today. after 9/11 a lot of criticism for intel agencies they weren't communicating with each other. it could be during the investigation of this that's what we find. we break down the walls to enable the intel communities to different agencies to talk to each other, and this may be a result of that in part perhaps. >> dana: he is due in court today possibly even this
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morning. we'll bring it to you if it happens. police identifying the man arrested in the stabbing death of bob lee. a fellow tech entrepreneur. what else we're learning. >> bill: what a story. also being called a thousand year storm putting southeastern florida under water. the thing is not over yet. we have the forecast on that coming up. >> dana: mccarthy facing his biggest obstacle yet trying to get a budget. newt gingrich on why the stakes could not be higher. ♪ helping them achieve financial freedom. we're proud to serve people everywhere, in investing for the retirement they envision.
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>> dana: southeast florida is under water what forecasters once every thousand year storms. people were told to stay inside and some hit the streets in canoes and kay yaks, the rain was so intense it broke the roof of a shopping plaza and temporarily closed fort lauderdale airport. more rain today, sunday and monday there. >> bill: going to be waterlogged in the end. senate minority leader mitch mcconnell will be back on the hill monday after recovering from a condition concussion. he looks forward to coming back and tackling the important business of the country. stay tuned for more. >> dana: house republicans hitting 100 days in power with a narrow majority. the honeymoon may be over if
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they can't find common ground in the budget battle. it might be mccarthy's toughest test yet. someone who knows about those fights former speaker newt gingrich and fox news contributor. how do you assess the first 100 days and the battle to come on the budget? >> speaker mccarthy has had an amazing first 100 days. 86% of his bills had democrats vote for them and a number of cases a majority of democrats voted for them. a dramatically more bipartisan and unified congress than nancy pelosi ever had. he has a challenge right now in that he has to listen to his own conference, find the votes to pass a debt ceiling is the first step. budget comes much later. my hunch is he will get it done because i know that tom emmer, the whip, steve scalise as the majority leader are out there every day talking to people and listening to people and the
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conference chairs is also out there. so there is a team effect here that i think people didn't quite expect but the 15 rounds it took for mccarthy to finally win the speakership i think unified the party. i think people got a lot of it out of their system. now comes the hard work. they have to find what is it that you can get passed? i don't think they need to worry about the white house, they need to worry about the house. if they pass something from the house and send it to the senate the ball is in the senate's court and see how they react to it. >> bill: five vote majority. things are slim there. in tallahassee, ron desantis, the governor, signed into law the heartbeat bill which makes abortion after six weeks illegal in the state of florida. just in a general sense two questions on this. how do you assess the impact of abortion the way it is playing out in various states and races that we have seen thus far?
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and how would this affect a desantis candidacy if and when he gets in this race? >> well, i think those are two different questions. the abortion issue comes down to who is the more extreme. if you end up with a democrat for infanticide or abortion on the last day or abortion for sex preference that person could be if trouble. you end up with a republican who won't except exceptions for rape, incest and life of the mother that person will be in trouble. it will take a while to sort it out and talk it through. in the case of governor desantis he has decided he has to run at least as conservative as trump and this bill certainly is in that direction and fits other things he has done including school reform, anti-woke activities, places where he has clearly made a mark as an aggressive conservative governor
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and it fits the pattern. >> dana: in terms of this issue. there is the primary that we're in right now and the general election. of course we have the electoral college. we know all those things. i wonder overall if you think the republicans have been caught flat footed even with a year to think about how they talk about the post dobbs world? >> i think you saw this frankly in wisconsin where i this i the media overstated what happened. the democrats outspent the republicans in a supreme court seat by almost 7-1. the republican candidate was incoherent. he couldn't quite explain what he stood for in terms of abortion. candidates -- the most commonly accepted position is 15 weeks. majority of americans agree there should be some limitation on abortion. that's why the democrats in the end may be more vulnerable than they think. but i think at the same time republicans have to be clear about protecting women's rights
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and very clear that they are not extremist in terms of not allowing abortion in the case of rape, incest, or life of the mother which we had a candidate for governor in pennsylvania whose position was so extreme he could never break out and get the conversation. >> bill: this may become a big story in the primary battle. trump has said republicans have not been flexible enough in their interpretation of the law. if that's what he runs on in 2024, desantis would be running to the right of trump, correct? >> yes. i think that's right. i suspect trump is close to 15 weeks because that's where the country is. desantis decided to run to his right. first of all, this is only one of a whole series of issues. that's an important thing to remember when you get to a general election. second, i think that desantis is clearly trying to find a way to be quote the real conservative in the race which i think is pretty hard if donald trump is
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the other guy. and we'll see how it works out. republicans are going to have to cope with this everywhere in the country but so are democrats. there are a number of streets where it is a huge disadvantage to being a left wing democrat for abortion on the last day. >> dana: the debate will not end. thank you for being with us this morning. have a good weekend. >> bill: 24 past. is a.m. radio about to become a thing of the past? that move if it happens could be dangerous. steve forbes will take it on coming up next. the family of a jailed american journalist in russia breaking their silence on his detention. what they are revealing about the fight to bring him home. mos with the 3 c's. pay down your credit cards. pay off your car loan. consolidate your debt with a va home loan from newday. dry skin is sensitive skin, too. and it's natural. treat it that way with aveeno® daily moisture.
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a treatment designed using a fragment of an antibody. ask your neurologist if vyvgart could be right for you. lomita feed is 101 years old this year and counting. i'm bill lockwood, current caretaker and owner. when covid hit, we had some challenges like a lot of businesses did. i heard about the payroll tax refund, it allowed us to keep the amount of people that we needed and the people that have been here taking care of us. see if your business may qualify. go to getrefunds.com. >> so you've got a.m. radio in your car, right? terre those days about to end? some electric vehicle makers plan on dropping a.m. radio from new model and raising concern about safety. douglas kennedy has the story today.
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intriguing. >> a.m. radio has the potential to reach 92% of everyone in the united states. why some want it to survive. one of your main jobs during an emergency is keeping the public informed. >> plan, prepare and stay informed is what we say at the sheriff's office for our residents. >> in 2012 the sheriff spearheaded the emergency response to superstorm sandy from the epicenter of storm's destruction in northern new jersey. >> you lost cable tv and cell phone service and the internet. really all you had left was a.m. >> all the above. a.m. radio was way to communicate with residents up and down the jersey shore. >> now golden and other first responders are sounding the alarm over carmakers dropping a.m. radios from new cars. in particular electric vehicles. for decades a.m. radio is
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standard in all cars sold in the u.s. if you buy an electric vehicle today, chances are you won't be getting any talk radio or sports programming using amplified modulation, including from major carmakers tesla, ford and bmw. they claim a.m. radios are an added expense and added weight and maintain there are now plenty of other ways for the public to access information. >> absolutely not. >> josh is a congressman from northern new jersey and recently called on fema to require carmakers to install a.m. radios. he says even with new technologies, nothing has the reach of an old a.m. signal. sometimes you can pick up an a.m. signal from a thousand miles away. >> it goes through everything, buildings and a.m. the way it's built meant for an emergency and why we invested in it for emergencies.
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>> in a letter a group representing carmakers says the public is simply moving away from a.m. both the federal government and automotive industry recognize the ways in which consumers receive information will change with innovation. an argument not moving sheriff goldman. >> i know our residents during an emergency tune into the radio devices a.m. battery operated or crank-ups. that's what they were tuning into. >> without a.m. he won't be able to inform a large portion of his county for the next emergency. back to you. >> bill: very interesting. thank you for that. >> dana: steve forbes joins us now. you are watching this with us and it does feel like -- i understand the move to want to get to electric vehicles. this is a point that i think has been lost on a lot of people. the other thing is not only can you get emergency information or sports news, you get conservative talk radio on there as well. >> there is a political angle to
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that as well i think. the emergency thing is very real and why seven former heads of fema have written saying you have to keep a.m. radio for these emergencies. also what is happening is the automakers are getting -- seeing a sign of revenue on big new dash boards coming in new models and they want to charge for this. they want subscription fees. why give it for free when you can charge a subscription. they will have a subscription to have a warm seat. all going after new sources of revenue with the new dash boards. so that's commercial reason. the idea that a.m. radio is not compatible, a couple hundred bucks it is compatible with e.vs and regular car. >> bill: you get news from the radio. we asked that question. 24% say never. 34% say sometimes and 13% say often. people are using it still. >> still using it. 40 million listeners on and off.
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he has declined over the years still a huge source. in an emergency it can reach everywhere everybody. thats the key thing. how do you get information out on a timely basis instead of what new device can i get to find out what storm is coming my way? >> dana: i mention the conservative talk radio angle. mark levine said this. >> they finally figured out how to attack conservative talk radio. rather than going after us through legislation, rather than going after us through boycotting, advertisers and all the rest, just don't make a.m. stations available in automobiles anymore. >> dana: there is that angle as well. it's interesting. electric vehicles will gain in popularity if the market is allowed to work. but the government is forcing this in which also adds division and suspicion for people who might like to visit to mark levine. >> bill: tens of millions of us
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still around. in terms the of the public square. that a.m. is one area in this whole spectrum where conservatives have a voice where people can voice their opinions. sports. what would you do on monday morning without a.m. radio? >> dana: i have fond memories of listening to radio with my grandfather on the saturday auction. >> bill: some of the a.m. stations are gravitating toward f.m. also. a lot of times you have the big channels with two different signals. one on each. >> that's why the whole -- you will end up paying for that on new ideas they are floating around. it's a revenue and political thing. it has to be stopped. emergencies still do happen and we have to be ready for it to get that information out. >> bill: when we were growing up and a tornado warning went out it was always a.m. radio. >> dana: absolutely. >> bill: batteries. >> dana: your point about the
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seven fema administrators writing saying it would be wrong that's a strong point. thank you for making it. thank you for being here, too. have a great weekend. love having you ton show. >> good to be here. >> dana reads sports. >> dana: so kansas city royals player with an early father's day gift for his dad. guess what it was? he hit a foul ball against the texas rangers wednesday. who caught it? none other than his dad all the way up in a suite. after the game bobby junior signed the ball hit by bobby witt junior, caught by bobby witt senior. that's fun. >> bill: what are the chances? >> dana: i don't know. good thing dad was paying attention. >> bill: if you aren't watching your son at-bat you shouldn't be at the game. >> dana: i probably should never go to a game again. i end up talking too much and i'm not paying attention and i am afraid of getting hit in the face by a ball. >> bill: we'll work on that.
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>> the theft and disclosure of sensitive classified information endangers american personnel overseas full stop. he needs to be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. >> bill: one of the many calling for accountability after the leak of u.s. military secrets. does the arrest of the suspect provide any reassurance for our allies? former defense secretary marks per will take it on. artificial intelligence infiltrating everything from your doctor's office to boardroom. how far, we ask today, is too far? okay, everybody, look at the rv and smile. this is what you want for your family portrait? good point. we bundled the boat with our home and auto first. -hey, team, get on in here. -team? oh. fun. now everyone say "24/7 financial protection with progressive"! 24/7 financial protection with progressive! okay. let's get some singles of me on the bike. honey. yeah.
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>> bill: you might remember that incredible first ever picture of a black hole. thanks to a.i., it got even better. the picture, that is.
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new a.i. technology cleaned up the image taken in 2019 on the left. at the center of the 87 galaxy. the fiery donut street original. the updated version on the right. >> dana: it looks great. congratulations. >> bill: take it or leave it. >> dana: want to talk now about a tech company rolling out an a.i. co-pilot in 30 hospitals and this is to speed up patient care and prevent burn-out among healthcare professionals. a new poll shows most americans don't want their doctors relying on a.i. when it comes to their care. alec, what should americans know about this? >> we're at the very beginning of a very disruptive technology. it brings promise, it can bring a lot of excitement and a lot of benefit to the american people. but there are also some scary aspects of this.
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when i think, for example, about artificial intelligence as it relates to our healthcare. one example how it can be very positive is i have an aunt who died of breast cancer because in her mammogram they weren't able to detect the cancer. a really powerful a.i. would have been able to find what the doctor didn't. on the negative side, i have aging parents who are in their 80s and i want a human nurse taking care of my 83-year-old father with dementia. not an a.i. robot. it contributes to positives and benefits but also scary scenarios. >> bill: we're assuming that a.i. would be able to catch that cancer. even then it doesn't strike me that would be a guarantee. am i right on that or wrong? >> no, you're right on that. so the question is, does it make human judgment better or does it
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-- or are we substituting human judgment? we shouldn't be taking humans out of the equation. we should be giving our doctors new tools. so in the same way in which doctors use stethoscopes and x-rays, i think they should be using a.i. tools. we don't want to take the humanity out of this. we also need to remember that the algorithms that fuel artificial intelligence were written by humans, humans who make mistakes. i think about that 21-year-old tech geek who gave away america's classified pentagon secrets. it is 21-year-olds who might be very intelligent but not necessarily very wise who are writing a lot of these algorithms. we need to keep the human component and the supervision and need to not think that intelligence and wisdom are the
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same thing. >> dana: you pay attention to a lot of these things and you were in japan. are they already using a.i. in their healthcare or other ways we might be seeing in our country soon? >> they are. honestly, dana, it is an example of a little of how a.a. scares me. they have the oldest living population in the world. a real demographic children. not enough children and grandchildren to take care of the grand parents. what i saw were a lot of caregiving robots. for me that sort of left me cold. in judeo christians we don't view robots as having souls. in japan they do. some of these technologies will be more accepted in certain cultures than others. if somebody with a judeo-christian background, my background lends me to think no,
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i don't want a robot taking care of my grand parents, i want a human. maybe who can use some of these technologies but i see these technologies rolling out around the globe and used differently in different countries depending on the culture and economic models. >> bill: the title of your book is great. >> dana: highly recommend it. >> bill: thank you for that. want to bring in dr. marc siegel. good morning to you. you wrote a piece. this is your headline in the "new york post" saying too much a.i. has big draw backs for doctors and their patients. you heard alec describe a few of those. how do you feel about this in your own office? >> first of all, i agree with alec said, very stirring analysis there. i want to point out first the good side. i talked to a doctor from harvard the other day. top professor of bone radiology and she said we amass hundreds of thousands of images that we
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use for one thing. we look at a liver or kidney. we can then use a.i. to go back in and see what is inside the bone. not even why we did the study originally. what kind of fat in the bone? what can we do with that information? cancer diagnosis, a new study out of massachusetts general hospital showed 86 to 94% success with a.i. diagnosing lung cancer very, very early. it is clearly a tool. but what i wrote in my op-ed and alec just said is how far will we go with this? another thing, what kind of a.i. are we talking about here? chatgpt that you can get anywhere without a doctor, it will tell you what your diagnosis is. you ask a question and it gives you an answer and passes medical boards but the problem is it can't do nuance or clinical judgment, it can't do years of experience and creative vision. it is not the human component at all.
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two other quick things. insurance companies are definitely going to use this to do pre-certifications. but bill, a lot of times, dana, i get turned down for a test i know somebody needs. the last thing i need is a computer voice overruling me. how will i argue on the basis of personalized medicine? mal practice is a problem. what if a.i. says one thing and i say something else? what if a.i. is wrong? a.i. can hallucinate. it is right, right and suddenly gives you a thing that doesn't fit. it is called hallucinating. we have to go slow here. there are definite research uses but we have to go slow. >> dana: the other thing that will happen is there will be calls about inequality, right? some hospitals will be able to afford some new units that could look at x-rays, liveers and
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mammograms. with the human eye you couldn't see it in the x-ray. so who is going to get the a.i. tools? >> you bring up a really important point. hospitals are going to use more a.i. to try to save money because of decreasing error and also streamlining the process, the key word is streaming lining. in the process of doing that it could end up costing more money down the line and it's very expensive up front. some places aren't going to be able to afford it and there again it puts people at a disadvantage that are in socio- economic disadvantaged groups. we have to look at that, too. if a.i. is a valuable tools for doctors, which will it will be, we have to make sure it's available across the board. the right hands and the right a.i. >> bill: i know you docs labor
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over paperwork on a daily basis. i think at a minimum this should help knock some of that down. good luck, doc, thanks for coming on today. >> dana: thank you. we've seen congressional delegations to ukraine before but not like this. brad paisley joining joe manchin to sing the mountain state's official song in kiev. ♪ take me home, country road, to the place i belong ♪ ♪ west virginia ♪ >> bill: who is on the other side of that? >> dana: i don't know. >> who is the audience? >> dana: maybe the press. the pair with two other senators in the ukraine capital on saturday to meet with president zelensky. paisley is an ambassador for a ukraine fundraising campaign and released a new version of the john denver classic with words from zelensky. >> bill: the catch, though, you
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play the song and you get on tv. if you just go to ukraine and meeting with zelensky is old news. paisley and manchin made the news. all right. there is this now from the state of new york we might be here in new york the latest to consider banning foreign adversaries from buying up any local farmland. the national security concerns lawmakers are worried about on this coming up. with a home loan from newday, take out an average of $70,000, pay off debts and high rate credit cards, and save hundreds every month. there are too many options. how do we decide what hotel to book? fear not, i got you! who are you? i'm your fairy hotel mother. what is happening? let me help you pick a hotel you feel good about. choice hotels is a family of brands, with a hotel for every type of stay. like a comfort with the kiddos. oooo, spacious!
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liberty mutual customizes your car insurance so you only pay for what you need. with the money we saved, we tried electric unicycles. i think i've got it! doggy-paddle! only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ >> bill: so now his bark might be bigger than his bite. president biden getting a not so warm welcome from the irish president's dog. roll this. >> dana: i think it's the sunglasses. no one else is wearing sunglasses. that might be it. >> bill: they tried to warm up to each other but apparently to
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no avail. what a stunning daily in dublin, ireland that was. >> dana: a wonderful five days in ireland. >> bill: the old sod. if you haven't been yet, america, you need to go. it is a great country. >> dana: i am going to go this year. new york is eyeing a bill to ban foreign adversaries like china and russia to buy farmland. >> lawmakers in new york believe they can get this done before the end of the year, dana. the main issue here is preventing a foreign adversary from controlling a significant portion of our food supply. russia and china are the headliners. it also includes north korea, venezuela, cuba as well. china specifically has lawmakers concerned. right now china owns over $2 billion worth of u.s. farmland.
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400,000 acres across the country. lawmakers in new york want to make sure that number doesn't get any bigger. listen to this. >> i think keeping our country safe, making sure we are not allowing foreign adversaries to come in here and threaten our national security whether it's spy balloons or buying up a farm like this. it's a top concern. >> that's democrat new york state assemblyman. the author of that new bill here in new york that would ban foreign adversaries from buying farmland and he believes the bill has enough bipartisan support to become law this year. right now, dana, 16 states across the country have bans in place. 15 more are considering similar bans. it is again a mix of blue and red states. new york and california but also texas and florida on that list. alabama senator believes it should be a federal issue. listen to him. >> we are being attacked by china and other countries around the world and we need to make
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sure that we are all in this together, not just new york or alabama, not just iowa. we are all in it together. >> just last month senator proposed a bill to ban foreign adversaries from buying farmland across the entire country. that also has bipartisan support. he is calling on senate majority leader chuck schumer to bring it before the senate for debate. >> dana: a sign of things to come. nate foye, thank you. fox news alert. suspected leaker of highly classified military intelligence documents shared online is now in custody and due in court this hour in boston facing serious federal charges for a breach becoming an embarrassment for the biden administration. i'm dana perino. good morning. >> bill: i'm bill hemmer. the suspect a low level air national guardsman arrested by federal agents at his home in

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