tv FOX and Friends Sunday FOX News May 7, 2023 6:00am-7:00am PDT
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straight to a fox news alert, eight people were killed, seven hurt after a shooting at an outlet mall in allen, texas yesterday. rachel: the gunman was shot and killed by a police officer would was nearby. >> alexandria hoff joins us with the latest. >> reporter: witnesses have described the shooter as a heavyset man who was wearing all black, potentially body armor, who was casually walking down the sidewalk while firing shots.
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this happened at 3:30 yesterday at an open air shopping center 30 minutes north of dallas. what was first confusion for shoppers led to a terrifying reality. one man rushed to the scene, knowing his sister-in-law was on site. >> my wife and i actually went over there immediately and we picked her up and i just saw -- i mean, if i would have to he's guess 1,000 to 2,000 people had that were standing in the hot sun, it was 92 degrees. it was -- people were just crying, hugging, being united with loved ones. it was something i'll never forget. >> the trauma is not going anywhere but the rampage was put to an end according to police by an officer responding nearby and jumped into action. >> our rescue task force teams found seven deceased individuals
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on scene. we transported nine individuals to the hospital to area you traa facilities. of those transported, two have since died, three are in critical surgery and four are stable. >> at 3 3:36 our officer was at the premium outlets at an unrelated call. he heard gunshot, located the shooter, neutralized the shooter, neutralized the threat. we believe the shooter acted alone. >> congressman keith selfie weighed in on this on what knows so far about the gunman. >> we do not know a motive yet. i wish i had a better answer for you on the motive. but we know that a man came into this safe community, not a
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citizen of this comm community d took innocent lives. that we do know, that he was not a citizen of allen. i'll leave it at that. l i'll let law enforcement expound on that as they choose. >> the motive here very, very important in understanding why and how this happened. but we also have to think of the victims. we don't know a lot yet about those who had died. of those who had been treated at the hospital, the hospital reports that they range in age from 61 all the way down to 5 years old. will, rachel, pete, back to you. >> thanks,al , alexandria. it's horrific, absolutely heart breaking. we're working on information about what that might mean as you heard from the congressman about him not being from the community. what connections it could have to other criminal elements and when we can confirm some of those facts we'll share those with you throughout the morning.
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we spoke earlier to two brothers who were working at the mall. it's an outdoor mall. you're familiar with outlet malls. there's no internal hallway for customer use. there's sometimes a back one for those that work at various stores to share. the two brothers, max and -- >> jerry. >> jerry gumm were working at wetzel pretzels and told us their experience throughout the afternoon. >> at first, i didn't really assume there were gunshots. i thought maybe a neighboring store dropped a few glasses or something like that. it wasn't until a bunch of families ran to the back of the store when i was doing dishes when i realized something bad was going on. my first reaction was to go through the back to the big hallway that is usually used as like a tornado shelter. i just assumed that would be the best spot. i think that's what a bunch of
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other stores thought would be a good idea. back there, there were probably 2, 300 people at that point. >> the last time we were in there was probably for two, two and-a-half hours, something like that. >> it's a lot to take in. you read about it or you see it on the news all the time but these shootings. you never think it's going to happen to you. it's kind of crazy for it to -- yeah, it slaps you in the face with reality. it's pretty crazy. rachel: crazy for them. i couldn't help thinking about their parents, i mean, two young boys working there and having this experience and you see the people filing out. a lot of questions. i always wonder, pete, what determines how much information the public can get and when. i'm always curious about that. pete: i don't understand exactly how that criteria breaks out. some of it does come down to positively identifying people. rachel: sure. pete: knowing who they are. making sure families are notified beforehand. bwe'll be learning more shortly
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to include how did this police officer who was there close with identifying this shooter who had a rifle. you don't know if the cop had a rifle or pistol. how much time did it take to he respond? were there other people armed? it is texas. we don't know if this mall had a policy about guns or not. and then again, who is the shoor and what is the why. you don't want to give credence to the mindset of a mad person who would shoot innocent people but you also need to understand. will: we'll stay on the details, share them as soon as they're available. now to this, joe biden is saying his son hunter had done nothing wrong ahead of a possible indictment. axios reports there is tension inside, despite the love fest, despite the pride biden said he has in his son. there's tension between the
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legal team and hunter. here is the soft ball. watch joe biden hit it. >> sir, there is something personal that's affecting you. your son, while there's no ties to you, could be charged by the department of justice. how will that impact your presidency. >> first of all, my son has p done nothing wrong i have faith in him had. it impacts my presidency by making me feel proud of him. rachel: last week, hunter was trying to get out of paying for one of his ill legitimate children, a lot of pride there. a lot of pride. of course, he has to hope that we all believe that hunter's innocent because if hunter is guilty, joe biden, the big guy, is going to be implicated. >> msnbc said definitively it's not started to joe. rachel: i'm sorry. >> the start of the question is the story entirely. sir, there is something personal, it's affecting you. your son, while there's no ties to you, that's the definitive
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statement that you made, this is a big j journalist as you also said repeating everything will said in the 7:00 hour. rachel: it was good. pete: it was really good. we should play it on a loop. that's what some of the other morning shows do. maybe we'll do that in the future. i'll do it for you. saying there's no connection, nothing to see here. that's been their you approach from the beginning, no ties. joe says it's not true so it's not true. and then they ignore the mountain the, the steamy pile of mountain of information he also used that phrase in the -- will: that was not mine. rachel: not his. but there were documents, financial documents showing, you know, now multiple, over eight members of the biden family getting checks and money from chinese companies, yo, all this stuff happening, we have the laptop that miranda divine and others tried to put forward but of course the deep state and the democrat party said that was
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russian disinformation. i mean, the evidence has piled up. it's really hard to believe that that interview went down like that. >> it is. i mentioned the pride. now here's the e the tension. axios is saying top aides to hunter biden clashed with the team in dealing with the attacks that surround the president's son. the tensions left hunter to hire a prom prominent lawyer in an at to take a more combative approach than the previous lawyers have taken. you bring up joe biden and where this is headed. pete, you interviewed miranda divine who has been all over the story since the beginning with the new york post. here's what she had to say. >> joe biden should remove himself entirely from the influence peddling operation that he was involved in with his
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son and brother, pretend it has nothing to do with him and say he's been prosecuted in a political witch hunt. that's probably the only way he can go, considering he lied about his involvement before the 2020 election. i think the end game is that he is setting up framing this sympathy card so that when it comes time for perhaps the lame duck period that he would pardon hunter and americans will forgive him because they will he say, well, poor hunter was a drug addict and joe just loves his family and he's been through enough tragedy in his life. leave him alone. >> that's exactly right. when you think about -- it's staggering to think that's the likely outcome of this. >> yes, i'm proud of my son, i feel bad for him, so i'm going to pardon him. rachel: hunter -- >> he's pa pardoning himself by
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doing that. rachel: hunter and joe are tied on this. this was a money making scheme for the entire family. some of the granddaughters were getting checks. jill had keys to the office building where hunter shared it with some chinese energy executives. so this was a family operation and of course joe biden has to distance himself from it and hopefully eventually be able to say oh, poor hunter. >> meanwhile, in california they're set to approve a task force, a recommendation for reparation for black residents after san francisco some weeks ago said we're going to give residents that fit certain criteria $5 million perez dent. of course, it's never going to happen. the state of california will go down the same path. they have a set of criteria a, formula, so many years lived here, so many different grievances, if you max it out you can get $1.2 million from the state of california. not enough.
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not enough according to many activists out there. listen to this. >> we must repair this damage. we must repair it. reparations are not p only morally justifyable but they the have the potential to address long-standing racial dispair you disparitiesand equality. >> say nothing about slavery. nothing. so the equivocal number from the 1860s for 40 acres today is $200 million for each and every african-american. >> so the call i california lege established this task force to determine what should be paid to black residents of california. the beginning discussion if you max it out could be 1.2.
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we heard some activists are unsatisfied with the amount, one individual saying up to $200 million per person. not only does this not end the grievance trend which never ends, you can acknowledge sins of the past without having to make people who are not guilty of them today to bay for them but where is the money going to come from. rachel: i spoke to larry elders who ran for governor not too long ago and now declared a run for presidency, he knows all too well about the finances. it's hard to believe the task force takes it self seriously when there is no money to pass out. here's larry elders discussing that and more. >> this is all about buying votes. they don't care whether or not the money is there. what they want is for black people to vote for democrats like lemmings being democrats are more likely to support reb reparations than republicans. the real gap is the fatherlessness gap.
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when i was young, almost every family had a father and mother in the home. now that is rare. you can't tell me there is more racism today than in 195 when i was born. >> he describes it as a vote buying reco recognition. there's no 1.2 million, much less $200 million to give to every resident. that's the point. if you ever did as you asked earlier settle the grievance, then that would negate the need for the poli political grievancs master. keep asking for ridiculous demands. make it unreachable. rachel: it's also a distraction. larry and i talked about the message it sends to young black people, that you're a victim and it also distracts from the real things that are happening in their community. he talked about fatherlessness. he also talked about the education gap. i mean, minorities he's personally -- especially those living if poor urban areas are
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getting horrible education and no optionses because the leaders who purport to represent them don't. want them to have any options, want them trapped in those schools for which they can't get out of poverty with that kind of education so, you know, it is serving the purposeses of the democrat party on every level. >> it's in california now. mark my words, if not in 2024, but at least by 2028 this will be a top national democrat platform. reparations across the country. rachel: he said it was a scheme to take money who were not slave owners and give it to people would weren't slaves. >> absolutely. >> i think the promise is the payoff. what i'm saying is -- >> the promise is the payoff, yes. >> as long as you continue to give the promise, you can reap the payoff of the votes. so ask for a billion. the fact that it will never be accomplished only helps you in getting the vote. rachel: very cynical indeed. all right. we're going to turn now to your
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headlines starting with a fox news alert. at least seven are arrested in new york city after shutting down subway service and clashing with officers while protesting the choke hold death of a homeless man named jordan kneely. he died after being placed in a choke hold by a retired marine. he was threatening passengers and shouting i don't care if i go to jail. a grand jury will decide whether criminal charges will be brought in the case. the retired marine's lawyer said he never intended to harm kneel kneely. a tornado and dangerous thunderstorms hit missouri overnight, he severe weather damaging a church in trenton and ripping through several buildings. officials reported damage from grapefruit size hail. >> i hate hail. rachel: i know. i know. we know you hate hail. >> i hate hail.
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>> is there anybody had that loves hail? >> i don't know. rank bad weather. it's up there. >> have you -- i you know you ranked bad we her. >> a lot of report damage. rachel: moments ago, the prinprinceand princess of walesa crowd after king charles the third was formally crowned yesterday. >> more festivities planned for today. >> alex hogan has been there for all of it and joins us now from buckingham palace. >> reporter: hi, will, rachel and pete. king charles was able to wake up today and look back on the first time on a day he looked forward to his entire life. today there are more celebrations underway, there will be a concert as you mentioned and there's street parties and lunches across the country which some royal members and family will be visiting. yesterday, all of the pomp and pageantry was on display. it was a more scaled back celebration than coronations in
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the past. 2,000 people crowded west minister abby for this moment, that included 90 foreign leaders from around the world. king charles will face challenges of criticism of the relevancy of the royal family in today's society and how to modernize the image of the monarchy. eyes were on the future heirs. they released a video of the monumental day in history for the country and the commonwealth had and for the family, they often stole the attention throughout the day as they honored their grandfather. despite the rain, thousands of people crowded the streets to see the king and queen in person would say they were extremely moved by the millions who came out to wish them well. you can see in the streets how many people crowded it, crowds that we still do see today. on the balcony with the royal many family, prince andrew and prince harry were not among those waving and smiling from
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buckingham palace which is behind me. so in all of the grandeur we saw yesterday, everything was planned down to such small details. for example, after the coronation ceremony, westminster abby, there were thousands of people would were going to march and return to buckingham palace so they had a recording in their ear so that everyone at the exact same moment was able to lift up their foot and start marching in perfect unison. will, rachel, pete, back to you. rachel: alex, thank you so much. you have to wonder how harry feels being put in the same category as andrew now. consequences, i guess. >> for sure. rachel: as i talk about this it sounds like the way i look when -- >> he's got to be thinking man, did i mess that up at some level. i don't know. rachel: yeah. >> maybe not. who knows. but -- rachel: somebody wrote an article that said when all this was happening glasses were
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crashes in monticeto. coming up, smooth talker, the new york times taking a hit at vivek ramaswamy, talking to a voter who questions the campaign legitimacy. vivek will join us to respond. >> rachel won a mechanical bull riding he competition. this morning, we face off again with the ultimate bull riding showdown. we have pros to help us out. stay tuned. ♪ if i was a cowboy i'd be wild and free. ♪ rolling around these towns like tumble weed zi. with skyrizi 3 out of 4 people achieved 90% clearer skin at 4 months, after just 2 doses. serious allergic reactions and an increased risk of infections or a lower ability to fight them may occur.
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rachel: welcome back to fox and friends as the 2024 presidential race heats up you, the new york times talking to a new hampshire voter, questioning the le ledge legitimacy of vivek ramaswamy's campaign. >> the times claiming they don't know how seriously to take him. victoria gifford questioned whether he was part of a back room deal with mr. trump to help take out mr. de santis in exchange for a position in the next trump administration.
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in the way she thinks chris christie, former new you jersey governor helped take down senator marco rubio. >> vivek ramaswamy is here to react. i believe you're in michigan in the middle of an event right now. thanks for taking time for us. what do you make of t theory planted by a voter, amplified by the new york times, that you're there to to help donald trump get rid of de santis. >> i take any hit piece from the new york times as a badge of honor. later in the piece, the guy was traveling with us, he saw what we did, we drew big crowds in new hampshire. somebody who stood up in the event, walked in with a trump shirt, broke down in tears, said he was switching over to vote for he me. i'm absolutely running for the presidency. we're running for the win to take this all the way. i'll tell you this. i'm the only millennial ever to run for u.s. president as a republican. i'm doing this for the next
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generation. and i'm in this race because i think we can take trump's agenda even further than donald trump ever did. i tell those audiences, america first does not belong to trump. doesn't belong to me. it belongs to the people of this country and i think we can unite the country in thes process, so thank you. rachel: here's one of the things i think about. i like a lot of what you have to say. i like a lot of what trump did. and so people look at a the trump presidency and the things that he got wrong and a lot of it was because he wasn't familiar with government. he was sort of learning on the job about that. people could say the same thing about you, that maybe you guys are supporting the same agenda but he's been there and kind of knows where all the land mines are versus you. >> i'll say three things. it's a great point. first, i'll based on the foundation that he laid. he pointed out a lot of problems that we now understand what they are. now is the time to solve them. i also come to this -- i know you're familiar with some of my
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work, some of my books, et cetera. with a deep understanding of the constitution and a commitment to it and i think that that we will go further with the agenda than trump did if we do it based on constitutional principles. first principles and moral authority, not just vengeance and grievance. yes, i am an outsider. i think it takes an outsider to take on the administrative state in china. it also takes somebody who has a bone deep understanding and commitment to the constitution and i think that's the you unique combination that i'm looking to bring to the table. last president who did that was a ronald reagan, on first principles he went further than anyone ever had. i think we have an opportunity to do the same thing in 2024 and unite the country in the process. that's why i'm in the race. >> to your point, you're right, we know a lot about you and one of the things i think i can speak for everybody had that we appreciate is your recommitment and constant harkening back to first prince be pell bees. it will be -- principles. it will be difficult. i read about various departments you want to roll back from
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intelligence agencies to doe, in order to accomplish living by the first principles. the question is, will you be able to accomplish it? you've been talking about social media, tiktok, about all of these invasions of our privacy while at the same time balancing the desire for first amendment issues and free speech. tell me about what you've been noticing on tiktok and what you what youcould do to help americ. >> one of the things that stand outs to me a with tiktok is thee access to what they are calling gay videos or lgbt videos. the point is why does the chai chinesecommunist party need acco that individual data? it's to exert leverage over the long run, over a 10, 20 year time horizon to deputize
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individual americans for their agenda. t.they require airbnb send over private messages to the ccp as a condition for doing business over there. so a couple things i would say there is. on the addictive social media point, i think if you can't smoke an addictive cigarette by the age of 18 or addictive drink of alcohol by the age of 21, i don't think you should be able to use an addictive social media product until the age of 16. kids aren't the same as adults. so part of the bargain of freedom in a country is that as an adult you get to make the choice, even a wrong one but kids aren't the same. whether it's genital mutilation, puberty blockers or the use of tiktok, if you're 14 or 15, that doesn't make sense. that's how i'm updating the ronald reagan vision bringing it
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to 2023 to address the unique challenges of our time. that's what we with need in the conservative movement. we take the spirit of the slogans to meet the challenges of today. i'm the first millennial ever to run in our party for the presidency. it's part of my responsibility to do it. rachel: vivek, we have one last topic we can get to really quick. you say the nuclear family is the best form of governance. i think that's been a big problem in general for our country that we have stopped relying on the family to do things that it should be doing, giving it to the government and to bureaucrats would don't really care. >> so look, actually this is one of the things i think we can do better in the conservative movement. we rail against big government. let's talk about the best form of governance known to mankind, that is the new clear family. today, 25% of kids, staggeringly, are born into single parent households. kids born into single parent households are 10% plus more likely to commit rape, to end up in prison, to end up leaving and
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running away from home. what do you think causes the social instability, the mental health epidemic and the shame is that we as a government, the people in government have actually created the incentives for that, paying for example black mothers in the inner city to have a single family home of rather than be married. i'm going to roll that back and revive the family as something that we've forgotten in country. that's the foundation of what it means to be an american. rachel: bring back marriage, family, personal responsibility. i love it. >> we'll make it cool again. >> i appreciate it. >> thanks, vivek. >> thank you, guys. i appreciate it. [cheers and applause] rachel: making family cool again. i can get behind that. >> that's a slogan on a hat. rachel: back to our fox news alert. eight victims killed at a texas mall. our next guest is leading a prayer vigil at his church not
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*6 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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.>> we're back with a fox news alert. eight a victims are killed, seven more hurt after a gunman opened fire at an outlet mall in allen, texas yesterday afternoon. rachel: today, our next guest will be leading a prayer service at his church not far from the shooting scene. >> john mark teten is the senior pastor at the cottonwood church in mckenny, texas. thanks for being with us. >> thanks for having me on today. >> mckenny, not far from allen. tell me what you're hearing from your community and what you feel like they need. >> you know, our community is just broken. we're hurting. i've been the pastor at this church in allen and in 28 years as pastor we've never known the brokenness and hurt in our backyard that we're experiencing now, just from law enforcement to the victims, families, to neighbors, to many of our people who were there at the mall at the time, everybody res just
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hurting and -- everybody's just hurting and broken. we want to gather our community together and weep with those who weep and mourn with those who mourn. rachel: we live in a culture that has started to mock the idea that in the wake of these tragedies we should have prayers and gather in that way. i'm really heartened to see that that's where your head and heart goes to as well as the community. on the other hand, we do need answers. i think that woul could be partf the healing process as well. >> absolutely. we look at our society, society's broken. the family's broken. and many places and spaces our young people are broken. they're hurting, more anxiety than ever before, suicidal ideation. why would we not want to place faith and real truth in front of our people each and every time, even in seasons of grief. >> pastor, how do you answer that big question after an event like this when people walk into the church and say if god is sovereign, why does he ahow he evil things like -- allow evil
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things like this to happen to innocent people. >> the truth is, god allows evil to exist ultimately because some day he's going to remove it. he sent his son jesus christ down-to-earth because we are a sinful and broken people. sometimes, there are things that happen outside of our own understanding but ultimately here's what we know. we serve a god that can bring good even out of the the bad. >> thank you so much for what -- for joining us this morning and what you're going to do this evening in north texas. >> god bless. thank you, pastor. rachel: thank you, pastor. >> a live look from our fox fly team as title 42 is set to expire this week. griff jenkins with a live report, next. ♪ the all-new chevy colorado is made for more. bring more. ♪ do more. ♪ see more. ♪
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with jabra enhance select, you can get the same advanced hearing aid technology and professional care you expect from a clinic at a fraction of the cost. try at risk free for 100 days. visit jabraenhance.com. rachel: we are back with the crisis at the southern border, border patrol agents apprehended nearly 55,000 migrants in just one week. >> this stunning figure reported as title 42 border policy is set to expire in four days. >> fox news correspondent griff jenkins joins us live from the border. griff, we talked to you so many times. you've been down there so often. have you seen anything -- i'll ask the question we've asked before, have you seen anything like this, these numbers? >> reporter: no. i've been covering the border for a decade, i've never before seen any of this and more
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importantly neither have the men and women in green in the border patrol likely seen what's coming our way. you may hear a helicopter above us, they're monitoring what's happening on the mexican side. you can see hundreds of migrants lining up. the majority of these are from venezuela. since the middle of april, here in the temporary processing site the border patrol calls camp monument, they process he'sed ed morethan 30,000 migrants and transported them to other places and lest you should think it stops when the sun goes down, let me show you footage we've shot in the early morning hours. look at the thermal drone shot, we can show you the same thing, massive groups at nighttime. you can see l them coming across the river. it doesn't stop, the u.s. side on the bottom there, mexico on the top and an active prosing we caught in the middle of the
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night. you talked about the 55,000 apprehensions. this was border patrol chief putting out a weekly recap that literally had many of us that cover the border you jaw-dropping. you can see nearly 55,000 apprehensions in one week. that's more than yankee stadium holds, approximately 19,000 got aways. do the math. 52 weeks. that's a million people we don't know who they are, why they're here, where they came from or what their background is and of course the fentanyl keeps on coming and cash, by the way, that was trying to go back to mexico to fund the ca cartels. we had an interview with chief ortez. we asked him what to expect. here's what he said. >> over the last seven days, we've been averaging roughly about 8,000 apprehensions along the southwest border. i fully expect us to see come may 11th 9 or 10,000 apprehensions a day. that's not something we're prepared for. if you get upwards of that it
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starts to answers to -- starts to stress theresourceo us. >> reporter: all of these men and women are highly motivated to try and deal with what they know is coming, will be the biggest test of their profeprofessioncareer -- profes. i press mayors cass. mayorkas. i said title 42 goes away. i said you're going to enforce the law, if had come in illegally and can't qualify for asylum, you're going to deport them? they said yes. we'll see if words match action. >> history doesn't give you a lot of hope or faith that will be the case under the democratic administration. always grateful for your reporting. thank you. rachel: thank you, griff. >> those are live images we're showing right there, not stock footage, line images of hundreds -- right there, live. rachel: that's unbelievable. >> that's our border. rachel: imagine if you're somebody who is trying to apply legally, what a sucker you feel
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like right now. i mean, that's part of it too. >> our next guest has seen the lines and that kind of situation firsthand at the border. sunday morning future anchor maria bartiromo joins us now. maria, you heard griff's report. at the same time joe biden is saying he's going to send 1500 army personnel to the border, title 42 goes away this week. what do you make of it all? maria: good morning, guys. it will be madness this week. as you are reporting. 1500 troops will face off you thousands and thousands if not hundreds of thousands of people trying to get into america in the coming weeks. i just spoke with one of my border sources and he told me it hads has been nonstop in brownswell. people coming continually, knowing that title 42 is about to go away and, yeah, we're talking about the apprehensions that we know of. we're talking about got aways we know of. the got aways, more than a
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million in the last two years that we know of. there are so many others that have just gotten in. we don't know their intentionses. and of course we know that chinese nationals are also up more than 1,000% year over year. that's a hard track from china. you have to question why so many people and my source told he me they're all engineers coming in. he said when he apprehends chinese nationals, they're engineers. so we don't know what the plan is huer. we're talking about it this morning as well. we have monica dela cruz, she's right in the middle of everything. she'll give us a good read in terms of what she is expecting come this thursday when title 42 goes away. we also have breaking news this morning on the debt ceiling negotiations. it looks like joe biden is coming out the loser here because it does appear the senates has enough votes to now block joe biden from trying to get a p clean debt ceiling bill through with no strings attached and that is all the work of
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you'utahsenator mike lee. he has been working to wrangle up republicans in the senate and miraculously he got chuck schumer to agree as well. we're talking with house oversight committee chairman james comer, just extraordinary, the charges that have been leveled at this sitting president. he's got bank records. he's got a whistleblower who is talking about this one document that the fbi has in its possession. we're going to talk about that as well. we've got a big show with breaking news coming up. what a week. we've got a crisis with title 42 going away and just three weeks later we've got another potential crisis when the country runs out of money on june 1st so it's going to be a big week. we'll preview it all. >> thank you so much. rachel: thank you, maria. >> still ahead, hold onto your hats, our bull riding competition is up next. this is going to be great. taking the shawl off.
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keep on riding for the most dangerous eight seconds of your life. >> that's a look at t new fox nation series, the last cowboy standing which takes a look at what it takes to be a professional bull rider. >> on fox nation right now. very cool. we're getting ready for our own bull riding showdown on fox square. professional bull riders, daniel an decklin join us now. rachel: i'm decked out. i'm matching them. >> ra.>> yes. rachel: and you guys are in suits. >> yes, we are. why do you love bull riding so much? >> it's a way of life for us and it's -- my family did it and i was following in the foot steps. i couldn't love it more. we get paid for something we love doing, it's kn not really a job. rachel: do you ever get scared
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m? >> every time. >> last cowboy standing, i got the privilege of narrating that. as you went through the competition to see who would be the last cowboy standing, how did that whole sear series -- yu spent time together. you were coached and judged throughout. how is had that different from the normal life, rodeo to rodeo. >> rodeo to rodeo, you've got maybe one to two other traveling partners with you all. being in a big group like that, it's more pressure in there, intensity to see who will be better than the other guy. at the end of the day we're blessed and happy to be able to do what we can to find out we have a great support system with us no matter where we go now. it's an honor. >> we're about to jump on the bull. rachel is going to go first. what tips, 10, 15 seconds, easy. >> keep your legs tight. keep your legs tight and move with it. >> just move with it. >> move with it. >> keep your shoulders out. >> shoulders out.
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can you get up there? >> rachel, jump. give me your hand. rachel: i can't do it. >> you've got this. ♪ >> here we go. who is running the controls? she won the competition last year which i'm wondering how did that happen. >> oh, boy. >> here we go. off to a very rocky start i would say. >> the slide began in moment one. oh, she's up. oh, there we go. will's up next. i'll take your mic. we've got to take our equipment adjustments, change -- you now he's taking the jacket off. >> he's getting serious, taking off the jacket. >> not prepared. okay. here we go. all right. let's fire that thing up. rachel: thank you. >> he's already -- [laughter] >> one of -- okay. more "fox & friends" in a moment.ti
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i'll get on at some point.or y that was one of the worst performances i've ever seen. when it does, aspen dental is here for you. we offer the custom dental treatments you need, all under one roof, right nearby. so we can bring more life to your smile... and more smile to your life... affordably. new patients without insurance can get a free complete exam and x-rays, and 20 percent off treatment plans. schedule your appointment today. we all know that words have power. they set things in motion and make us happy or sad. but there's one word that stands out, because when people say it, lives are changed. it's not a big word. it's itsy bitsy. it's only three little letters. but when you say it, the life of a kid like me can be changed. so what is this special word? it may surprise you.
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your yes is making a difference in my life and the lives of so many other kids like me. thank you. thank you. thank you. thank you. thank you for giving. please call or go online now. if operators are busy, call again or go to loveshriners.org to say yes right away. 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. ♪ ♪ - why are these so bad? - if i would've used kayak to book our car, we could have saved on our trip instead of during our trip. ughh - kayak. search one and done.
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will: pbr.com, and want to thank betty's bounces for this mechanical bull. so pete's on -- >> there you go. don't freeze up. don't freeze if up. >> [inaudible] will: hey, was mine moving that slow? that's really good. [laughter] ♪ ♪ maria: good sunday morning, everyone. thanks so much for joining me this morning. welcome to "sunday morning futures." i'm maria bartiromo. today, repalins unite ahead of a major week on debt as joe biden digs in. >> i'm happy to the meet with mccarthy but not on whether or not the debt limit gets extended. that's not negotiable. maria: and that may no longer be possible. utah senator mike lee rallies up senate repns
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