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tv   Fox News Tonight  FOX News  May 4, 2023 5:00pm-6:00pm PDT

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helmets? don't you want your scooter-driving producer to be the safe? >> it's a little too safe. all right, live a little scooter-driving producer. don't live so much you get killed in mexico but let the wind go through your hair. you've got a lot of it. that's it for us. dvr the show. always remember, i'm watters, this is my world. ♪ >> hello america welcome to fox news tonight i'm lawrence jones. for the past four years, i have traveled all across the country covering america's crime crisis. mostly in progressive cities. people from all different backgrounds ar and they have one simple request. for our leaders to protect us. do what's essentially their only job. but for years these people have been ignored. they've altered their life style and the way they move for their protection and their family's,
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too. recently i noticed somewhat of a change, and i expressed it here on fox. i warned that vigilante justice was coming. this isn't anything new from what we've been experiencing for almost like two years in the country where the crimes have become more brazen. it is very clear that the criminals aren't afraid of law enforcement. as this continues in the country we're going to have vigilante justice and we can't have that in a civilized society. someone has to fill that void and we don't want that to happen but the leaders aren't doing anything about it, the mayors aren't stepping up to the plate, the das aren't stepping up to the plate, the judges aren't stepping up to the plate. on so who's going to do it and that's where vigilante justice comes into play. >> 80s that to brag or be right. i genuinely wanted to be wrong about this issue. but this is just basic science. when government creates this kind of void, someone or some idea will fill it. the most recent example is the
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story of jordan neely. on monday afternoon jordan neely was harassing subway riders in new york city. it wasn't his first time. jordan neely made harassing subway riders somewhat of a hobby. sometimes he became violent. jordan neely had been arrested more than 40 times. he was homeless, and some say he was mentally ill. his rap sheet included four assaults, and three specifically were against women on the subway. the criminal justice system in new york city never held jordan neely accountable for his crimes. it's by design. because the system exists to protect criminals over law abiden citizens in new york. citizens are left to defend themselves from people like jordan, and that's exactly what happened on monday. after neely aggressively shouted at passengers, that's when a 24 year old marine veteran tackled neely to the ground and put him in a choke hold.
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two other passengers helped the marine restrain neely. >> this morning, there is growing outrage and questions surrounding the death of a man on a new york city subway. this video obtained by nbc new york shows three subway riders subduing the 30 year old man and one putting him in a choke hold. he later goes limp. the medical examiner ruled the death a homicide and says the cause was, quote, compression of neck, choke hold. the district attorney identified the man as jordan neely. a witness says neely got on the subway and began, quote, a somewhat aggressive speech saying he was hungry, he was thirsty that he didn't care about anything. he didn't care about going to jail, he didn't care that he gets a big life sentence. >> neely quickly became unconscious, he was taken to a nearby hospital, and sadly, later, he was pronounced dead. the new york city medical examiner proclaimed his death as a homicide, and almost immediately, the usual suspects capitalized on this tragic
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story. for their own political gain. aoc, the congresswoman, accused the marine of murder. new york governor kathy hochul claimed neely was killed simply for riding the subway. she knew it wasn't true. >> i do want to acknowledge how horrific it was to view a video of jordan neely being killed for being a passenger on our subway trains. and so our hearts go out to his family. i'm really pleased the district attorney is looking into this matter. as i said, there has to be consequences and so we'll see how this unfolds but his family deserves justice. >> meanwhile protesters have taken to the streets. apparently they think jordan neely should have been allowed to attack innocent passengers on the subway. >> justice for. >> jordan neely. >> justice for. >> jordan neely
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[chanting] back up! please back up. back up. >> what about jordan neely? >> aoc and these protesters actually don't care about jordan neely's death. there were 11 murders on the subway last year. we did a search, aoc never commented on those deaths. transit crime is up 54% in new york city compared to 2021. here are just some of the examples. >> disturbs viral video shows a group of teens punching and kicking a 15 year old boy. the brutal beatdown was captured at the 18 1st street subway
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station in washington heights. friday afternoon around 3:00 at the subway station david martin was checking subway times when a man ran and shoved david onto the tracks breaking his collar bone. >> this surveillance video from police shows a vicious mugging on a southbound f train platform at 34th street last tuesday about 10:00 p.m. police say the attacker slashed the victim twice while he tried to hold on to his backpack. >> headlines about random unprovoked crime seemingly nonstop recently. >> you can see a man grab a 52 year old woman from behind and throw her onto the tracks. it happened very fast and appeared to be unprovoked. >> so the question is, where's the justice for these victims? does aoc even know their names? we invited her on tonight. she declined. it's clear there's something wrong here. if you take a quick look on social media you will see videos of jordan kneeling dancing. you will see all these
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individuals express why jordan neely's life mattered. which i agree. he's an american citizen. he's a part of our family. it did matter. but why did his life suddenly matter once he was dead? many knew this man, including our government, was struggling and they did nothing to help him. society filled that void. and the marine who put him in a choke hold is now the villain. how is any of this right? jason nichols is a senior lecturer at the university of maryland. he joins us now. jason, thanks so much for joining me, brother. we all mourn his death. but the city is out of control. and people that are black, brown, white, everybody is on edge right now. and they're going to do everything that is necessary, those that are willing, to defend themselves. so why the rush to judgment on this case? >> well, first of all, lawrence, let me just say congratulations.
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i'm really proud of you and you know i'm always rooting for you. >> thank you brother. >> first of all, we have to understand that the characterization that you made earlier about crime being out of control in new york city is just factually inaccurate. it's actually, major crimes are down 6% in new york city, subway crimes 9%. >> i'm sorry to interrupt you brother. >> no, we can look at it new york city.gov. >> i just put the stats up on the screen. year to date, yes, it is down. but if you compare the crime to this point last year, it's up. and that is a problem for people that walk the streets of new york. the mayor knows he was elected because of this reason. >> yeah, and i think we need to give credit to the new york police department, the nypd. they get a lot of heat. i've been someone who's been critical but they're actually doing a good job of dropping crime. when we look at the crime
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statistics, they are actually going, trending downward. so we need to actually acknowledge that. now, where we will find agreement, lawrence, is that jordan neely should still be alive, and we need better mental healthcare in this country. this is a man who obviously was struggling with mental health concerns. you can hear it in what he was saying before he was killed. i'm not going to go around and call this is a murder because that's a legal determine and i'm not a lawyer but i will call it a homicide. >> you're a gentleman so why are people doing that? this is happening all across the country in major cities where people have their back up against the wall, people are being pushed up into the subway. people can't walk the street. i know people want to act in the democratic party that this is a figment of people's imagination but these criminals just don't care. so why are people in the parties
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that represent this area by the way, all of a sudden they care about this death but they don't care about the other deaths that happen every single day in progressive cities? >> so here's the thing. i think we have to make sure that we're not out here fearmongering and making people afraid and making them afraid to -- >> don't have to, people are. >> or use the subway. that's bad for our society to make people afraid. but i will say when we talk about what's going on, this is not a partisan issue. you are much safer in new york city, which by the way is the safest big city in the country and the ninth safest big city in the world than you are in bakersfield california, which current kevin mccarthy's district. you are far less safe there. you are far saver in new york city than you are in oklahoma which by the way its two largest cities are run by republicans tulsa and oklahoma city. >> so show me the video, because i want you to look at your screen because you can just see
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the video. show me that in those cities that you just named. show me the people that are being harassed on the day-to-day basis. show me the little girls -- that's all i cover, jason, all across the country, the kids murderedd in the middle of the streets. how many funerals have you had to sit through, as family have to literally put the sculls of their children back together? it's happening all across the country, and it's just a figment of imagination? >> so lawrence, lawrence, no,' not a figment of anyone's imagination but here's the thing, are we going off and dotes or are we talking about law enforcement with crime and crime is going down. >> i gave you the numbers, 54 -- >> i told you new york city -- >> i did. who do you think the cops call when other media won't cover these stories? i get it straight from the cops. even before it's released to the
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public. so what i'm saying is, the cops are begging for the help -- and i understand, there are some bad apples. but don't you think that the defund the police unit, taking the anti crime unit off the street. it's our community. the people that look like me and you being victimized the most. >> no, we've always, in this country, been dealing with crime. even though crime is much lower than it was when -- at least, you're a little younger than i am, at least when i was a kid in the 80s and 90s, if you knew what crime was like in new york city, it was a very, very different place. crime has been down. it spiked in 2020 because we had unnorm -- you know, abnormal circumstances but they're actually, again, when you look at the statistics, this year in 2023, we're coming back down again. and so when we're sitting here and talking about these things. >> i love you brother. >> i think we need to not fearmonger. >> i can tell you this. as someone that covers this every single day, that gets
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calls every single day from victims, it's not fearmongering. i only go where i'm invited and the people want their stories to be told. brother i appreciate you joining the program tonight. >> thank you lawrence. >> you got it >> there are growing fearss that there could be a complete collapse of the banking industry in this country. a new gallop poll shows half of all americans worry about their money's safety in banks. this comes as major banks like jp morgan are now taking over smaller banks. the fed chair jerome powell said he is against all of this even though it's exactly what's happening. watch. >> so i think it's probably good policy that we don't want the largest banks doing big acquisition, that is the policy, but this is an exception for a failing bank and i think it's actually a good outcome for the banking system. it also would have been a good outcome for the banking system had one of the regional banks bought this company and that could have been the outcome but
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ultimately we have to follow the law in our agencies and the law is it goes to the least bid. >> charlie is a fox business correspondent. he joins us now. charlie thanks so much for joining me. >> anytime. >> should we all be concerned? >> listen we have a problem with regional banks, okay? the big banks the jp more begans, bank of american, city group, wells fargo well capitalized diversified and do different things but we have a problem with regional banks. and what is the problem? we printed a ton of money and spent a ton of money from the federal government. those banks went out on the spectrum, as gamblers always do, when you give them free money, and they invested in risky stuff. they bought -- they loaded up on capitol at the top of the market. when you put those two things together, you have a real hole in the balance sheet of many of these regional banks. now if you're at a regional bank, should you be worried? i would say yes, you should be
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worried. the simple sort of answer is, make sure you don't have more than $250,000 because that's the fdic insurance limit, and if you do take some out and put it in a different bank. we're in a pickle now and by the way it was created by the man you just listened to t he printed money, the federal government, janet yellen, the treasure secretary spent money, created a situation where we had massive risk taking and inflation. how do you reverse that? well you have to raise interest rates. when you start raising interest rates all bank balance sheets get crushed. the regional banks are the least able to handle that crush. jp morgan can handle it better and that's what you have now. my sources are telling me there's about two dozen banks that are very impaired. now whether they go under or not, i don't know. you know, this stuff doesn't work out like, you know, it doesn't -- first republic was a slow burn, people thought it was going under a month ago and it
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was kind of like a zombie for a few weeks. but we're going to be seeing more of these. yes, it's a problem and here's why. jp morgan and the big banks can't do all the lending. you need more banks to lend and if you don't have any regional banks, that's a huge hole in the banking system in terms of lending and if you don't have lending this economic downturn could turn into a fairly deep recession. >> what a pickle they've gotten us into. >> yes. >> charlie thanks so much. >> yeah time. >> a government whistle blower has made a shocking allegation against the president. the whistle blower says the fbi document joe biden in a criminal scheme with his son hunter. we talk to somebody on the committee investing it all. that's next. don't go anywhere. ♪ but i wonder if you just take a few seconds to pray with me real quick.
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in the name of the father and son, holy spirit. amen. lord jesus, come to us now. help us to surrender ourselves completely to you. help us to listen to your voice. even when we're distracted or tired, we pray this in the name of the father and of the son of the holy spirit. amen. thank you so much. i just want to encourage you that if you want to join me in more prayer, check out hallow it's the number one prayer app in the world.
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♪ >> lawrence: so we told you yesterday about how government whistle blower says there is proof of that president biden was directly involved in his son hunter's business dealing. the whistle blower says that the fbi has a document dated from 2020 that explains all of it. it apparently links joe biden to quote a criminal speed involving, quote, money for policy decisions when he was vice-president.
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the house oversight committee just issued a subpoena for the document. congresswoman nancy mace is on that committee and she joins me now. congresswoman, what are we going to learn from this letter? have you guys gotten it off the record, behind closed doors? are we just speculating right now? >> we are not speculating. but i would say that i believe this is the smoking gun. and what did joe biden know and when did he know it? and we want the american people to see what he know and does he even remember any of this that happened because i think a lot of americans feel republicans are held to one standard and democrats held to another. everyone in this country regardless of your politics should be held to the same standard and so that's the purpose of this investigation, to get to the bottom of it and follow the facts where they lead us. and i've seen the suspicious activity reports. i've read about the prostitution rinks. i've seen the millions of dollars in shell companies coming and going to our sad verb
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sars to nine members of the biden family. it needs to be investigated. >> lawrence: how do we make the jump to the connection to joe biden. i know a lot of these folks, especially hunter, he can't be severely addicted to drugs and still be a successful businessman so it's very suspect right there. >> right. >> jesse: so how do we make this jump to joe biden. >> that's this document the fbi can run but can't hide so when we get this document in our hands and show it to the people in our oversight committee and our investigation and show the connection is what this document will do, show the connection between the president and his family and son moving around between the different shell companies. >> lawrence: the big question from a lot of folks is what's taking so long? we were promised once republicans take control of the house that the investigations were going to happen, they were going to get the documents, but it doesn't seem like the fbi is listening to the house. >> they don't want to listen. they don't want to see the
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documents and i would gather they're probably ignoring the documents. and i want christopher wray to come to the oversight committee. if he's watching we want you to come to the oversight committee and have a subpoena, testify before congress, what did you know, when did you know it, did you hide the documents. that's why this is so important. the oversight committee has only had subpoena power for less than a hundred days. and we've got bank records, we have suspicious activity reports, now we have this subpoena and this document that we will get our hands on to show the american people, show the connections and what's happening. so it takes a little bit of time. but like you, i came to congress really fed up with what i see because no one's ever held to account, no one's held responsible, no one gets fired, never a referral to the doj, no one gets arrested. so we want to make sure the fullest extent of the law it is investigated and if heads need to roll then that's what happens at the end of the day. >> lawrence: when can we see that document. once you guys get it how long will it take the american
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people. >> i can tell you jamie comer won't wait long. he wants to have this investigation, he wants to share it with the american people and it's going to be important -- >> lawrence: we need it now. >> i would want it yesterday. >> lawrence: i'll tell you the same thing i told the speaker kevin mccarthy when he was running for the spot. we the american people are checking to make sure that commitment is fulfilled. >> and i hope they'll check on republican spendings too by the way because republicans only care about spend when democrats are in charge so both sides are at fault on that too. >> lawrence: appreciate that. thank you so much >> the biden family has pretended the hunter's love child doesn't exist and democratic lawmakers have followed their lead. they don't care about the most recent addition to the biden crime family they don't care that joe biden ignores his own grandchildren if they are political inqueen president. miranda devine author of the laptop from hell joins us now. miranda, they called you crazy,
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they called you working for the kremlin and putin. now we know everything in that laptop was true, everything in your report is true. the grandchild is true. what's next? where do we go from here? >> hi, lawrence. look, i think we feel the pain maybe of the hunter biden's many teams of lawyers. they're basically playing whack a mole at the moment. there are so many investigations, there are so many whistle blowers. now, you know, if the oversight committee can be believed, they have the smoking gun, as nancy mace just told you, that connects all this directly to joe biden. and, you know, in the middle of these swirling investigations, the criminal investigation in delaware as well, that hunter biden would choose to create this drama in arkansas with his baby mama and the little four year old girl that he's refused
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to acknowledge, although he has been paying $20,000 a month child support after she forced him to court with a paternity test. but i just -- i think everybody around hunter biden is wondering, why on earth would he cause this trouble right now, and now a judge has ordered all his financial matters have to be opened up to the public. that would be the last thing that the white house and joe biden wants. but, you know, talking to people around hunter biden, his former business partners, they describe him as human kryptonite. he basically destroys everyone he comes in contact with, and maybe that includes his father. although we're not going to let his father off the hook because, of course, joe biden turned hunter into his bagman. >> lawrence: you know what's crazy? it's like the president is
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taunting us all. hunter is right by hid side now, everywhere you see hunter. and when the american people are calling a investigation into this, the president feelings like i guess he can get away with it. it's crazy. miranda devine, thank you so much. >> thanks lawrence. >> lawrence: you got it. joe biden has finally ended the last of the covid vaccine mandates. he's only two years late in following the science.y. more on that next. don't go anywhere. ♪ know... i was talking about the dogs. they need their lawn back fast and you need scotts turf builder rapid grass. it's revolutionary mix of seed and fertilizer that grows grass 2 times faster than just seed alone. giving you a stronger lawn. release the hounds! smell that freedom, eh? i smell it! i'm still talking to the dogs. get scotts turf builder rapid grass today, it's guaranteed. feed your lawn. feed it.
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>> lawrence: the biden administration finally announced their plan to end vaccine mandates for federal employees, contractors and international air travelers. the mandates are set to expire may 11th. one of the few extras willing to speak out against the mandates from the beginning was dr. marty makary. he is a health expert and professor at john hopkins school of medicine and he was on capitol hill criticizing the pandemic response. dr. makary joins us now.
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doc, you're one of the few people that i trust in medicine because you told us the truth from the very beginning. i'm just curious, why the slow pace? like is it money? is it a refusal to confess that they were wrong? >> i was on capitol hill today, i can tell you, lawrence, there was no humility whatsoever. and i can tell you as a doctor that's the most important thing that defiance a great doctor. instead public health officials were begging for more money. the cdc, which has 21,000 employees and did at the time of the covid pandemic hitting the u.s. they couldn't even come up with a web site for the virus. they said it would takes months. it was one johns hopkins grad student that came up with a trend to use. and then the secretary of health for emergency preparedness, she asked for more hiring power from congress.
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i said how about firing power? you've got to have some accountability for the incompetence. >> lawrence: so, doc, will there ever be any trust in medicine anymore? because they did a lot of damage. especially when it comes to our children. i'm not sure we even know the amount of damage that has been done because of the isolation that our kids had to experience. >> well, that's so true, lawrence. there has been so much misinformation spread by the u.s. government by the cdc that we had to close schools, that we had to mandate the vaccine, that myocarditis was not real, we had to mask toddlers and boost young people, that long covid was a real threat that infected won in five people, it didn't. we had so much misinformation they have to come back and address all of these things for public trust to be restored. >> lawrence: you know, doc, i think one of the great sins as well as in this tragedy of covid have been the masking debate.
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i think people forget, there wasn't really a debate. people were running to go guest masks off the shelves, they were hoarding the supply. and then the feds said, look, they don't work. and then they said they said it because they wanted to get the supply for the doctors as well. so a lot of the distrust, when it comes to science, was all done because of the people in washington, right? >> look, nih had $42 billion. they do have done a good study on masks in the first few weeks and ended the controversy once and for all but they ruled by opinion and dogma rather than scientific evidence. we finally got the study which found they were basically infect sniff crazy. doctor thanks for being honest with us from the very beginning. >> thanks. >> lawrence: you got it. nordstrom's announced their plan this week to close both stores in downtown san francisco over concerns with crime. the upscale department store is the latest retailer to quit the city. fox news laura ingraham was in
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the bay last week to interview local residents. here's one man she spoke to whose house has been robbed ten times in less than three years. you've got to see it. >> so my first break-in when i was living here was in the summer of 2020. in total i've had 10 break-ins. >> ten break-ins in less than three years? when you do call the police, what's their response? >> usually it would be, we'll call you back. >> this is insane. >> it is insane. i'm not okay with it. i don't think it's okay. and i don't know what to do. i don't know how to feel safer. i don't know how to protect the things that i've worked hard to get. it's clearly getting worse, you know, steadily getting worse, and it's starting to get scary, and no one will do anything about it. i don't know what to do, right? i don't know what to do. >> lawrence: so sad. michael shellen burger is the
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author of san francisco why progressives ruin cities and he joins us from berkeley. michael thank you so much for joining the program. this was predictable, they obviously don't care about the people, i just got back from san francisco two weeks ago, it's like the walking dead they allow people to openly shoot up drugs there, set fires. why? michael? >> yeah, absolutely. i mean, the situation is so bad that you have to remember that nordstrom's is a flagship store for san francisco. i mean, when we lost the walgreens, people said, oh, well they're downsizing. then whole foods announced that it was moving out. now nordstrom's is moving and that's a major flagship store. it's really, it's the place where the pelosis and the new psalms and feinsteins go to. it's upstales and now they claim
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nordstrom's was going to move anyway. they keep making excuses, the reality is it's an open drug scene for much of downtown san francisco. there was a woman with mental illness whose legs rotted, they took her to the hospital amputated her legs and put her back on the street. this is a city that spends ten times more on homelessness than the average city yet they're leaving people in a state of misery out of a kind of woke dogma. that's why you have open air drug dealing mostly controlled by who are durans for a local drug cartel. we keep thinking it can't get any worse and then it does. >> michael so interesting because if you want to know how to solve the problem talk to people impacted by it so i talked to some of the homeless folks out there, they're offered three meals a day, cell phones on the street. housing, mental health services. so i asked them why don't they take the housing and mental health services? and they're very candid.
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there's rules. they can't bring their crap in there they have to be in by midnight and they can't take their drugs in the facilities so they live rent fee on the sidewalk. >> that's right. i discovered a man about a year and a half ago or a year ago, he had a broken hip in the middle of the street with police barricades around him two other guys with him, they had needles, feces, used food wrappers all around him he had a broken hip and couldn't get up. a city worker came by, we told the city worker about the guy and he was there a week later. the situation has just been out of control and the mayor has just become unwilling, unable to deal with it because they're captured by the idea some people are victims others are oh pressers and nothing should be done to require so-called victims to get into care. >> so silly, so destructive so
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preventible. michael shellenberger thanks for joining us >> it seems our leaders embrace death and destruction. we need leaders who embrace life. more on that next. don't go anywhere. ♪
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how much their accident case is let our injury attorneys know he how much their accident cget the best result possible. ♪ >> lawrence: so did you hear this? the corrupt st. louis prosecutor kimberly gardener resigned today. the soros backed let criminals go while prosecuting her political enemies. one was mark ma klausski, you may remember mark and his wife forced to defend their home from the blm rioters in 2020. mark was very happy with today's news. watch. >> here's to the resignation of kim gardener, the city of st. louis will be much safer. there is justice, there is a god and justice and god have prevailed. thank you very much! >> lawrence: those were some beautiful roses.
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so what ever happened to valuing life. ? seems like our leaders are embracing death and destruction. from the moment he was elected joe biden promised to change that. he said he would return the soul of the nation. spoiler alert that hasn't happened. joe biden hasn't reunited our country, violence plagues the cities and half the murders are never brought to justice. meanwhile our leaders push abortion on demand. the good news is americans can reject what our leaders are selling us. we can choose life. i learned that from my mother and my father. my mom unexpectedly became pregnant with me when she was just 16 years old. my dad stepped up because that's what real men do. my mom never questioned whether she'd have me. >> i never picked up a ball. i never did another game, i never did another volleyball another basketball, not
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another -- i became a mother. and you were my responsibility. i didn't push you off on your grandmothers. i took care of you. >> when we struggled, mama, did you ever go back in your mind and say, maybe i could have made a different decision at that time? because we had good days and we had bad days but we did it all together. >> well, yeah, of course son, of course. you know, when it gets hard, you're always going to be thinking about, it could have been easier. however, the more i prayed, the more i talked to god and the more that i was honest about my struggle, i had that village that came along, hike your aunt, bt, my grandparents, my mom. you know, they stepped up and they helped us. but the struggle, the struggle was real. >> lawrence: so mama and daddy just celebrated 30 years of marriage. things weren't always easy for my parents, and with the culture
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of today that we live in, it probably would have been a lot harder. that's why we need our leaders to cherish life and who will help us achieve -- they will help us achieve our potential. kayle kayleigh mcenany is the author of chaos through the storm, leaning on christ. she will be hosting this show at 8:00 p.m. all next week and she joins me now. kayleigh thank you so much for joining. >> thank you. >> lawrence: congratulations on the book. >> thank you. >> there's no valuing of life anymore. >> yeah? and i think it directly goes back to the people that are in leadership. what do you think? >> that's right. what a beautiful interview with your mom tameria and happy 30th anniversary to your parents, how incredible. you're exactly right. when you look at what our elected leaders have done on this issue, i can't help but go back to this opinion called car heart it upheld the practice of
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partial birth abortion, abortion when a baby is quite literally out of the womb partially. and justice said something that stuck with me in the decent and he said one day our abortion juris pruden will be on cora and dred scott, two opinions one upheld internment camps and one upheld slavey two abhorrent moments in our past. we have a president who doesn't cherish life in fact he lies about it. he says catholic catechism no longer says we can protect life i can tell you i've gone to catholic school my whole life it's not true. we need to cherish life because the consequences of that are what we see today. >> lawrence: i sales say we must value life from the womb to the tomb but folks here, we have a society now that allow criminals to do whatever they want now and it's killing a lot of folks. >> yeah, callous disregard for life, we see it on the streets,
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senseless violence. when you cherish life from cradle to grave you don't see those kinds of things happening. i would say on this issue, because people say, oh, republicans have gotten in trouble on this, as a party republicans need to talk about this optimistically, we support women, we support women like your mother during the time of pregnancy. and we are the party that says we do draw a line and that line is north korea and china. the other party, where is your line? because most democrats, in fact i would say pretty much everyone with maybe one or two exceptions wants abortion laws on the same footing of north korea and china, not good company. >> lawrence: so true. only a few seconds left. what can we expect next week from kayleigh. >> a lot of good, governor glenn youngkin will be joining us, i'm exciting to be hosting members of the chosen the hit new series on faith. so a lot to come. those are just two but it will be a great week. >> lawrence: so excited for you. >> you've been awesome. you have been awesome. >> lawrence: thank you. make sure to watch her on outnumbered as well.
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>> so google once known for pampering its employees now the company is beginning to strip away some of their lavish employee perks. more on that next. don't go anywhere. ♪ in my ozempic® tri-zone, i lowered my a1c, cv risk, and lost some weight. ozempic® provides powerful a1c reduction. in studies, the majority of people reached an a1c under 7 and maintained it. ozempic® lowers the risk of major cardiovascular events such as stroke, heart attack, or death in adults also with known heart disease. and you may lose weight. adults lost up to 14 pounds. ozempic® isn't for people with type 1 diabetes. don't share needles or pens, or reuse needles. don't take ozempic® if you or your family ever had medullary thyroid cancer, or have multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2, or if allergic to it. stop ozempic® and get medical help right away if you get a lump or swelling in your neck, severe stomach pain, or an allergic reaction.
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>> lawrence: once a pie fear for employee pampering they weren't shire about their pampered perks from rock climbing to pool tables but that's to change on budget cuts. incentives on the chopping block include free massages, shuttles, dry cleaning, fitness, snack. what are y'all doing? employees saying good-bye to their daily host of fun free business. abby hornacek is the host of fun nation park. i mean i don't get my dry cleaning. >> i just picked up mine yesterday, a hundred bucks. i'm like, what the heck are we doing here. >> lawrence: i get it, you want to keep employees there but some of this is a little ridiculous. it's like they were their full
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blown maid and assistant. >> truly. i've actually been inside of a google office before and it's like a mix between willy wonka and the chocolate factory and whole foods. it's amazing. so i can understand why people are upset. we poke fun at maybe the fact they don't get their dried manning os now and whatever other perks but the fact of the matter is, you know what, say their paid, i don't know the individual pay of employees but let's say their pay is not reflecting what they want at least they have the perks and now the perks are taken away? that would hurt me too. except the free massages are weird to begin with because i feel like you can't be too relaxed at work. >> lawrence: i might go to sleep. why not give me the money. i understand the perks but give me the raise i can pay for my own massage. >> or i can buy my own dried mangos which are disgusting by the way. >> lawrence: why do you this i this has happened? do you think it's because the economy has hit everyone and
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even tech companies which have a lot of money are being impacted by it. >> i think tech companies especially i think ceos are now looking at their company and where they're spending money and saying hey maybe we don't need to spend money here. google fired 31 of those massage therapists. they also cut 12,000 employees in january. so i think it's hard times across the board for everybody, but, yeah, i don't know lawrence. i don't know the answer to that. but i know a lot of people are looking at pichai, he made a lot of money last year the ceo of alphabet, google's parent company but i think employees are just upset because they're not get their money and now they're not getting their perks. >> lawrence: there's one solution to this, all those employees that were fired we should just hire them here, hire them here. >> i'm down. we do have bananas and apples upstairs. >> lawrence: we have a great little goody bag and they restock it twice a day so we should hire the massage therapists, get the orange juice, dry cleaning.
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>> and the sunshine and the joy and that's free lawrence. >> lawrence: right? i'll bring the dog, too. abby hornacek thank you so much for joining me. >> thank you. >> lawrence: and thank you so much for joining me tonight. i hope you guys have a great evening. the great sean hannity has a studio audience, i think. >> sean: okay, what's going on? good job lj. there you go it doesn't get any better than that. glad you're here, welcome to hannity. yes, another live studio audience, another day for your 80 year old commander in chief joey. biden, he starts work at around 11:00 with a daily briefing. he then has lunch around noon, then they call a lid on the entire day at 2:30 in the afternoon. there's something wrong with that. i'm working way too hard because he's not working at all. serious question, why is joe even running for reelection. now, get this. coming up tonight we're going to have a hannity hot seat,

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