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tv   FOX and Friends Sunday  FOX News  May 7, 2023 4:00am-5:00am PDT

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pete: straight to a fox news alert, eight people were killed and seven others hurt after a shooting at an outlet mall in allen, texas, yesterday. will: the gunman was shot and killed by a police officer who happened to be nearby respond ogg to the an unrelated call. rachel: alexandria hoff joins us with the latest. good morning. >> reporter: we don't have a clear picture right now of the victims, who they are, who they were or the shooter, for that matter. we do know that one local hospital reported their facility a had treated victim between the ages of 5 and 61 years old. service a gruesome and heartbreaking scene for first responders to arrive to.
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>> our task force teams found seven deceased individuals on scene. we transported nine individuals to the hospital to area trauma facilities. of those that we transported, two have since died, three are in critical surgery and four are stable. >> reporter: so this all started just after 3:30 yesterday, a male shooter opening fire at the allen premium outlet about 30 minutes north of dallas. dozens of shots were reported as employees and shoppers scrambled if for safer areas, soming even getting a terrifying glimpse of the gunman. >> my mom and i were in johnson and murphy's shopping, is and out of nowhere heard about, like, 10 pops go off. i look at the customer next to me, i was, like, was that gunshots? no, probably just construction, and then we heard, like, 10, 15 more shots go off. and so i ran to the front of the store and we're like, no, that's
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shooting. there's this guy dressed in all black wearing a vest, has an assault rifle, and he's just shooting at people. >> reporter: we also spoke to the a man in the last hour who rushed to the outlets knowing that his stage was there. concern his sister-in-law was there. >> my wife is and i went over there immediately and we picked her up. and i just saw, i mean, if i had to guess 1,000-2,000 people that were standing in the hot sun. it was 92 the degrees -- 92 degrees. it was, i mean, people just crying, hugging, being united with their loved ones. it was something that i will never forget. >> reporter: now, as we mentioned, a police officer was already near the open air mall responding to the an unrelated call when the shooting started. here's allen police chief brian harvey. >> at 3:36, our officer was on an unrelated call. he heard gunshots, located the gunshot, located the shooter, neutralized the shooter and
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neutralized the threat. we believe at this point that the shooter acted alone. >> reporter: by neutralizing, he meant the shooter is now dead. texas governor greg abbott released this statement, quote: our hearts are with the people of allen, the, the, tonight. i've been in contact with the mayor and other state and local leaders and offered the full support of the state of texas to local officials to insure all needed assistance and resources are quickly deployed. a possible motive for the shooting, guys, has not yet been released. will: thank you, alexandria. pete: you know, that seems to be the detail we wait on. many some cases we get it immediately, and usually when we do, it fits a certain narrative. usually when we have to wait, it's a different narrative. and then you have to dig to figure out what the -- and then in the case, as you pointed out, the nashville shooter at the christian school, we've waited for months. we don't know what the motive is
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at this point. we'd only be speculating, but we deserve to know because things like this, tragedies like this where people are targeted, as human beings we want to understand the why even it's sheer evil. rachel: it could be just evil, it could be, you know, other factors. and everything needs to be on the able. there needs to be no third rails, you know, whether it's prescription drugs, whether it's somebody who came across the border illegally, whether it's a terrorist, whether it's, you know,ing prescription drugs, whatever it is the we all need to know because there's no way -- we all have to do a better job of reading the signs, and we can only read these signs before these tragedies happen if the people in charge give us full information. will: and they don't, they send us signs. one of the signs we all find curious is that it's being reported that the shooter is not from our community, reports of that from the allen police department. it's a pretty racially diverse community. there's no way he would know whether or not someone's from
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your community unless you've already id ooh'd that shooter. i caught it means a neighboring suburb. it is most likely -- who knows, it could mean anything including, as we saw, this would be speculation are, we saw a week ago that an illegal immigrant who'd been deported four times in cleveland, texas, killed the majority of a family, tragically, including a child. and so there will be much more to learn. we're only getting hinted at in this story right now. pete: there are theories kicking around the internet right now. i mean, we don't know but we deserve to the. will: speaking of illegal immigration, joe biden has now said he is sending 1500 army troops to the border. here is what he had to say when asked about that issue on msnbc. >> you're sending 1500 troops to the border. people on the left criticize and say it's the inhumane.
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people on the right say you're not putting american priorities first, and employers around this country are saying we need more workers, this is an economic issue. >> bingo. >> have you given up on congress doing mig? and if so, is there something you can do to address this? >> yes, there is. number one, the first bill i ever into deuced was to reform the situation we have for immigration, number one. number two, we're in a situation now where those 1500 people at the border are not there to enforce the law, they're there to free up border agents that need to be on the border, and we're having another 1,000 people coming in. there are asylum judges to make judgments to move things along. i'veed asked this congress for help in terms of what they need at the border. they need more agents, they need more people to clear people. pete: the only more agents anyone has provided are irs agents -- [laughter] rye rye right. -- rachel: right. pete: that was a mealy-mouthed
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answer for a policy he would have called under donald trump inhumane, except title 42's ending, and the flood is coming even more so. they've been overwhelm for two years. it's just band-aid on top of band-aid. rachel: what it is is more processing. we need more people at the border so we can be the travel agent for the cartels and help move people through and get them to their final destination. that is what this is about. it's not about securing your border. you see people, i just had an interview with border patrol wives, they're terrify. i mean, i could hear it in their voices. they're terrified for their communities which they say they can't get the communities they need in their community. they say they're terrified that their loved ones are being tie up in processing and when other agents are in need, they say they can't -- the they know that it's going to take a long time to get emergency help because emergency vehicles are hard to get by with everything that's going on. their communities are falling apart, and joe biden says we
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just need to process these people quicker. that's how he sees this problem. will: well, then-senator kamala harris blasted the trump administration for doing, well, something very akin to what is now being done by the biden administration. here's kamala harris in 2018. >> i believe that it is inappropriate to require the limit resources of the united states military to be used in such a way all because there need to be some demonstration the for the tv cameras based on a political agenda. rachel: that was pre-ukraine war, by the way. pete: yeah. it's just a are reminder that she was always bad. [laughter] she was bad at her job is before, she's still bad at her job. rachel: yeah. but this is a strain on the military -- pete: yes. rachel: but this administration has done nothing regarding the ukraine war, now we know we have troops over there, but now we're going to take troops to the border. by the way, heir not securing
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our border, they're just processing. pete: yeah, delightful. will: meanwhile, let's go to california where a task force has voted to approve reparations for black less kens of california. now -- residents of california. the city of san francisco has suggest $5 million in reparations for people that satisfy a certain i number of requirements that live in industries. now, this is statewide. this is at large, and they have a set of requirements that essentially say if you've live here for x amount of years and suffered this type of economic burden, you can get this dollar amount. if you've owned a business in california, you can get x number of dollars per year. it's a math formula where if you max it out, you could get $1.2 million in payments. rachel: is this real hoe? pete: it's very real. rachel: really? if. pete: it's something that democrats want to push, will push, will continue to to push, and it's going to be front and center nationwide in the coming years. i kind of laugh it off --
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rachel: me too. pete: this is what the activists, if you take the logic of the 1619 mentality, of critical race theory, of what they're pushing, ultimately the only outcome they say is you overturn the whole thing, give the money back because this whole thing is built on -- it's the whole predicate of their belief system. rachel: where does it end? pete: i don't know. that's a good point. doesn't end at $1.2 the million per are resident. that's not going to make everybody's life better -- rachel: doesn't it end with the racial thing ending? pete: president harmony is not the goal. it's retribution. it's reverse racism. you know that. we were too close to harmony, you recognize the problems of the past, forgive the sins of the past, and activists, you mentioned $1.2 million, they're saying that's not good enough. here's a portion of -- here's a couple of sound bites from california democrats and activists in oakland. watch. >> we must repair in this
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damage. we must repair it. [applause] reparations are not only morally justify with bl, but they have the potential to address longstanding racial disparities and inequality. >> you say nothing about slaves, nothing! pete: small note,ly was never legal california. will: never a slave-holding state. that man went on to say, i believe it was that man, $200 million perez e dent. and the question you asked, rachel, would it settle the claim? rachel: right. do we go back to 1985? will: you know it wouldn't settle the claim, because the claim is totally divorced from agency. if california wasn't a slave-holding state, so it can't be really tied to that. i don't know what california segregation, jim crow laws, even
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if you took it back to that. it's not tied to the a sense of harm and agency of any of the individual actors who are alive today or even geographically in the state of california. it's something else, and that something else will never be satisfied, the claim never satisfieded, never move to the place of racial harmony. rachel: and we live in an age where you can identify anything. so i could get in line and i could identify as black to get the reparations. there's just, i see so many problems with this, but i see n- pete: it's an absolute mess. it's the end state of the grievance of grievance politics. i'm -- rachel: do you remember when angela davis can did this, she was of a big black panther kind of person, and they did a genealogy thing, remember how we did where they take your blood and they kind of check -- will: this was fairly recently. rachel: she found out on air live, which the face was just, it was priceless are. she found out that her relatives
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were on the mayflower. and they were actually leaders. not just, you know, like low-level passengers, were actually leaders. this is the problem, that we are a bit of a melting pot. and so who's going to decide who gets what. pete: that only feeds the division, only feeds looking backwards toward bloodlines that hopefully we have moved past at this point. and they don't want us to. rt all right, we've got a few additional headlines this morning as well starting with this: a black man is accused of shooting and killing two white men in what authorities are calling a racially motivated attack. police say carlton gifford shot a hand in the back of a head at a library in tulsa, oklahoma, before shooting the second victim at a nearby convenience store on april 18th. police say the suspect had no prior connection to the victims before the shooting. and to a fox weather alert, a tornado and dangerous thunderstorms hit northern
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missouri overnight leaving a trail of destruction. severe weather damaging a church this trenton and ripping through several buildings. officials also reporting damage from grapefruit-sized hail. that'll do it. and a kansas man is making a difference with the help of a truck, a team, a lawnmower and a big heart. spencer, the 24-year-old owner of the sb mowing, is mowing lawns with his team for free. the viral video on social media shows the teen giving a woman's lawn a makeover and then covering a -- uncovering a hidden path. spencer says it's about restoring dignity to hose who are down on their luck. and those are your headlines. very nice of him. by the way, tomorrow is v-e day, but 78 years ago today world world war ii, the day that world war ii ended in europe, victory
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in europe, when the formal act of military surrender was signed. rachel: fox news contributor joey jones had a chance to sit down and talk with the last known living witness to that surrender. will: it's an interview you to will only see on fox. take a look. >> you were master sergeant louis greats january know. it's such an honor to be here. you just turned 100 years old in february. you got more than 1300 birthday cards. i think people know who you are. >> they're from all over. >> what's the secret to the a long life? >> right here. cook everything -- [inaudible] [laughter] >> is that from your italian heritage? >> i believe so. >> your parents come over from italy. >> right. >> they're immigrants in new york city. so you're in new york and you get drafted. >> right. >> how did you feel about that? >> i didn't mind. i was ready to go when hay crafted me. >> when you first got to the england are, your job was to set up camp for all of the other
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soldiers coming there in preparation for -- >> across the english channel, the allied armada of ships and crafts steam. consecrate by the blood of our heroes. >> turn the third wave which means the first and second was right in front of you. what was going through your mind watching that happen? >> well, i see so many of them got shot up, i lost two men -- >> was there something inside of you that said i will live through this? >> i knew i had something to do, really didn't think about living or dying. >> you were driving a tanker truck, a truck full of fuel. >> fuel, right. >> and it's tricky work for the men whose task is the to get the masses of mechanized equipment ashore. >> driving a gasoline truck is kind of dangerous itself. >> yes. know it. i jumped out of it and said, hurry. under the cliff, the germans were up on top shooting down at
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us, and i got my flame thrower out and put that owl on the fire underneath and got rid of those machine guns there. >> and the fighting doesn't stop there. you have to keep fighting. >> it took us about 43 e days, i think, to fight our way through. >> 43 days. >> and then we kept fighting on til i got to -- [inaudible] >> so then you get an order that says you have to go help find a unit that's on their way to the battle of the bulge. >> general patton's, half of his unit was lost. so captain come in one night and says you've got to go on a mission with me. i says, is that a request? he says that's an order. [laughter] i said, let's go. >> the victory in europe and rejoicing all over the world. >> may 7th, 1945, you were in the room the day world war ii was won in europe. >> the germans came to sign the
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surrender. eisenhower didn't think they would sign it, you know, so he wouldn't come in that room. the french, the british, the russians and germans, he wouldn't sign it, they all signed first. so then he finally signed it. i took him to -- >> you took the germans to general eisenhower. >> yeah. he told me to take them up this when they'd signed it. >> there's a reason why people are just drawn to your story. it's because you're not looking for glory, you're not telling a story about how amazing you are, but in telling your story we learn just how amazing your life has been. and so, you know,st the really inspiring as a man who's seen probably the worst war has to offer, are you proud for your service? >> i'm proud, yes. i didn't do it for glory, or i just didn't know if i had it in me.
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i just did what i had to do. rachel: world war ii also introduceed graziano to his wife. she was a staff sergeant in the women's army corps. beautiful picture. pete: wasn't doing it for glory, did what i had to do. god bless men like him and her. all right, still ahead, paid in china, will and i go off the a wall to break down the company companies dominating u.s. markets while hiding hair true origins. rachel: ooh, i like that story. pete: the threat they could pose, coming up. rachel: plus, first, it's my pop culture round-up, and it's the royal recap edition. of course it is. the stories you didn't hear from king charles' coronation as prince harry dips just ab hour later. ♪ ♪ ♪ limu emu & doug ♪ what do we always say, son?
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rachel: all right, it's time for another pop culture round-up. this time it's the royal recap edition, of course, with the best and worst of the king's coronation. starting off, prince william and kate middleton taking a central role as the youth withful face
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of the monarchy's future including the next generation including kate and her daughter charlotte wearing matching headpieces for the ceremony in a true show of the family's bond. here with what she thinks is british royal commentator, hillary fordwich. listen, the real queen here was kate. i mean, she looked way more regal than camilla, no offense to camilla, and the mommy-daughter thing was adorable can. >> you're absolutely right. rachel: look at them. >> yes, absolutely. topping was within their are robes, be i the way -- by the way, there was a daffodil representing wales, a thistle for sod lapt -- scotland, a rose for edge land and a shamrock for ireland, all the a nations within the united kingdom. very special some of things we couldn't see. yes, they were by alexander mcqueen who, by the way, very
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interestingly, he did not and they did not, that fashion house, tweet out afterwards, but dior subtly did regarding prince harry. rachel: wow, that's fascinating. again, perfection. camilla, take a look at what kate's doing here. it's pretty good. [laughter] okay, now, speaking of fashion, topic two, queen leticia wore it best. i love you, brits, but the formal fashion is very hard to pull off. it's kind of brutal. sometimes it looks good, sometimes it looks frump by, and queen leticia, i think, queen of spain, did -- i mean, this is perfection. i got melanne that -- melania vibes a little bit. >> yes, she look looked beautiful is and, obviously, totally fashion-forward. somebody that was there in westminster abbey was two rows behind her and was complaining she was wearing an ikea lamp shade because, of course, no one could see that was behind her which was a pity, the dress was
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spectacular and was great for spain to be very proud. rachel: oh, yeah, and that spanish bun, by the way, that's the nicest thing i've ever said about a socialist. [laughter] all right, topic three, the prince's car is spotted at heathrow just one hour after king charles' coronation after he told jack brooksbank he planned to head off. so this was really -- i gotta tell you, this was the saddest part for me. he look sad, it was so obvious that he lost his family. your thoughts, hillary. >> you're absolutely correct. but i will say one thing, at least he did come, and then when he found out about dior afterwards, one wonders was this all just for merchandising which really, that was the biggest concern. and when prince william hearse about that, obviously, the prince of wales, he's not going to be too doinged. but we should talk about the fact that he was issued an invitation to lunch at
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buckingham palace, and he didn't accept it. the royal family taking the high road and doing the right thing by still inviting him. rachel: let's talk about that. do you think that he wanted to stay and hang out with his family and sort of reconnect and mg hand said you better concern meghan said you better get back home? >> i don't think it would be fair for me or anybody else to speculate in the relationship of a married couple, that's up to them. all we can definitely say is that the royal family again was doing the right thing and perhaps he, you know, a 4-year-old -- i don't know how many 4-year-olds can wait up until 8, 9 p.m. at night to have a birthday can party, let alone -- they don't really know the candidate. many of us have the children's birthday party the next day. that's for them to decide, and think it's a great pity that he's going to be a footnote in history. rachel: it clearly wasn't the party since she was negotiating all the terms for her to come for, like, a month. and when she didn't get her terms met, including a mention
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of the kid's birthday, then she said i'm not going, i'm out. that was obviously a lame excuse. great insight on the dior stuff. i hadn't heard about that until you told me, hillary, so great stuff. but it was a wonderful coronation. thanks for joining us. >> thank you. pleasure, rachel. rachel: cheers. back to fox news alert, this one's a hard one. eight victims are dead in a texas mall massacre. what we're learning about the gunman. plus, with migrants expected the flood in as title 42 the expires this week, saw -- saw e 1500 u.s. troops are heading to the border. we're going to have congressman ronnie jackson weigh in on both of those stories next. ♪ lowe's knows the first step to motivation is inspiration. so, we've got new everything. new flooring, new paint, new patio sets, new pillows. i can keep going if you want me to. you got this. and we got you.
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yeah, i could do a cartwheel in here. oh hey! would you like to join us? no. we would love to join you. ♪ what do mom■s really want for mother■s day? here■s a hint: it■s not flowers! blendjet 2 gives you ice-crushing, big blender power on-the-go. so you can blend up a mouthwatering smoothie, protein shake, or latte wherever you are! recharge quickly with any usb port. best of all, it even cleans itself! just blend water with a drop of soap. what are you waiting for? order yours now on blendjet.com. rachel: we are back with a fox news alert. eight victims are killed and seven more hurt after a gunman opened fire at an outlet mall in allen, texas, yesterday afternoon. will: g gop congressman ronny
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jackson joins us now. sad story are there our home state. what can you share with us? what kuhn about this story, about this investigation? >> well, i haven't heard anything that you haven't heard at this particular point which i agree, it's a little bit concerning. to me, it mean,s it doesn't fit into the narrative of the far left or the problem we currently have maybe relate to our southern border where we have a large number of really criminal elements crossing the border. we have potential terrorists crossing the border. i haven't heard anything in in addition. our hearts go out to the people down there, that's just a few miles, actually, southeast of the district that i represent, so i know those folks really well. but i hope we can figure this out. this is the problem with our society, this is a societal problem and, you know, trying to disarm law-abiding citizens is not going to be the answer, because i know that's a big push right now. i tell you, we have somed bad people in this country, and a lot of them are crossing our southern border. we have an issue in general
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where we have a culture of unaccountability and in a culture of there's no responsibility, we have people prosecuting crimes that won't prosecute if crimes, and we had the defund the police. all these things are coming together and creating a problem in this country that's now manifest itself in shooting like this. pete: yeah, no, you're right. i'd like to stay with the border, and it remains to be seen the motives and background of the shooter, but we'll see. you mentioned the border, congressman. title 42 the is expiring on thursday, and we're already seeing a flood of illegals. we're sending -- the biden administration is sending 1500 troops to the border, something they said was horrible when it was done under the trump administration. here's joe biden defending that move. take a listen. >> we're in a situation now where those 1500 people at the border, they're not there to enforce the law, they're there to free up the border agents that need on the on the border, and we're having another 1,000 people coming in, they're a asylum judges to make judgments
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to move things along. if i've asked this congress for help in terms of what they need at the border. they need more agents, they need more people to clear hemo. pete: so the troops are going to free up the other agents and that's their approach. >> well, instead of addressing the problem, they're sending people down there to help with the processing so we can get more people into the country. i think this works hand in hand with what they've been doing all along. don't think for a minute this is not intentional. the democrats had control of the senate, the house and the white house for two years. they could have done it on their own terms. they didn't do anything. reason they didn't is because this is the intentional. this is the progressives, the far left, driving this process. having 1500 troops down there to help with the administrative burden and a bunch of extra judges down there so they can look at these asylum seekers, at their cases and then get them into the with country. that's what's going to happen. we're going to to have just a ton of people that are going to get access to the country as a result of all of this, and it's got to stop.
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i saw the other day the sate department said there's upwards of 5 million people that are waiting to come into this country at some point. this is unsustainable, and i think the only reason biden cares about it right now is because he's coming up on an election, and he wants it to look like he's doing something, but he's doing nothing. probably making the situation worse. rachel: or he just wants us to not look there. the processing is about moving people through, getting them out of the way, not having a situation like the haitians under the bridge that might actually bring the, you know, the left-wing media in to finally have to cover it. >> right. rachel: we've been talking to some of the people who live along the border. the level of helplessness and hopelessness is just through the roof as title 42 comes to expirings as we see these -- expire, as we see these shootings, do they involve cartel members coming across because we know that's a huge problem. has been you do and what can the state of texas do if the administration, as you said, is clearly this is intentional, they want this to happen?
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>> i think the state of texas, we're doing a lot. we're operating urn the threat of the federal government, biden has threatened the state of texas that that if our law enforcement officers get more aggressive with securing the borderer, that they will be or you know, or they will be subject to central crimes. so i mean, it's a him a that we have a commander in chief and a head of state that threatens our state law enforcement agency like that, but that's part of what's going op. we're going to do something about it in the house, and it's it's going to be up to the democrats in the senate to push this through, but we're going to pass h.r. 2 next week going back to some of the trump era policies that worked so well. we're going to reestablish construction of the wall, reestablish remain in mexico, we're going to get rid of the parole system. we're going to adjust asylum, the threshold for if what meets a claim of asylum, all these different things. it's the kind of stuff in there that we need to secure our border and hopefully we can get that done. hopefully, there'll be enough
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pressure on them with an election year to pass this through, but we'll see. remains to be seen. rachel: yeah. that remains to be seen in a democrat senate. all right. thank you, congressman, really appreciate you joining us this morning. pete: thank you, sir. >> thanks, guys. appreciate it. will: still ahead, made in china, pete and i go off the wall to break down the companies dominating u.s. markets while hiding their true origins. the threat they could pose, coming up. ♪ -- this is what you came for. ♪ lightning strikes every time she moves ♪ ♪ prices keep going up. but experian is here to help you save on personal loans, credit cards, or car insurance. experian helped me save over $1,400 a year on car insurance. start saving now. free. at experian.com or get the app now. need relief for tired, achy feet? or the energy to keep working? there's a dr. scholl's for that. dr. scholl's massaging gel insoles have patented gel waves that absorb shock
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join the millions playing royal match today. download now. ♪ ♪ will: companies from china are dominating the u.s. market and while they started in the communist chinese country, you might not know it, and that's because these companies seem to be misleading everyone about their origins. pete: yeah, they don't want you to know. so what are these companies, what's their potential strategy and what possible threats do they pose? let's go off the wall and find out. ing you can understand, at least now looking at the cold war declare or undeclared that we have with china, why these companies would want to hide this allegiance. there's renewedded scrutiny on capitol hill about what china's attempting to do. one obvious company to start with folks do know is there china is tiktok. will: at this point, world-renowned. how did it get that way? 20 in 2017 bytedance, which is
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the parent company of tiktok, acquired musically and promoting it as tiktok. this tiktok phenomenal is only e of years ago. -- old. pete: it's amazing how quickly they -- we have to make it look like we have a base in the united states all the way up the their ceo saying, hey, i'm an american, this is an american company. in 2020 the they established new headquarters in the u.s., but what they can never answer is, well, do you answer back to the chinese -- communist chinese, and they always obfuscate. will: at least in the case of capitol hill, they continue to get scrutiny. they're not the only one. how about binance? this is the world's largest cryptocurrency exchange. the time lauren is kind of similar, 2017 it's founded in shanghai and then it leaves china over a big regulatory crackdown. pete: again, founded in shanghai, the world's
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cryptocurrency exchange, it's like coinbase is the big one in the united states. and they wanted to, again, appear like it's an international firm. now crypto, you can understand why the communist chinese may not like crypto, they can't control it. it's anonymous flows of money. so if you're all about consolidation and control as a communist country,s you don't a want crypto there. but that doesn't mean the tentacles of the ccp aren't tied in to binance today as well. we have no way of knowing. do you think they're allowed to just voluntarily leave hang thigh and to -- shanghai and do business elsewhere? if. will: they do not operate in they that, nor do we have technology or servers based in china. pete: again, what does the actual -- what's it called, the org chart, where does it actually go back to? they don't have to show that to us especially as a crypto firm. but then we've got online shopping. will: you're going to have to take it from us.
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we don't do a lot of online shopping -- pete: i do. i try to look where it comes from on amazon -- will: these are very, very popular shopping apps, first, temu, an online shopping superstore that started, again, in shanghai and eventually moved its headquarters to ireland. the entire time this company and others we're going to show you in a moment, they simply try to rebrand themselves as these multi-national/international firms. pete: and every time you download e the app and provide your credit card information, they know who you are, what your interests are, how to argument you concern target you potentially, and we don't know how tied they are to the communist party. they want it to look like they're a multi-national firm -- will: and they suggest they're based out of boston, one off the in boston while headquarters in ireland. pete: they've got a lot of fellow traverse there. --
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travelers there. will: how about shein? we hear many of these products are all made out of china, circumvent all our laws and ethics and morality we would hope to to the accomplish including child labor and sell you a pretty dress for really cheap. pete: exactly right. you've got all this cheap labor and cheap goods making it look like, no, no, this is all fine. got it for $18 online, it's a lot cheaper than going to to the store. the back story is the data and the information. again, they don't share the fact that they were launched in china and, again, who do they answer to in china or do they answer to them k and where does your information go? will: privacy, ca data, kim sum venting the laws of the united states and potentially representing a national security threat. what can we do about all of this, all of these chinese companies? well, there's several different steps. experts believe these companies are doing the rebrand to emphasize diversity if in their
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work force. i mean, that's in part the play to be popular -- pete: to be palatable -- will: not just with political entity, not just with customers, but with investors in the united states. pete: as you see investors going many in that direction too with esg, they want it to look like they're global, international, inclusive, diverse. the chinese will happily play their hand in that game. but what they really are after, politicians and experts worry about threats like data privacy and security. you down load the app, you give them your information, ultimately look at all five of those, you add that up on a person, you've got a pretty good profile on who they are. will: so we wanted to open the aperture away from just tiktok as a threat. take a look at this, four out of five of our top apps right now being downloaded are from chinese companies. pete: four out of five in america today control by chinese companies. who's the one? other one? we'll have to look that up.
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i don't know who it is. we'll find out in the break. will: there to you go. rachel, over to you. rachel: and shein's a clothing company, lots of issues in this off the wall. thanks for doing it, guys, it was awesome. okay. now to your headlines, a denver councilwoman proposes taxing white-led businesses as a form of reparations. this weekend she said, quote: instead of a business improvement district collecting extra taxation from the black and brown businesses that are struggling, you could be collecting those extra taxes from white-led businesses all over the city and redistributing it, them to black and brown-owned businesses. wow. well, former astronaut buzz aldrin hitting another career milestone, being appoint an honorary brigadier general of the space system command. military leaders paying special tribute to 58d run, also naming him a space force guardian for his work in pioneering space
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exploration. aldrin, who is 93, was the the second hanna -- man to walk on the moon as part of the apollo 11 crew 54 years ago. and those are your headlines. don't move, two 2024 presidential candidates, vivek ramaswamy and larry elder, join us live. but first, we're getting ready for summer. celebrity trainer who trains big screen superheros tells all. ooh, can't wait for that. ♪ come on, let's get physical ♪
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(vo) in three seconds, this couple will share a perfect moment. (woman) is that? oh wow! but we got to sell our houses! (vo) don't worry. sell and buy in one move when you start with opendoor. (woman) yes! (vo) close in a matter of days. start with an all cash offer at opendoor dot com this is going to be great. taking the shawl off. ok i did it. is he looking at my hairline? is plaque psoriasis making you rethink your everyday choices? otezla is a pill, not a cream or injection that can help people with plaque psoriasis achieve clearer skin. and no routine blood tests required.
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rachel: summer is right around the corner, so it's time to get your beach body ready. will: the l are um if en device help you hack your metabolism are giving you a health score based on your breath with advice on what to eat and what to do throughout the day. pete: here to show us how it works is a celebrity trainer. don, thanks for being here. tell us how this works. >> this is a nutritionist in your pocket. most people aren't going to have access to expensive nutritionists. i was thinking about this 20 the years ago when i started
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training people, i always imagined if you had a device, you could almost breathe into it and it could tell you what do you need to eat today. our bodies are always different, so there's not a set template on the shelf that everyone's grabbing and using and being successful with. so now what happens is you breathe into this quite, it measures your carbon dioxide, and it's going to tell you what you need to be hire on, fats or carbohydrates. will: really? >> it's financial. pete: it's called lumen. anyone can order it. >> it was develop can by two twins, twin ph.d.s, and they were preparing for an iron man, and they basically create this device. and it was something i was -- i was, i thursday thinking about this decades ago -- thinking about this decades ago, and it's going to allow you to be successful every single day. you'll have higher levels of energy, change body composition, you'll sleep better -- will: show us, i'd love to see how it works. >> i'm already programmed in, it's going to tell me to the
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inhale deeply through my lumen. pete: all right. he's got to hold -- it's telling him to hold his breath for 10 seconds. will: okay. pete: he's holding on, countdown on the app, 3, 2, 1, and then exhale. rachel: see how long it took -- >> skills right there. on the air, i want a little credit -- [laughter] i'm trying to keep a steady hand. pete: analyzing right now. >> exactly. so i'm burning a lot of carbs -- .. camera, if you would. >> i'm actually going on a run after this, so my meal this morning was heavier-carb meal, so the idea is to wake up in more of a fat-burning state depending on your activity the levels, we could administer carbs, more fat. for most people out there you're going to think, well, this seems very high tech, very advanced, but the reality is that you breathe into this for a few
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weeks, lumen starts to win more -- will: fascinating. want it. booth president see, i knew it. >> i'm going to get you one. rachel: by the way, this is als- will: we gotta run are. more "fox & friends" -- >> thanks, guys. thank you. living with metastatic breast cancer means i cherish my memories. but i don't just look back on them, i look forward to the chance to make new ones every day with verzenio. verzenio is proven to help you live significantly longer when taken with fulvestrant. verzenio + fulvestrant is for hr+, her2- metastatic breast cancer that has progressed after hormone therapy. diarrhea is common, may be severe, or cause dehydration or infection. at the first sign, call your doctor, start an antidiarrheal, and drink fluids. before taking verzenio, tell your doctor about any fever, chills, or other signs of infection. that can lead to death. life-threatening lung inflammation can occur. tell your doctor about any new or worsening trouble
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>> all right straight to a fox news alert. eight people are killed and seven others are hurt after shooting at an outlet mall in alan, texas, yesterday. [sound of gunfire] >> the gunman was shot and killed by a police officer who happened to be nearby. while responding to an unrelated call. >> alexandria joins us now

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