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tv   Americas Newsroom  FOX News  May 15, 2023 6:00am-7:00am PDT

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♪ >> good luck tonight at 8:00. >> we'll be watching. >> i'll be there. hope you will as well. >> will you use that shot to open up with this? >> it's myrtle beach, south carolina. >> have a good day. listen to the radio. >> bill: good morning. it happened again, america. an afghan national on the terrorist watch list caught entering the u.s. as the white house touts extraordinary on the border. happy mom's day belatedly. good morning. >> dana: i'm dana perino. and this is "america's newsroom." great to be back with you. that afghan national was amongst thousands arrested during the final week of title 42. policy expired on friday. illegal crossings have dropped since then. many chalking that up to efforts by the texas national guards.
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>> they rolled out the razor wire and redirected migrants to official points of entry. president biden said this on his bike on sunday. >> secretary mayokas said the numbers at the border have gone down since title 42 was lifted. are you confident the numbers have peaked and they'll continue to go down? >> president biden: they have gone down. we have a lot more work to do and we need more help from congress as well. in terms of funding and legislative changes. >> dana: resources are stretched to the limit. new video shows a holding center jammed full of adult men. facility meant to hold 1,000 right now is housing more than 6,000. >> the problem goes far beyond the southern border. cities like new york city and washington, d.c. struggling to accommodate daily bus loads of migrants. that is prompting a heated legal battle on where they can stay. team fox coverage, david spunt reports from the white house.
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let's start at the border where matt finn has been up for hours live in el paso. let's begin in texas. >> this morning the city of el paso reports it released more than 4,200 migrants onto the streets here last week alone. the highest number for any week so far this calendar year. you can see now behind me there are migrants sleeping here on the streets and taking shelter in a dirty alleyway. over the past couple days i've been communicating with some of the migrants telling me they have plans to get to other states including colorado, florida and new york. this is happening as some cities like chicago have already declared an emergency over the number of migrants that have arrived there. as we enter a fresh week after title 42 expired, border patrol sources are telling fox news the number of migrant encounters has drastically plunged. the numbers have dropped 50% according to mayokas.
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there are still thousands, tens of thousands if not hundreds of thousands of migrants who just crossed into the united states and are basically in limbo overwhelming resources in border towns like el paso and major cities like new york. here on the ground migrants tell me point blank they're starving. they don't have a dollar or working papers to earn money to get to their next location here in the united states. president biden, who visited the border only one time while in office, criticized the media yesterday and says he does not have plans to come back. >> how are things going at the border? >> president biden: much better than you all expected. >> do you plan the visit the border? >> president biden: not in the near term, no. it would be disruptive. not anything else. >> so looking ahead we're talking about all these releases of migrants. talking with some of the migrants on the ground and one woman yesterday showed me one of
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her documents and it indicated that she has a court date in 2026. she was ordered to appear in new jersey in 2026. how does she plan to get to new jersey and she says she will rely on a humanitarian flight. another reporter interacted with a migrant who has a court date in 2027. bill and dana. >> bill: more to come today. matt finn, thanks live in el paso, texas. >> dana: president biden says the situation at the border is not as bad as expected with the end of title 42. david spunt live at the white house this morning. hi, david. >> the president and first lady spent the weekend in delaware for a little time away from washington. the president is cautiously optimistic about some of these numbers following the lifting of title 42 last week. he was asked by reporters yesterday on the bike ride how do you think things have gone at the border?
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he said much better than you all expected. it is true officials have seen the drop since the end of title 42. is it temporary or the new normal? congressman byron donalds on "fox news sunday." >> when it comes to negotiations with the democrats on this policy i say to them clearly, let's secure the border first. let's get it done. let's finish building the wall and do all the other mechanisms that are crucial for our country's security and when we have that done, then we can talk about all the immigration policies. >> border patrol says in the days leading up to friday it saw the highest number of crossings the u.s. history, more than 80,000. another bus full of illegal immigrants from texas pulled up in front of the vice president's home in washington, d.c., her official residence, the naval observatory. governor abbott continues to do this. the white house says it is sad people are being used as
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political pawns. the president will return to the white house later this afternoon. he will head to japan for the g7 later this week before going to new guinea and australia. there is tentatively potentially a meeting scheduled tomorrow on the debt ceiling here at the white house. an issue where both parties were supposed to meet last friday. looks like it will be pushed back to tomorrow. >> dana: david spunt at the white house. thanks for the update. >> president biden: stand up against the poison of white supremacy as i do to single out as the most dangerous terrorist threat to our homeland is white supremacy. [applause] i'm not saying this because i'm at a black hpcu. i say it wherever i go. >> bill: that was the message for graduates at howard
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university. white supremacy is the greatest threat facing american. marc thiessen with us, nice to see you, sir. inauguration address. unity was the big theme that day. a cold day in washington i remember that day. how does this play now in a re-election campaign that is more and more underway? >> this is the ground he wants to fight the 2024 election on. he doesn't want to defend his record or the worst inflation in 40 years, the worst collapse in real wages in four decades. the worst border crisis in american history and highest gas prices on record, highest food prices since 1979 and high crime rates. he wants to have a fight about phantom voter suppression and race. the reason for it is, the reason why he is bringing this out right now, is because his support among the black community is softening like his support is across the board. there was an a.p. north poll that came out. he won 91% of the black vote in
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2020. his support among the black community is at 58% right now. 41% say they want him to run again. 55% say they are likely to support him if he does. for a democrat those are red alarm -- fire are lamp -- alarm numbers. they are worried his support is softening. >> dana: they believe that donald trump will be the nominee for the republicans at the white house and who they plan to run against. we still here rumors ron desantis is likely to get into race for president in the next two weeks. he was in iowa this weekend. president trump couldn't go because of weather concerns. >> if we make 2024 election a referendum on joe biden and his failures and if we provide a positive alternative for the future of this country, republicans will win across the board. if we do not do that, if we get
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distracted, if we focus the election on the past or on other side issues, then i think the democrats are going to beat us again. >> dana: one of the beltway publications described his run as limping to the starting line. how do you see it? >> he hasn't started running yet. that's a really compelling message. he said we have to get rid of the culture of losing in the conservative movement. he is right. if you look at the 2022 mid-terms, there were two types of candidates, forward-looking reform-minded governors who did well and the populist rabble rousers who elated the hearts of the maga faithful but lost winnable races. the minds are with the reform governors. the thing about ron desantis, he is both. he is -- second to none in taking on wokeness and disney and all the rest of it but
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delivered a tsunami of conservative reform. since his election, the most strongest school choice law in the country. protected second amendment rights. took on trial lawyers. passed a heartbeat bill. banned esg investing of state assets and pushed back on disney. the list of things he has done is remarkable in just a small period. he is making a case you can be both take on wokeness, take on those fights but win elections. he won by 20 points in florida. the best record. he won independents, hispanics and women and also deliver results. you can punch the left and deliver results for the right and it is possible. >> bill: "new york times" says desantis impresses in iowa showing up in an absent trump. a couple seconds here, marc. was it that good for "the new york times" to write that? >> i don't think "the new york times" -- most republican voters
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don't care what "the new york times" says so i don't think it will have much impact on the election. he is showing up. donald trump lost iowa last time around. if desantis can gain traction in iowa and win the first -- the iowa caucuses, things could -- that could give him momentum going into the rest of the race. >> bill: we shall wait and see. nice to see you, marc. >> dana: an interesting point. there is a primary that goes on and it is not a national election for the republican primary. as you know from the board you have to go an win in those early states and that's how you get the delegates in order to win. >> bill: it is quite possible we'll have some desantis news in the next couple of weeks is my best guest. remember mike pence came on and said well before june i will have an answer? it is mid may now. >> dana: a couple of weeks. tim scott as well. all right. brandon johnson is about to replace lori lightfoot as the new mayor of chicago. the uphill battle he is facing
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on crime. >> green regulations threatening farmers. they say they need to cut emissions and how farmers are fighting back. >> dana: outpouring of support for the former marine charged with the death of a man in the subway. >> we need to feel safe nan on our streets and subways and fighting for the everyday new yorker. here on our family farm. then we partner with family owned mills from maine to mississippi to manufacture our cotton into quality american made fabrics that become our heirloom inspired bedding, towels, blankets and apparel. experience our 100% american made luxury linens for yourself. go to red line cotton dot com and receive 15% off your order with code fox news. veteran homeowners, what if you could save a lot of money every month by paying off your car loan and paying off your high rate credit card debt
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>> bill: chicago mayor elect brandon johnson officially taking office today with his swearing in in morning and have to hit the ground running. a lot of issues with crime in that city. chicago police now looking for four robbers who spent mother's day morning targeting 10 people in just 30 minutes. that robbery spree started at 7:20 in the morning. you can see the cluster of crime scenes over the next 30 minutes. meantime violent crime in chicago skyrocketing since 2019 when lori lightfoot took office. up an astonishing 50 percent. >> dana: this is what he said about the looting that you remember that happened over a weekend about a month ago. watch. >> is that the answer, to loot? >> no one is going to condone
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behavior that quite frankly speaks to a level of desperation. >> so you aren't condoning looting. >> i'm saying people are acting out of desperation. >> you are not condoning looting? >> there is no way to embrace that. what i'm saying is you can't condone the looting that corporations continue to do every single day when they take tax dollars from black, brown, white folks all over the city of chicago so they can turn a profit. >> dana: that's his statement. that was from 2020. a month ago when the looting happened he did an interview with the same reporters and said almost the exact same thing. he is consistent. >> bill: the big thing he is on is resources, social welfare benefits to help a lot of people in chicago. that's where he is coming from. >> dana: he wants businesses to pay up more. if you look at what happens in san francisco, the way the businesses react is to leave. so you might start to see more
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of that in chicago as well. people were thinking about where to go this summer. they wanted to go to a big city. what about chicago? no, not with what's going on there right now. it is stuck in people's minds. >> like eric adams got a lot of attention when he was a new mayor in new york. branson johnson will receive the same level of attention. >> dana: marine veteran daniel penny has been flooded with support. defense fundraising nearly $2 million t. charity website crashed at one point. penny's family's outraged at the d.a. bringing that charge. a young man who served our country, what about the other two gentlemen on the subway? they haven't been named. let's bring in my co-host
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geraldo rivera. let's get to that real quick about the question of the two that helped penny restrain neely, how they haven't been named or charged? >> it could be they are cooperating witnesses. we don't know yet. they still might be charged. we haven't seen all the video. there is a lot more to come. the cases will revolve around whether or not it was reasonable to use deadly force to subdue mr. neely. it has become clear -- i just found out this morning reading in the "new york times" -- that neely was more notorious violent vagrant in the subway. he assault you had an elderly woman but a rap sheet as long as my arm. it will all go to the question of whether or not penny was reasonable in the use of deadly
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physical force to subdue neely. it will resolve around that and reminds me of a case i did back in 1985, the subway vigilante person bernard getz. he shot black young men. he was acquitted of all those assault charges and convicted only of the illegal gun. so i think that were i to bet right now, i would say this will be considered self-defense. that will be a justifiable homicide and there won't be a reckless homicide case. >> bill: getz went to jail for eight months because of the gun charge. >> not on the assault but on the gun. >> let's scan the gamut from the left to the right. "new york times" on the right support and donations pour in for daniel penny. it could go to 3 million or more. conservatives hail daniel perry
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as hero after killing man on subway. alvin bragg was elected by a tiny fraction of progressives to realize the race-obsessed vision of social justice, not to enforce laws even handedly. >> remember the mayor, eric adams, when he first heard about it, people have a right to defend themselves on the subway as long as you have violent vagrants on the subway. only later district attorney bragg sought to charge penny. i still think now the case is in the hopper. it will go to trial. and i believe again the jurors will find it was a reasonable use of deadly force in self-defense. >> bill: the mayor said there were a lot of neelys out there. >> he is one of the worst. i had no idea he was this
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notorious. he had no business being in the subway. shame on the authorities who had him on the top 50 list and allowed him even with outstanding warrants to be on that train terrorizeing those passengers. he was a terrorist. you had the marine responding. i know -- i've been in plenty of fights. there comes a time you want to tap out. enough is enough. if anything, i think penny held that choke hold for too long. it is a very difficult decision when you are in the heat of the moment and you are doing what you think is the right thing. i think that clearly he was doing the right thing. >> dana: thank you. be sure to tune into "the five" today. judge jeanine has an exclusive with daniel penny's attorney on fox news at 5:00 eastern time. >> bill: farmers in america are fighting back against a green agenda from the white house. john kerry says we cannot slow
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climate change unless we regulate agricultural emissions. but the american farm bureau says his numbers don't add up. jeff flock is live in long valley, new jersey with more. you have been to more farms than anyone else in television. what are you hearing? >> my dad grew up on a potato farm in new jersey, believe it or not. we're talking to farmers this morning. i have a fifth generation farmer with me this morning. i want to play for you what secretary kerry said last week, nicole. and goat your reaction to it. this is what secretary kerry said last week at a conference about what agriculture needs to do about climate change. >> a lot of people have no clue that agriculture contributes 33% of all the emissions of the world. we can't get to net 0. we don't get this job done unless agriculture is front and
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center as part of the solution. >> nicole, he said 34%. in the u.s. it's closer to 10%, right? >> that's correct. >> you feel like you are already pretty clean out here. >> definitely. as farmers environmental sustainability is one of our top priorities. we make a living off the land and so that's always important to give -- nurse the land and continue the farm for generations. >> bill: she is talking about planting cover crops. you already do that. you already do and feel like your part. >> so many of our practices are about sustainability, cover cropping, crop rotation and nourishing the soil. >> we had the tractor go by and jason look at the tractor as it comes by. all of your farm equipment is diesel. talking about electric-powered tractors. i'm looking at your track for now and want to show a picture to you of electric-powered
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tractors. what do you think? >> i think that electric-powered tractors we need to do thinking on if they can keep up with the demand to continue to be efficient. how long the batteries can last and what it will do to production and the cost of producing our products. >> a lot of questions still out there, bill. we'll continue to listen to them and tell you what we know. >> bill: that green john deere in the background looks pretty good, jeff. nice to see you. >> it's running well, too. >> bill: getting the job done. thank you, jeff. jeff flock in long valley, new jersey. >> dana: what a great life she lives indeed. the white house pushing back on negotiations over the debt ceiling even as the deadline looms. is the u.s. getting closer to defaulting on its bills? the latest on that stand-off and what it means. california's budget deficit ballooning to more than $30 billion. it's dwarfed by the potential cost of his reparations plan.
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can the state afford those pay-outs? >> he thought they would be reasonable. no clue they would empty the fault. this could be as high as $8 hundred billion. 2 1/2 times the california budget. financial well-being to me is knowing that i can be free to do the things that i love to do. i hope when i retire someday, they say, that guy made this place a special place to come to school and gave as much as he could to help the community.
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lower your monthly payments and get cash? with a home loan from newday, take out an average of $70,000, pay off debts and high rate credit cards, and save hundreds every month. >> dana: more and more schools across the country are embracing easier standards from four-day weeks doing away with homework all together. parents and educators worry the learning loss during covid lockdowns could get worse because of all this. >> it turns out the four-day school week is a major trend reshaping education in america's grade schools right now. the move is meant to slash costs for schools. plug teacher drain and achieve equity among students. colorado school distract says his schools love the four-day week so much they aren't going back. >> it has been 80% in support of
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the four-day work. so as you would imagine, our students are the highest. they're like 83 to 84%. parents and teachers have come in about 80% support. >> nationally 850 school districts have dropped the fifth day of classroom learning. thousands of schools up from 650 districts back in 2019 pre-covid. they explain the colorado schools made the switch after losing out on major funding. >> we made the decision to move to a four-day week. we know the greatest impact on student learning is the adults they're working with in the schools. >> four-day weeks are most popular in the rural west. the trend is picking up in metro areas like texas and arizona where it is a legacy teacher's
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union pandemic policies. >> all day long i've been talking about how teachers teach kids. i am glad that in this pandemic, thank god, it did not affect children the way it affected adults. but it is the teachers that teach. >> most schools that adopt the four-day week are closed fridays some mondays, school days are longer in other days to make up for the lost day. >> to the other end of the country gavin newsom taking flak for considering reparations as his state's budget deficit balloons higher. $10 billion more in the red than predicted in january. i don't know how you do that. newsom has yet to endorse the plan for reparation payments that would cost $8 hundred billion.
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his spokesman said the governor is making up his mind. comments have been inaccurately framed. that's a quote. charles payne is with us here. before we get to reparations, how do you go from being up $97 billion a year ago to being down in the hole $32 billion now. how does that happen? >> the giant welfare state with the red carpet. it is totally irresponsible. you know how many times they've taken bites at the tax apple? they went back and taxed people on top of taxes they already paid? they have used every trick in the book to squeeze folks out tea there and now they are paying a heavy price for it. >> dana: on the reparations piece. california republican james gallagher said no matter what he does he is going to anger part of his base. one more example of the governor's tendency to make big promises he can't or won't keep and people will learn quickly that newsom is all talk but no
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action. did he put himself in a box here? he asked for the commission. >> he did. he is going to do something. some of the outrageous numbers that we've heard just -- it's just -- he is going to do something. again when you go up $10 billion from january to may, it means that you just keep making promises and you keep going further and further and figure it out later. i want to say it is interesting you had the education story before this, right? last week i was doing research. i did a segment on my show looking into los angeles specifically. and 9% of their black students are proficient in education. nine. 14% of hispanics and they are 75% of the school system. i was doing it in part looking at all the people that we have to bring into this country to do great jobs, right? we're in a fourth industrial revolution. native-born americans can't get
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the jobs. why? we won't educate them. you talk about modern day slavery. what california is doing to black and when hispanics students. and white students were in the 40s. watered down education is a form of modern day slavery. i don't care what you give someone. if they don't have the wherewithal to use it. let's face it, los angeles, california was never a slave state to begin with. the whole thing is ridiculous. >> bill: why aren't these numbers in the 70s and 80s? why don't we expect more? >> when the head of the teachers union think teachers suffer more than students that gives us the answer there. it is heartbreaking. absolutely heartbreaking. if america ever loses its status as the number one country in the world it will be because of the way we treated our students and kids. >> dana: what we accepted. it is outrageous. let me ask you about the debt limit. i'm trying to avoid having to
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learn all about it. i think it will solve itself. listen to biden yesterday. >> president biden: what i've learned a long time ago and you know as well as i do, never to characterize negotiation -- i remain optimistic. i really think there is a desire on their part as well as ours to reach agreement. i think we'll be able to do it. >> they're going to do it. i think so. everyone is talking about 2011 when we lost the aaa status. it was a mess after we did it. so if they wait too long even if they say we'll wait a day or two the damage that's done even if you wait too long is going to be -- a lot of pain and suffering. they will get it done. it's interesting he is using the word negotiate. i think they get it done this week. >> bill: jump on your bike and ride on out of here. thank you. >> dana: new york city is trying to find beds for the hundreds of
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ranked america's top state for business. >> dana: new york city mayor eric adams announced mid town's historic roosevelt hotel will become the city's main shelter for asylum seekers as new york struggles to house bus loads of migrants arriving every single day. lydia hu in newburg, new york. let's go to nate foye in new york city. hi. >> not only will migrants be staying here at the roosevelt hotel but legal and medical services. according to the "new york post" at least four migrants will be in need of legal services after being arrested and charged with assault during two separate fights early sunday morning. take a look. it happened about a mile from where we are at the nearby stewart hotel. police responded to two separate altercations early sunday morning. four people were charged with
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assault, six were given summons for disorderly conduct. police wouldn't confirm if the ten people are migrants. but we do know this hotel is being used as an emergency migrant shelter. at the roosevelt hotel the city plans to open 175 rooms this week for children and families and then eventually scale it up to 850 rooms. mayor adams describes this facility as the main asylum seeker arrival center on top of the eight humanitarian centers and other places. public school gym nays rums, similar to these images we saw at a former nypd training facility. "politico" reports migrants are living at a coney island school as well as a former public school on staten island. mayor adams continues asking for more from the biden administration. even though we did not see the
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immediate surge after the end of title 42 that we were expecting at the southern border the mayor's office expects more migrants to come and they say they need all the help they can get. >> dana: all the hotel rooms they can get. >> mayor adams moving to relocate migrants sparking outrage north of the city. the crossroads hotel in the town of newburg, new york evicting some homeless veterans to make room for asylum seekers. then you had a couple about to get married getting an unwelcome surprise. lydia lou, fox business is live in newburg. can't be good for business. hello. >> that's right. not good for business. this couple from florida tells me their wedding is next month but they are already getting word from the hotel that hotel rooms they had booked for their guests is already going to be canceled. the couple now scrambling to make alternative accommodations. 20 homeless veterans were
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evicted from temporary housing last week to make room for 60 migrant males being sent from the city to here orange county, new york. orange county sued the city last week to stop them from using hotels here as shelter for migrants and orange county executive pointed to new york city's sanctuary city designation as the reason why mayor eric adams of new york city should keep migrants in the city. it was during his campaign for mayor's office two years ago that mayor adams pledged to maintain the sanctuary city designation. but now, bill, new audio shared with box business we here the mayor speaking with local executives appearing to distance himself from that sanctuary city policy. listen to this. >> the law of sanctuary city was in place long before i became mayor. i'm following the law. as a law enforcement person you know we follow the law.
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we're in court now today asking the judge to revisit this law to deal with this humanitarian crisis because even when they decided to put in place that law, no one thought they would be dealing with a humanitarian crisis of this proportion. >> now the mayor's office tells us that essentially the mayor misspoke. the city has not asked a court or judge to revisit the sanctuary city policy and that they do acknowledge the sanctuary designation remains in effect. still these remarks from mayor adams seem to shed new light on his thoughts on the sanctuary city designation as the city grapples with the migrant crisis being felt across the country. >> bill: bad all around. lydia, thank you. newburg, new york, north of new york city. thanks. >> dana reads sports. >> dana: a new nba record as the boston celtics blow out the philadelphia 76ers in game seven
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of their playoff series. >> 51 for him in game seven. >> dana: jason tatum scored 51 points. it breaks a record for points in a game seven set just two weeks ago by seth curry of the golden state warriors. they face the miami heat in the eastern conference finals. game one is wednesday night. >> bill: boston looked pretty. you are getting good at that. i think the knicks got ripped off the other night because their best player was in a foul end of the second period that gave them three and changed the complex of the entire game. >> dana: they got robbed. >> bill: maybe they would have lost anyway but i'm just saying. from iowa, sioux center. >> there is no substitute for victory. we must reject the culture of losing that has infected our party in recent years.
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the time for excuses is over. >> bill: that's the florida governor ron desantis talking like a presidential candidate in iowa over the weekend getting a lot of headlines. we'll check in whether he is ready for news. a new study linking mental disorders to heavy marijuana use. the mother of a young man who died by suicide after vaping pot is fighting to help save others. she joins us next with a heck of a story. for a home loan. yet, some lenders charge you hundreds of dollars in upfront fees just to apply. they keep your money even if they turn you down. call newday. unlike other lenders, at newday there's no upfront appraisal fee, no upfront termite inspection fee and no upfront water test fee. not $1 out of pocket. give us a call.
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>> dana: there is a new study the finds heavy use of marijuana is linked to higher risk of schizophrenia in young men in particular. a colorado man is our next guest who lost her son to suicide after he began using marijuana. her fight is to save others. she is founder of johnny's ambassadors. welcome to the program. tell us about johnny and what
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happened. >> johnny was a wonderful person. i wish you could have met him. he was a bright student. he had a lot of activities in school. he had a scholarship to colorado state university. sadly he started using marijuana when he was 14 years old. and became psychotic. he started to think the mob was after him and people were watching him. sadly, he died five years after he first started using marijuana. >> dana: he told you three days before he died that you told me weed would hurt my brain and it's ruined my mind and my life. you were right all along. i'm sorry and i love you. i know that's no consolation to you. the studies are now being done and you didn't have that kind of information before. maybe it wouldn't have made a difference, we don't know that. as a parent you would have had a little bit more knowledge and perhaps some ammunition to help fight it. >> yes. our nonprofit johnny's
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ambassadors didn't exist. nobody could help us. none of the doctors thought it was addictive. i didn't have a lot of information. now this study adds to the growing body of evidence that use, especially in young men ages 21-30, 30% of schizophrenia cases would have been avoided had they not used marijuana. i just wish things like this would have been available back then. >> dana: it wasn't marijuana that killed him. he committed suicide? >> correct. he thought that the mob was after him. he wrote in a journal, which we found after he died, that the whole world knew about him and that the university was an f.b.i. base and he had become psychotic. this is what a lot of parents that we work with today don't understand. they think marijuana helps the kids chill out or helps with stress when it is causing mental illness, anxiety, depression, suicidal thinking.
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truancy and hallucinations, this is adding to a well-known body of evidence that unfortunately johnny succumbed to delusional thinking and suicide. >> dana: tell us more about your organization. what can people find to help them or can they help you? >> thank you. i wrote a book the dangerous truth about today's marijuana, johnny's life and death story to tell people what happened to my son and share his story and not be silent. six months after he passed we started our charity to help educate parents and teens about the dangers of today's high potency thc. it is not the same as the stuff we used when we were kids. i speak at school assembles and conferences trying to sound the alarm and let people know this is not harmless simply because it is legal. it is causing the mental illnesses your children are experiencing and trying to get them help. >> dana: johnny's younger
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brother graduated from colorado state university and your older daughter has just made you a grandmother. so life does go on, although it is difficult to do. as you channel your grief through johnny's ambassadors i'm sure you will touch a lot of hearts and reach a lot of people who need to know this information. laura, thank you. >> thank you, dana. >> even more notorious violent having a grant in the subway. they man had the outstanding warrant for assaulting the elderly woman and several others but a rap sheet as long as my arm. it will all go to the question of reasonableness. whether or not he was reasonable in the use of deadly physical force to subdue neely. >> dana: thousands of people rally around the marine veteran who restrained a mentally ill homeless man on the new york

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