tv Lawrence Jones Cross Country FOX News May 7, 2023 12:00am-1:00am PDT
12:00 am
will look at are just like includes douglas, what's happening in new york city and beyond as well as should men be playing with women on the same team when it comes to sports? richard, six public vernacular putting our country who discussed all that talking about democrat or republican first we can't start with this, the rise of a
12:01 am
i >> high tech leaders, 1000 people including elon musk founder steve sign on to a letter calling for artificial intelligence to positive elements of the most advanced systems for facebook on risk to society and community. >> we been hearing the last few weeks of a overreacting? is because of you, doesn't mean that is very? is one of crime the today show anchors everyone show they couldn't wrap their heads aroun. >> it never gets old. that's what i said. >> i've never heard it said. there is.
12:02 am
before we talk about the dangers, can we talk about the realm space travel, accelerated, milestones in education, tools or agriculture, all types of advances what about the convenience of having these answers at your fingertips? rapidly, things you'd never dreamed about doing this a i could do. ai could completely change life as we know it. >> i thought my little brother was dead. somebody out there using an ai machine to trick my grandpa into thinking my little brother got in a wreck and died. >> mom, i messed up as she's crying and sobbing. this in here, i got your daughter, you're not going to call anybody, you're not going to call the cops and i put the phone on mute and started screaming for help. ♪
12:03 am
>> a i recorded that song, it became a bestseller which is great for the public but what about the artist? about break we can who's taken down because they had nothing to do with it? what about foreign relations? >> suppose there are two countries already not getting along and fake an announcement of the leader of one of those countries that they are going to invade this afternoon and leadet the did. >> now i'm getting scared. ai is accelerating so quickly it's about to lap humanity. >> are we close to computers coming up with their own ideas for improving themselves? >> we might be. >> and it could just go fast. >> yes. we have tontrol it.
12:04 am
>> can be? >> we don't know, we haven't been there yet but we can try. >> that seems concerning. >> yes. >> what you think the chances are of ai wiping out humanity? >> it's not inconceivable. >> i'm not feeling better about this. we really want to empower something smart more than us and could ultimately kill us? ♪ >> skynet is, it's the reason everything is falling apart. >> they become self-aware. in one hour it will initiate a massive attack on its enemy. >> all right. if we do decide to go ahead with this, there are many unknowns. should we be stepping back? is that the right thing to do? china is still moving forward and the biden administration here's your concerns. the perfect person to put in
12:05 am
charge reporting for duty, let's hear it for vice president kamala harris. [laughter] >> and upset. joining me now, open ai board of directors, former cia analysis in texas congressman will heard, great to see you again. you are not just a passenger on ai, you are trying to leave the march toward setting up guardrails. what do guardrails look like on this? >> i appreciate the time, i appreciate your set up to the conversation, you encapsulated the pros and cons credibly well. this is an issue i've been dealing with since at least 2015 and when i was in congress i held a first hearing on artificial intelligence and i've been think we should take advantage of technology before
12:06 am
it takes advantage of us in one of the things we need to do right now is still down on saint artificial intelligence should follow the law. it shouldn't have special carveouts, we have laws to protect civil rights and civil liberties and we need to make sure ai is doing that. that's a first step most people would agree with from fear and anxiety we are feeling and people feel when it comes to artificial intelligence, it's understandable because whenever you see a rate of change as fast as this, it's difficult to comprehend but slowing down is not an option because there's a lot of folks out there trying to achieve was called artificial intelligence, and algorithm harder than people in advantaged work but in starts with understanding, we need better data policies, the things we do on the internet, it mind. it's ours and we should be able to decide how that works and
12:07 am
these are the debates we should be having in washington d.c., not whether we should be banning books or open borders and the answer is no to both of those so this is real, it will impact every industry and almost every one in humanity. >> congressman, yesterday this week, the vice president met with google executives to get an idea on what we are up against. if i were to set up rules, would one be a stiff sentence for impersonating somebody? changing a voice, my voice could be mimicked, i could get, i could convince my wife to get a stranger with that voice my bank codes, bank numbers and those things. should we set up punishment already for this? is at the guardrails you are talking? >> well sure. right now i can't impersonate you. if i still your credit card and used it, it would be a violation of the law, stole your idea. let's use yet existing laws we
12:08 am
have and apply them to this new technology. we often time things went something is new, it should be treated differently and when it comes to revelation, regulation can improve safety and innovation when it comes so let's start -- we cannot use this in a way you can't do right now and you can't impersonate somebody else -- >> when it comes to music if values drake's boys and put out the song, i will get sued? so just because ai did it, it doesn't mean there's any difference so these things we have, we have canals four. i'm wondering about the stuff we don't know about and had to battle against it. if i write, if i get a graduate degree in my business, masters in business and i have a i write my thesis, is that disqualify my diploma? >> i don't think it should disqualify your mama.
12:09 am
artificial intelligence is a tool that can be used and just like when calculators were introduced, we changed the way we tested the questions you ask ai when it comes to copywriting, we should be able to address those and evolve the way we are testing whether somebody has the knowledge or not. >> thanks so much, sir. >> always a pleasure. >> last week we got an e-mail, we asked you to write is and you did. let's share some. some of you pumped me up with think use. from texas, we watch you every morning and every saturday night, the best news anchor ever. i don't how this made the cut. sam says i'm enjoying the show, for years i watched fox and frank and read your books, how you do it all? amazing wife, that's true. her name is don and she has to see me on tv so the most is
12:10 am
good. just can't smell me. some of you focus on the issues, the republicans need to do a better job messaging and controlling language and not letting democrats control the conversation. they win every time by controlling the linkage. there's an art. kellyanne conway. also, comments pretty funny. rhonda writes this -- the program is good but you talk so fast, i have no idea what you are saying. i apologize for that. if you can, slow it down. maybe if you have that technology, ai can help us out. i watch pete on one nation last week, pete was on the panel. his hair on the back of his head looked so horrible, tell him to cut it, it does not look good at all. what's wrong with that? i think it looks cool, a wild man who lives in tennessee who moved out of minnesota, went
12:11 am
crazy in new jersey and found himself in tennessee. i will relate that. your comments are always welcome, good, bad and indifferent. write us and we are excited about our e-mail. one nation efficiency and twitter e-mail, instagram and facebook. still ahead, calls to charge retired marine with murder after the chokehold death of a deranged man on the subway. brittney griner says it's a crime to land many from women's sports. no joke. our panel, they are good. douglas murray -- will weigh in on those stories. during down historical statues for years and is taking a toll. the academy award winners your to break down the danger not teaching kids history. don't move. >> to think he's gone?
12:13 am
as a business owner, your bottom line is always top of mind. so start saving by switching to the mobile service designed for small business: comcast business mobile. flexible data plans mean you can get unlimited data or pay by the gig. all on the most reliable 5g network, with no line activation fees or term contracts... saving you up to 75% a year.
12:14 am
12:15 am
the death of a homeless man in a subway sparking blame game and national dialogue. 24-year-old marine veteran stepped into an ugly situation by 30-year-old jordan said to be acting erratically to say the least making friends and screaming and user chokehold to restrain him while others out his arms. history of mental illness by their members, 40 prior arrest, died. grand jury investigating the marine could face charges, we will see. terrifying rise of crime in new york city, can anyone blame this man for trying to intervene and keep other people safe? subway crime, group 30% in new york city last year. bring me to discuss, fox news
12:16 am
contributor douglas murray and deputy editor -- your thoughts about this incident and how it relates to you directly? >> i found out about the story while being on a subway threatened by a person who was similar to other videos i've seen, there are videos of him being violent on subway stations. >> the michael jackson impersonator. >> it's a tragedy he's been but like you said, can anybody blame somebody for sending up for the people in a subway car must've been terrified? we don't know yet what happened, we don't have the details. it is appalling for elite progressives who work from home to sit there and demand working-class new yorkers to take a subway to get to work should sit there and terror not knowing for the next person is just having a mentally ill episode or real schizophrenic
12:17 am
who's going to attack them physically. >> marines -- jordan was not nearly as much. that seems to be what they are focusing on. >> it's what opportunists focus on. it took no time at all for progressives to proclaim that this was a public execution. we were told it was a lynching and every emotive term you could use, said in my new york post it was like these motives, they know when it comes to footage like this, we are standing by a box and these people are merely striking matches hoping to blow the whole thing up. i honestly wonder, what were they hoping for by saying this was a lynching? it's disgraceful. >> i have to salute mayor adams. i can't salute the governor who couldn't have been more off-base
12:18 am
saying a subway rider who was killed today. what are you talking about? keep your mouth shut and let's find out what happened, there's no reason for that. >> one of the things, every new yorker knows this and has a story of being on the subway and being a couple seconds of having things going wrong. the left in new york in particular has been waging war against the idea of mentally ill people in new york. they claim if people are institutionalized, we are robbing them of the agency so they black people desperately to the ill to be swarming around subways of new york and when somebody steps in and does something, that's lynching. these mentally ill people are on the streets because of radical left policies about known to illness. >> psychologists and psychiatrists will say the same thing.
12:19 am
i want to move on to something else, not life or death but certainly daily life, women -- excuse me, men who become women wanting to play sports against women. fundamentally unfair in my view but not for any writer, one of the best female basketball players ever. listen to her take on this iss issue. >> i think it's a crime, honestly, to separate someone for any reason, i definitely will be speaking up against that legislation. >> riley gaines going against women, not transmitted. it's a crime x. >> 17% of americans, only 17% believe trans women should be allowed to compete on women's sports team so brittney griner is going 80% of americans criminals but the deeper thing -- is this.
12:20 am
from the progressive view, they would take things that are real crimes video of a trans woman punching a volleyball player, a girl in the face. something you'd consider it a crime, a man exposing himself to a woman in a locker room, things would consider crimes and they take this and side with the criminal and call you a criminal if you have a problem with it. >> alex morgan, a handful of others and soccer players think brittney griner is right. >> we are so lost on this. we have to get back to the court thing. a man can't become a woman. man can pretend to assimilate the behavior and appearance of a woman but they don't actually become a woman. it's just not true. >> you don't on broaden your shoulders. >> you don't undo the testosterone so that's the first thing. the second thing is trans people
12:21 am
account for .3% of the population. there's a contingent of young people thinking that because we are confusing them with this nonsense if you feel funny as a teenager, you're in the wrong body but 92% of the -- we are going to jump and hoops to get around bathrooms and women's sports. how about this? remember nordic rights are important, majority rights are important, majority white matt matter. >> women's sports matter, there's something about that for her to say it's a crime is nuts. good to see this reunion. you reminded me. watch yourself on the subways. i did. don't forget to dvr, will get it at 8:00 whether you're there or not. diabetes drugs are all the rage,
12:22 am
used to shed pounds and people are going crazy on tik tok showing transformation but what are the risks? one of the rewards? is it worth it? to doctors on both sides of the debate next plus kj p, peter doocy dramatic. but we have comedian -- a comedian who really knows what dramatics mean. one nation next. ♪
12:27 am
jackie ibañez, now back to one nation. i'll tell you what really grinds my gears. charities. [laughter] i said it. even bill gates is got in, which is weird. why he asked the nonrigid people ever to send him cash but he defends it saying his fortune will be donated after he's dead. jasmine: [laughter] you will have my donations over my dead body, bill. >> he left his home to follow the american dream in new york city and rose to fame the top for all family touring across the country. he's a writer and frequent guest on gutfeld.
12:28 am
he joins us right now. great to see you every day on the first floor and great to have you on the set. >> it took me from being a guy who could do the job to a guy people would pay to do the job because the hardest part is stand up dealing with hecklers. the hardest part is nobody showing of. >> that is true. if a joke falls in the woods and you are alone, nothing happened. >> no a musters campers. >> there's another moment in your career that stands out, zanzibar. >> she's one of the judges so here's that moment. >> joe mackie. we all talked how you like that delivery he brought. it was complement treat and difference, we haven't seen anything like that one of the things she said, this jon lennon
12:29 am
line. >> is imagine which i basically thought was a song about how horrible his imagination is. [laughter] >> attribute to a great singer-songwriter. let's bring you to the news. kj peak was entertaining when she decided she would have an interesting answer to peter doocy and that was to be totally inaccurate and overreact. >> you said yesterday when it comes to legal migration, you see it go down by 94%. where did that number come from? tell us -- >> i hear you, i'm about to answer. >> people -- [inaudible] the dramatics would come down just a little bit. >> with dramatic about asking a question? >> i'm going to answer. >> he was very dramatic.
12:30 am
>> he was very dramatic and i'll say this, very dramatically, i don't care for that type of lying because when you like, you have to do the leg work. you can live with the best lie is when you tell the truth in a lie. for instance, if you like it legal immigration is down 90%, you pick a day when it was really, really high and pick a day and there was like a storm it was really low. for instance for let's say i've lost 7 pounds but if i take date from three years ago when i was 225, i gained 14 pounds. >> somewhat correct. >> and telling the truth kind of, part of the time. >> absolutely so gutfeld in one or two words, what is it like? >> great, gutfeld is a relentless taskmaster. i'm just kidding. he has to be that way because the show is got to be good but i
12:31 am
enjoyed the challenge and he's a great boss to work for because he wants to be the best. >> and he's watching. you are going to be at the west side of. >> i'm going to pull him off the stage to get your tickets now. it's going to be a humiliati humiliation -- he's going to say no loss. >> i thought you were going to be more together but it's more of a competition. >> i've never seen you dressed up like this. years hearing on history renaming asphalt and kids are paying the price. history in record numbers. on why this is so dangerous to our country and hundreds of pounds of pasta here's the what. tom shillue is investigating. we'll explain when we come back. ♪
12:35 am
welcome back. one nation we focus a lot and were in america in the radical takeover of historic sites in history that push for schools nominal several statues turned down two schools renaming mascots, the focus could be further from teaching kids on this great country. new scores are in, a drop in students knowledge of u.s. history. 13% of eighth graders being proficient. civics far behind, 22% hitting the standards. joining us now, he does this
12:36 am
every day, about a education in america. one thought scares me, cofounder of the civics institute. great to see you, sir. a song on radio, and present. those numbers don't surprise you, do they? >> they don't since we don't teach it, why would they know about it? >> twenty think civics is the foundation of the country may be getting back on track? >> there's a great historian, will grant and will durrant said history is what memory is to an individual. if you take his own memory away, he is disconnected from his world, he has no idea who he is and what we've done by cutting history or lying about the remnants of history which is also ugly.
12:37 am
we can't know anything about who we are we don't know who we were and who we plan to be when we don't know how brave we were. we don't know what risk we took to get there. we don't know anything about it so people start to think history is only about 15 years old and they are nuts. >> we have a great story to tell. you say is so provocative, the world week without america and what have we done change world history by the type of government we have? >> the fact is not only tell her history, we told the truth about our history and then he stopped doing either and that stupid and
12:38 am
unacceptable. >> here is an excerpt from your book to give you an idea of what you will be getting. those documents were founding documents, pull us the rest of the world who we are and why we are who we are and who we intend to be which is better than any other nation, more inclusive, more generous. we made a promise to educate our public in the preparation and learning how to run the country or whatever endeavor they choose. then we stopped. why do you think we stopped and how can we get back on track? >> there is an element in human nature that says what is the latest emotion is the only emotion. what i mean is it was after world war ii have proven we are not only the best but for the most valued and most valuable and most imitated and sought
12:39 am
after country in the world that we came to a generation which i call the james dean generation and they were without mission, without any idea of how they could have helped their fathers in world war ii or could have prevented their younger sons or brothers from taking acid like me. they decided that the founders were different and wrong about the goal of education which was a terrible defeat called to separatory democracy. participatory citizenship meant that there was a country that
12:40 am
wanted its distance to be as smart as they could about everything and they could then be relied upon to run the country. after the 60s and the democratic convention of 1968 showed the mayor of chicago shouting obscenities directly into the camera and cause cbs reporters to be arrested on camera, those kids who had gone through the 60s with caution and fear decided participatory democracy was a mistake and when they first entered public life, they were on school boards and the first thing they did was remove participatory citizens citizenship. >> used study everyday and trying to put it back in the schools and get everything back
12:41 am
on track. the debate can continue in a civil way if you pay attention to how we started. great to see you. thanks i love it, i think everyone would benefit from reading love your personal story, to which is in there. thank you so much. meanwhile, still had the latest craze taking over hollywood. >> trying to get a piece of steak down like one slip, you got to force yourself to make your to skinning and -- >> diabetes drugs for us, to doctors great pros and cons of and democracy in action, 30,000 voted off a plane. ♪
12:42 am
12:43 am
or more she can sell all or part of it to coventry for cash. even a term policy. even a term policy? even a term policy! find out if you're sitting on a goldmine. call coventry direct today at the number on your screen, or visit coventrydirect.com. ♪ the all-new chevy colorado is made for more. bring more. ♪ do more.
12:46 am
people are doing in l.a. >> i was in the elevator and i was like you are skinny. imagine being too skinny. >> i went to lunch with a girlfriend and she's like not eating anything, i'm not. i was like i am nauseous, too. she goes -- >> that's what hollywood talks about, diabetes drugs with dramatic weight loss effect. she's a the liberties doing it. it's spreading beyond hollywood among the most popular, ozempic and -- they appear to be too good to be true. is there a downside? was debated, chief medical officer, doctor casey means is here and weight loss specialist is here, welcome to both of you.
12:47 am
is there a downside to these weight loss drugs originally meant for something else will? >> many nations have prescribed medications improperly so the biggest thing is a patient needs to be monitored very carefully so as they are getting care through an app, it doesn't work. my patient we start off with body composition scale. i want to know, what is the body fat composition? when body fat is high, i know there is resistant and probably need the drug we monitor for side effects and get incredible nutritional support. also hydration, that is key. we see them frequently and speak to them every week. we weigh them as weight comes down as i've been able to taper my patient off the drugs successfully by monitoring them by body composition. >> once they get down, you take them off. >> yes, if i can. probably not if i'm monitoring body fat composition so this is
12:48 am
the big difference. most positions are putting patient on a scale looking at bmi which does not give accurate view of what's really going on so some patients gained a lot of the weight back and they've been nutritionally copper mice because they haven't gotten the best care. >> so doctor means, what is your sense on this? >> 73% of americans are overweight or obese and the fact is, it's not because of an ozempic deficiency. one hundred years ago, 10% of americans were overweight and virtually 0% were obese. the reason americans are eating themselves to death these days is because nearly 70% of our calories are from processed fact remains boot designed to make us insatiable so i think there are
12:49 am
three key side effects about ozempic that people need to internalize as we talk about this craze. the first is side effects. glance at the packaging and the drug and you will see things like thyroid cancer, pancreatitis, kidney failure, hypoglycemia, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, allergic reactions, these are serious side effects and these medications are recommended kids as young as 12. the second issue is decline in muscle mass. we think this is melting away fat but researchers have shown this is decreasing lean muscle mass which is key for health and longevity and it significantly lowering muscle mass and the third large issue is what we were alluding to which is weight regain. large analyses have shown people can dramatically lose weight quickly on these medications but the majority of people gain back the majority of the weight at first any health benefits from the medication and it's not
12:50 am
getting to the root cause. >> not all the same, eli lily says it could be the most successful pharmaceutical drug ever if it's as effective as early results are. >> i think it will be. the key problem when people are obese and diabetic is insolent resume tricks. this affects every single system of the body and when we treat insulin resistance, not only do people lose weight but they have better mental functioning, cortisol levels go down and their appetite changes long-te long-term. the key is monitoring the patient. patients are not being followed, body composition and not getting careful care, they can regain this weight. side effects the doctor mentioned, thyroid problems and all that, that's very rare. there is a rare syndrome called multiple endocrine him -- very few people have it. i think i saw one case.
12:51 am
>> got it. real quick, you find it rare? >> i think the side effects are extremely serious and we cannot gloss over them. when we have major g.i. function with 70% of patients discontinuing medication because of side effects, we can't just gloss over it and for $10000 a year for the medication, we can ship healthy organic food to every patient in the country and actually reverse insolent resistance -- >> food is not going to treat this epidemic. >> we are going to bring this up again and again and we will have you back because a lot of people on both sides. there's hope and worry and concern but we will see. thank you so much, appreciate it. meanwhile, straight ahead, tom shillue has zero body fat according to him. ♪
12:52 am
and it's easier than ever to■ get your projects done right. inside, outside, big or small, angi helps you find the right so for whatever you need done. with angi, you can connect with and see ratings and reviews. just search or scroll to see upf on hundreds of projects. and when you book and pay throug you're covered by our happiness it's easy to make your home an a check out angi.com today. angi... and done. so much more now? other companies are charging you more and more for less and less. and we hate that! that's why force factor has partnered with walmart to provide amazing supplements at great prices for all americans. force factor products use clinically studied patented ingredients to powerfully improve your health. they're also delicious, easy to use and affordable. that's why force factor is now the number one best selling herbs and supplements brand at walmart. rush to walmart and unleash
12:56 am
brian: where does the time go? end of the show means "news duel." we have flown in comedian tom shillue. >> brian, we are here. i know what we are doing. i don't want to blow it. brian: there is an auction opportunity if you have somebody and love tv. you have the opportunity to buy the cheers bar. this is a tv history auction. it's hard to imagine except it
12:57 am
isn't that hard to imagine because it was a television show. >> for those of you who don't know, a sideling is what? >> what is wrong with you? >> what do you mean? >> for starters you are looking at note cards. >> ladies and gentlemen. our good friend george costanza. brian: would you buy the cheers set? >> yes. i have some stuff from nbc radio. and i have it here at fox. i have some old nbc stuff in the building. brian: what a great example for the kids. >> a bunch of pasta ended up mysteriously washing ashore on a
12:58 am
new jersey river bank. brian: i thought it was like a fraternity pledge or something? tom: a bunch of different kind of pasta. brian: you know what they say, you might think it's fun, but pasta has a ph level. six narcissistic phrases. this revealed. if you say i don't want to make it about me, but ... i'm sorry you feel that way, which means it doesn't bother me. why are you doing this to me. i'm a busy person i don't have time for this. i hope you know who you are messing with. it's not fair. >> traffic cops.
12:59 am
do you know who you are giving this ticket to? you know what number 7 was? i'm watters and this is my world. >> passengers voten unruly off a plane. brian: they voted hip off and he left. >> that guy respected democracy. brian: i loved our time together. it was great. there was music underneath it and it wasn't about you so it means you are not a narcissist. >> i'm tom and this is my world. i hope he doesn't watch on weekends. coming up on radio, governor greg abbott will be on tv. piers morgan has an accent.
1:00 am
be sure to follow us on social media. follow me personally on facebook, instagram because i'm cool on, over to you, buddy. we saw sparks flying, right in front of us so we ran into the store, they want the door. that's where we stayed in the back. jon: i am jon scott a day of shopping turned tragedy at an outlet mall in allen, texas. fox news alert. multiple people shot including the gunman but police are not sharing the exact number. it's 10:00
117 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on