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tv   FOX and Friends  FOX News  May 18, 2023 3:00am-4:00am PDT

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send it to the white house. >> todd: with that we have avoided going into wonky discussion with discharge petitions with "studio by," piro we need answers that's not how america works. thank you, we appreciate it? >> thank you. >> ashley: thank you, have a good day. with that, "fox & friends" starts right now. you have a good day as well. ♪ >> steve: they are cutting the quad. lucas tomlinson joins us in d.c. with what the president is going to be talking about over the next 72 hours? >> good morning, steve, ainsley and brian. the u.s. defense budget expected to shrink due to inflation.
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japan's prime minister wants to double the defense spending including buying 400 american tomahawk cruise missiles to send a not so subtle message to china. no stranger to new york. he spent part of his childhood right there in new york and visited washington earlier this year. >> as you said back in january, when you were at the white house, i think the quote is "we face one of the most complex environments in recent history, security environments." and i couldn't agree with you more. but i'm proud that the united states and japan are facing it together. when our countries stand together we stand stronger and i believe the whole world is safer. >> president biden will be in japan through sunday. the trip was supposed to include three-point papua new guinea and australia the unresolved ceiling talks in washington has forced biden to cut his trip short. the president sounded optimistic about his talks before catching a flight to japan. >> i'm confident that we'll get the agreement on the budget,
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that america will not default. and every leader in the room understands the consequences if we fail to pay our bills and would be catastrophic for the -- for the american economy and the american people if we didn't pay our bills. >> the house speaker kevin mccarthy blasted the president for leaving those debt ceiling talks unresolved. >> mr. president, stop hiding, stop traveling somewhere else. america wants an american president focused on american problems, finding american solutions. >> now papua new guinea had declared a national holiday to honor biden's visit. the first sitting by u.s. president. back to work, party is over. china's president has visited the region three times including a visit to postoperative pa new guinea. let's not forget north korea. back in october launched a missile that flew over japan, guys. >> steve: main reason they're cutting the ghawd australia and papua new guinea.
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bad optics for the republicans to be trying to get some sort of a deal on capitol hill and for the president to be halfway around the world. >> right. could have just said yes before getting on that flight. >> steve: that's all. >> brian: thanks, lucas, appreciates it. let's talk about the leverage kevin mccarthy has because of the g 7. the president of the united states has a trip, number one, number two, you go over there and all everybody wants to talk about are you guys going to default on your debt? what's going on with the crisis. they are not only interested in us because it's an economic decision. act like we are on track. if the president says i'm not dealing with the debt ceiling. i don't care what those republicans want to do in the house, then all of a sudden the market reacts and he does not look strong. and he staring down kevin mccarthy doesn't work for him. that's why so far it looks like he is acquiesced on the work requirements to a degree has to do with social security. and also acquiesced on another thing and that is clawing back the pandemic funds that are sitting in everybody's account
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and clearly the pandemic is over. >> steve: let's see what they ultimately get as the president heads back. usually at one of these g-7 things. there is one predominant theme. this time it's all one. you got the debt ceiling, russia, ukraine, you got china. you know, keep in mind, hirsch hiroshima, spoke to all the people g 7 sounds like trying to keep everybody on the same page when it comes to ukraine because, remember, they are launching that spring offensive. they are going to try to take back land and they need all the members of the g-7 on the same page because sometimes our allies over in europe have not all been on the american side. >> well, when it comes to the debt ceiling our leaders here in america are meeting with some of the big banks. they have met with. so ceos like jamie dimon. probably will not default.
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i don't think anyone really believes that our leaders are going to let this default. we have come close to this in the past. it's never happened. it would be unprecedented and would be a catastrophe. republicans would accept a hiring borrowing limit they say if it's attached to reduced spending. they are just saying we can't keep printing money and keep spending the way that we're. democrats say they want those two issues unlinked. >> brian: i saw jamaal bowman quoted as saying there will be no cuts and no work requirement. all right. thanks for playing. i appreciate it. we keep spending. why should we quit spending. president $7 trillion. we bring in $4.5 trillion. i don't know, i can't do the math in my head but it doesn't seem to be a dead heat. >> steve: big numbers, indeed. >> ainsley: in other news daniel penny charged with the chokehold detective of jordan neely on the subway in new york city. a witness spoke to fox digital and able to lease it this morning. she called him a hero. a woman of color.
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she is a witness. a retiree in her 60's. she has lived in new york city for more than 50 years she said i'm sitting on the train and readings my book and all of the sudden i hear someone spewing this rhetoric he said i don't care if i have to kill an f. i will. i will go to jail. i will take a bullet. i'm looking at where we are in the tube, in the sardine can and i'm like okay. we're in between stations. there's nowhere we can go. the people on that train, we are scared. we are scared for our lives. >> brian: right. he went on to say -- she went on to say he is a hero. it was self-defense and i believe in my heart that he saved a lot of people that day that could have gotten hurt. mr. penny cared for people. that's what he did. that is his crime. nobody wants to kill anybody. mr. penny didn't want to kill that man. you should have seen the way mr. he was distraught. very, very visibly upset e he didn't run. he stayed. and then he went back with the cops to the precinct. so he sat there the whole time, obviously, and the next thing uno within 24 hours, within a
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few days boomeranged and alvin bragg. it just blows me away alvin bragg knows witnesses like that out there. they said they did their research and wouldn't take the time to even put it to a grand jury. instead, a call to his lawyers. report tomorrow, turn yourself in we're going to arrest you. >> steve: keep in mind, there were protests every night. obviously, mr. bragg was feeling the political heat. this retiree who spoke to fox digital and it went up at 5:00 eastern time. you can read everything she said. she said it was wrong of the d.a. to charge that guy right there, daniel penny with manslaughter. because it was self-defense. he saved a lot of people who have gotten very, very hurt. yesterday in new york city, nikki haley was on wabc radio and she said of mr. penny, a military members, they are trained to defend and protect. that's what he was trying to do. and she, nikki haley, suggested that governor hochul pardon
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mr. penny and now this morning in the papers here in new york city the governor of new york, kathy hochul said to nikki haley hey, you can't pardon somebody who hasn't been convicted or indicted or anything like that. you have got to wait for a conviction. and she says the governor should have known better. >> ainsley: witness said she actually stayed to give police a statement. at least three other passengers were thanking daniel penny. she said daniel penny cared for these people. that's why he did this. and you read, this brian. but she said and that is his crime because he cared for people? she said the narrative has emerged it's become about race. a white man fatally choked a black man. this isn't about race. this is about people of all colors who were very, very afraid of a man who stepped in to help them. race is being used to divide us. >> brian: just amazing how organized these riots were. we saw the guy from black lives matter huck newson. shutting down immediately of the bridges. had to be coordinated for that subway train to slow down
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because these guys were dancing on the third rail. somebody was in cahoots on that subway train. this is what we are talking about. you don't dance on the third rail even if you are a railroad worker you would never feel comfortable to do that unless someone tipped you off and that train didn't steam roll you. number two today jordan neely is going to have his funeral. guess who is speaking at it? al sharpton. does anybody think that al sharpton is not going to make this worse today and bring up race and talk about what a great person he was and how his life was snuffed out by a 24-year-old white man? and that's what everyone should guard against. there is racism in this world. you should be able to pick it out when it happens. you shouldn't make t. do a synthetic approach to this, that's what this is. a guy who jumped up when he was needed and don't expect anyone else to jump up if is he convicted ever again. who is going to ruin their lives and their family's lives to protect. >> ainsley: he was yelling he didn't care if he killed someone. are you allowed to yell that? you are allowed to be a career
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criminal, go on a subway yell i'm going to kill, i don't care who i kill? and then not expect to be taken down yourself? did. >> steve: ultimately, ainsley, the jury going to have to determine the intent plaintiff penny. did he intend to just restrain him or did he intend to hurt him? if you have got people like this woman who spoke to fox news digital saying look, this guy is a hero, when there is a trial, is he going to be after quitted. that's not going to be a problem. >> brian: just the bark ground is interesting. if you want to go into the background, go ahead. the guy is a high school athlete and instead of going to college, i'm going to go to the marines. is he getting of his career on track and then this happens. the other thing is he is no -- they want to portray him as a rich white person of privilege. he is a kid -- product of divorce. he lived in a 3 bedroom house in a working class area of long island. please explain to me where he living a life of privilege. >> ainsley: why would that matter anyway?
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>> brian: i'm just saying that's the chara carksz of what we hean the streets. >> steve: what complicates things medical examiner ruled he died of homicide. people hear homicide they think he is. that simply means you were killed by a person. people like a.o.c. who suggested it was murder and that's different. in fact, alvin bragg hasn't even charged him with murder. charged him with second degree manslaughter. >> brian: last thing i would add about this is that i want to see the talksology reports. because this guy has a it history of drug abuse and that also changes your behavior, according to reports why don't we know about his be yet. >> ainsley: on drugs and in distress. >> brian: and if you could possibly have that -- that could have been the reason why he died. >> ainsley: have you heard anything about that? >> brian: not a word. >> steve: just that it was
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murder. that's what the medical examiner said with the autopsy. >> ainsley: 11 minutes after the top of the hour. coming up next, you have heard about reparations for black californians, but the squad's cori bush wants reparations for black americans all across our country. don't worry, it's only going to cost $14 trillion. that's next. >> steve: plus, freebie, bud light offering $20 rebate for a beer that cost $20. they are giving it away. >> ainsley: save your receipt. >> steve: as they try to get their reputation back. and look at these folks who are showing up today right here on "fox & friends" live from new york city. >> brian: pick your favorite. ♪ you're a shining star ♪ no matter how are ♪ shining bright to see ♪
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>> ashley: back with headlines. cbp confirms the death of 8-year-old girl yesterday following medical emergency making her the second migrant child to die in federal custody in just one week. this comes as border agents reveal they arrested 16 people on the fbi's terror watch list southern border in april. and 98 so far this fiscal year between our northern and southern borders. montana becoming the first state in the nation to ban tiktok for
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everyone for date that privacy concerns. the law goes into effect on new year's eve day. it will and app. stores from making tiktok available for download. entities would face $10,000 in fines per day for violating that law penalties will not apply to users. the law is expected to be challenged in court. the company is launch ago customizable soft dispenser that can whip up 200 possible combinations. the hinds remix machines allows to you modify ketchup, ranch, 57 sauce or barbecue with enhancer smoky chipotle mango and learns what people like so heinz can eventually sell new creations in the grocery stores. and those are your head libraries, brian, over to you. >> brian: thanks so much, ashley. you know, days after california approve reparations proposals for over a million dollars -- a
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lot of money. cori bush introduced a resolution for federal reparations. you knew that was coming. missouri democrat calling for $14 trillion in payments for black americans echoing similar legislation that have been introduced every session of congress since 1989. so, what do people think about this? shear poll, 28% say good idea. 65% say no. bob woodson is with the woodson institute center. he is the founder and president and joins us now to react. bob, your reaction to this reparations move? >> i think this is more insidious form of bigotry than old fashioned bigotry that was based in malice. barn hough of the german theologian said malice can you confront with violence. but folly, there is no defense against it. it's really insulting and demeaning for this. i'm not surprised that cori bush is one of the sponsors. after all, she also voted against the celebration of
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fallen police officers. this is just another arrow in her quill against the values of this nation. it's really weaponizing race. she makes the false claims that others do that this is necessary because of the legacy of slavery and discrimination has resulted in the kind of out-of-wedlock births and violence and see in cities. this is pass tently untrue. brian, i was born during the depression. 1937. in my poor neighborhood, there were holes in our shoes but not in our character and in our faltd. elderly people could walk safefully these communities without fear of being mugged by their grandchildren. babies were not shot. i never heard of gunfire. babies were not shot in their cribs the way they are today. so, it's ironic that these people like cori bush is pushing an agenda that is really
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antiantithetical against black americans. >> the united states has a moral and legal obligation to provide reparations for the enslavement of africans, black people in our country cannot wait any longer for our government to begin addressing each and every one of the extraordinary bits of harm, all of the harm it has caused since the founding. >> brian: in reality, we know how the evils of slavery. fought a war for it. we know what happened in 1875 with the compromise and incoming with the black codes and the evilness of jim crow. separate, but equal. having said that, we had the 60's, and i think we have been in a gradual improvement since then. with all those evils in the past, is there anything in between we can do or do you think right now the best thing to do is to do your best in your
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society, your town, your family? >> the first of all, we must focused on, particularly the black community, what we are doing at the woodson center we published a book red, white, and black. rescuing america from race hursters and revisionist history. blacks are at their best, our people need to know that our response to oppression was to superior performance we had five major high schools at the turn of the century in major cities that had crumbling buildings, overcrowded classrooms. half the budget of white schools. every one of those black high schools outtested every white school in their cities. but we were denied access to hotels, and banks. we established our own. we had our own railroad. again, we have a rich edition of self-determination based on our christian faith and she's
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institutions have been undermined and had been. the question the race is being used as a spear and shield. will the question will not be raised if -- if the issue why are poor blacks suffered these declines in cities run by their own black officials over the past 50 years? we already had reparations in the poverty program. $22 trillion on programs to aid the poor. where 70 cents of every one of those dollars went to professional service providers and only a fraction to the people suffering a problem. which undermine the institutions of the family and the attitude of self-determination. the institutions that god us through slavery and jim crow have been undermined by the poverty programs. >> brian: bob woodson putting it all in perspective. i know one thing, what they started in 1989 has warp speed now. and i don't know where this is
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heading because, especially in california, they're committed to, i guess, pay. this i don't know how gavin newsom pays this bill without any money. thanks so much bob woodson, i appreciate it. >> thank you. >> brian: all right. meanwhile, coming up straight ahead. terrifying video. small plane crashing and killing the pilot in florida right around fort lauderdale. what we are learning about the moments leading up to that crash. plus, fox news alert. president biden in japan for a high stakes g-7 meeting and russia's relentless war in ukraine expected to be a hot topic. foreign policy expert, rebeccah heinrichs live, soon. elite? >> vo: for us, driving around is the only way we can get our baby to sleep, so when our windshield cracked, we needed it fixed right. we went to safelite.com. there's no one else we'd trust. their experts replaced our windshield, and recalibrated our car's advanced safety system. they focus on our safety... so we can focus on this little guy.
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for a limited time, save up to $500 on select tempur-pedic adjustable mattress sets. >> we're back with headlines, the pilot is dead after his small banner plane crashes down onto the streets of hollywood, florida right near a hospital and distress call to air traffic control. the pilot reported difficulty shortly after takeoff saying he needed to drop the sign he was toeing. rescue teams arrived on the
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scene to find the plane completely engulfed in flames. officials have not released the pilot's identity. the faa is investigating what went wrong. the house of representatives voted yesterday to send a resolution to expel new york congressman george santos to the ethics committee. the panel has been investigating santos since march to determine yes broke the law during his 2022 campaign. santos has pleaded not guilty last week after being hit with a 13 count federal indictment. an organization that's hoping to put flowers by every grave at arlington national cemetery on memorial day is asking for your help. the memorial day flowers foundation says donations have dried up, falling short of goal of 310,000 flowers the group needs to raise $150,000 before tuesday in order to honor every fallen service member and veteran head stone with a flower. you can help out by donating to the foundation on its website.
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that's the memorial day flowers.org. and those are your headlines, ainsley. >> ainsley: wow, we have got to get those numbers up. they all need to be honored memorial day flowers.org. thank you so much, ashley. >> you're welcome. >> ainsley: president biden now in japan where he will meet with world leaders at the g-7 summit in hiroshima. the high stakes trip being cut short over the looming debt ceiling default here at home. joining us now what we can expect from the president on the world stage is foreign policy experts rebecca -- expert i should say rebeccah heinrichss. hey, rebecca. >> good morning. >> ainsley: what do you think the focus will be? will it be russia and china? ukraine? or will it be what is happening here at home with our debt crisis? >> well, the cloud that's kind of hanging over the entire g summit authoritarian china and the threat that it poses to the region and beyond and the fact that china is contesting the united states and the idea, the system of government and democracy and freedom.
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that's why this trip is going to be undermined by the fact that president biden is cutting it short. not going to papua, new guinea and key ally australia. the message look america is sticking around. item crazy is hard but we are committed and is he not even going to show up? that really undermines really the message that i think president biden shouldenning sending all over the united states. >> ainsley: he is in a tough spot he doesn't want to cut his trip short because of the message it sends to other countries at the same time we definitely need to be focused on our debt crisis because if we don't fix that, it's going to effect every country around the world. the republicans, including mccarthy, speaker mccarthy said mr. president, stop hiding, stop traveling, americans want an american president focused on american problems what would you recommend if you were in the administration? >> well, here's the thing. kevin mccarthy actually demonstrated that he is able to deliver a debt ceiling bill which he did last month it was mailed kind of as symbolic that
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he had chops to negotiate when he had a razor thin majority in the house of representatives. i agree that joe biden needs to get this hap wrapped up. call kevin mccarthy and strike a deal. the fact that joe biden has delayed. this nobody is to blame but joe biden himself. he ask wrap this one kevin mccarthy this morning over the phone and then demonstrate that the united states is still the preeminent world power and that we can handle our business abroad as well as the domestic challenges we have at home. >> ainsley: republicans will agree to higher borrowing. they want to reduce the spending. how does it end? democrats don't want those attached. how does this end? how do you see a compromise happening? >> kevin mccarthy stands between joe biden and the political abyss. the freedom caucus that is going to expect a lot out of him as speaker of the house. everybody knows that i really think that he is the most important person in this and so joe biden is going to have to play ball on things like getting
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spending under control. so you immediately raise the debt ceiling, and then you also have to take carol of the fiscal sanity that is the spending problem. and again, while also making sure that the united states handles our external threats abroad. all of that is important. if the leader of the free world can't show up when the message is america is going to lead, we are in a really, really tough spot. >> ainsley: we are hearing experts say we have to fix this before june 1st. that's about two weeks away we are hearing janet yellen saying that how do you feel about that? is that accurate? >> i think that's what the experts are saying. why kick the canal all the way down the road and make everybody have heart burn until then. >> ainsley: they always do that. >> they always do that but kevin mccarthy had this wrapped up and the two men could have been negotiating all along. this trip, let me emphasize. australians how important this is for them. all of the planning and cost they put in into putting hospitable to the president.
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pap that new guinea claimed a national holiday. china continues to harass and be very difficult for these countries. this is of enormous importance. joe biden is not going to be able to claim that great foreign policy achievement going into this election if he can't even show up for something like this for the g-7. >> >> ainsley: how are the folks feeling about this in pap that p&a new guinea how are they feeling. >> it's a really big deal. i don't want do overstate it. it is the security arrangement for the region to demonstrate that the democratic allies there are going to make sure that the indo-pacific stays free and open and that the united states is going to be steady at the helm and make sure that china does not push the united states out. that's how important it is for the australians. we have all kinds of other security agreements with them that go along with this. physically having the president there he doesn't have to answer questions as long as he reads the teleprompter and gets his feet on their soil that would be
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enormous consequence. to say yank in out from underneath them right as he was supposed to arrive it's a huge diplomatickers on the part of the president. >> ainsley: rebecca, thank you so much for coming on. >> thank you. >> ainsley: coming up, a "fox & friends" exclusive. a family is now suing a school after censored their son for wearing a shirt that says there are only two genders. they are going to join us live. first, paging dr. a.i. is he in the house? [snoring] >> waking up jfw come in. surgery. carter. >> what? >> let's go. >> ainsley: dr. marc siegel writes meet my new co-pilot artificial intelligence in a brand new it foxnews.com op-ed and he joins us live. ♪ what are folks 60 and older up to these days? getting inspired!
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the insurance company enwasn't fair.ity y ca i didn't know what my case was worth, so i called the barnes firm. llll theararnes rmrm now the best result possible. ♪ call one eight hundred, eight million ♪ >> ainsley: we are back your headlines isis inspired terrorists sentenced to 8 consecutive life sentences for 2017 attack that killed 8 people. remember that struck more than 20 people when he drove his pickup truck through a busy new york city bike path before crashing into a school bus. the judge tacking on an additional 260 years to the
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maximum eight life sentence that's already received. prosecutors say the national guardsman accused of leaking those classified documents was warned about handling sensitive information before his arrest. according to a court filing, jack teixeira's superiors within the international guard told him not to take notes about classified information after seeing him do so in december. he was arrested last month for allegedly sharing u.s. intelligence on the popular gaming platform discord. bud light is essentially giving away beer for free after disastrous partnership with the transgender influencer dylan mulvaney. mocking $20 rebates on a cases of beer that's cost 19.98s. things can't be going great if they are basically giving it away. 20 bucks for a case of beer that gives you 20 bucks back. giving away beer to desperate bid to make look like sales. sales did tank nearly 24%.
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and those had are your headlights. steve. >> ainsley: hand it over to adam and get to steve. sorry about that, adam. you are outside for the fox weather forecast. >> adam: i will throw it to steve in a minute. the temperatures have dropped out here. a little bit on the cool side. a little bit on the chilly side. folks are feeling that early this morning. dive right into it. you know what? actually some frost and freeze warnings across this entire region stretching back to the midwest, it truly had dropped off temperature-wise in a really big way. 31 degrees currently in syracuse in new york city. right around 45 degrees. always warmer toward the coast and cooler as you head off toward the east. # 7 degrees -- excuse me the west. 16 degrees cooler than it was yesterday in detroit. this exact time in new york city you take a look across the country a little bit warmer in the middle. 60 degrees in kansas city. it's going to continue this kind of warm up there. stay a little bit warm in the middle of the country and cooler for folks in the northeast. those are your weather headlines. steve, for now tossing it back
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to you. >> steve: i'm coming outside. i'm wearing a parka. >> bring a jacket it's cool out here. >> steve: i'm bringing a big coat. we have been telling you about how top artificial intelligence experts share their concerns about the rise of a.i. >> if this technical goes wrong it can go quite wrong and we want to be vocal about that. we want to work with the government to prevent that from happening. >> how do we actually find fulfillment? you know, how do we find meaning in life if the a.i. can do your job better than you can. >> steve: the question is is all a.i. bad? dr. marc siegel says no and explains in new op-ed meet my new co-pilot in the doctor's office artificial intelligence. doctor, thanks for making a studio call this morning. >> hi, steve. >> steve: we have heard a lot of people say scary stuff about a.i. ultimately, you have looked at all the data known so far, and
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it could actually be a great help to you. >> i was one of the first people to warn about this in the doctor's office. the more of a deep dive i do into it the more impressed i am. look, elon musk, when the tesla came out people said u.o. it drives itself? so of all people i think a.i. can be really really helpful in the doctor's office. first of all, harvard has shown that a.i. can diagnose lung cancer well advance of a radiologist. the radiologist should be guiding that another study in nature medicine looked at diagnosing pancreatic and, steve, the earlier we diagnose cancer the better. this study showed you may be able to find signs of it with a.i., again, looking at massive data bases, comparing it to normals that don't have pancreatic cancer three years earlier. three years earlier? might be able to save a life. >> steve: of course. >> in arizona they looked at it to look at clues of how to treat alzheimer's disease and found
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drug targets. do you know how we look for drug targets? a new drug? we do something threw put screening massive data bases to see which drugs work. artificial intelligence does that i have had patients come to me and say chatgpt said this to me what do you think? but, steve, what do you think is the key? because i have to be able to help my patient process the information. i don't want a.i. telling them what to do. point of purchase and say okay, this is how it applies to. i was talk two or three weeks ago researchers up at the university toronto used a.i. to come up with a treatment for a kind of liver cancer in 30 days. that's unbelievable. >> that's the key. the key is can we use a.i. to help us with treatments? can we use a.i. to give you diagnoses we weren't thinking of. you were saying as one of the best chefs. what if i don't have mushroom
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soup what do i use instead? a.i. can say that what if i don't have a.i. available is a cat scan good enough? awe i. can help across the board ford personalized solutions. the danger is if it's used in a way that creates liability for -- what if a.i. is wrong in the world health organization is warning let's not use a.i. so quickly that we end up with wrong information. doctors and researchers have to be careful to make sure to apply a.i. step-by-step so that they don't get ahead of themselves. but it's definitely a new frontier. >> steve: when you said that what if they are wrong you are absolutely right, if they make a wrong diagnosis, somebody could wind up dying, suing the doctor or whatever. so they will be reluctant. once again, with the rise of a.i., what did t. does presents to you on the screen or on a piece of paper a range of options. then it's up to you. a guy in a white lab coat to figure out what's perfect for the guy sitting on the paper table.
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>> and informed patient, too. i'm not defensive about this. patients are now coming to me with information better than they were just doing google searches. they come in with a going search, oh i have this. oh i have that. oh i have this. >> with a.i. they can have a conversation with something like chatgpt and doc, what do you think about that? i'm the one landing the plane. i want a.i. as my co-pilot. it helps me. a tool for me cannot replace me. >> steve: you bring up another great point. read his op-ed at foxnews.com about this being your co-pilot. that is so many people they have got a couple of symptoms they go to dr. google. next thing you know they are going to die in two weeks. >> and it's hard to talk them out of it. hard to reassure them because part of my role is to reassure people. i definitely don't want that. and, again, google has a new a.i. called barred i think from what i'm reading. chatgpt more flexible and pro-rides more information. i'm not defensible about the information my patients give me.
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you just said that. i don't want them coming in convinced they have something that they probably don't. the other thing i don't want, one last point on this, i don't want to have to fight with insurance companies to get approvals for things i want my patients to have and hear a commuter voice on the other end saying you can't have that it's got to be maintained in a personal manner that is used on a patient-by-patient basis. >> steve: we need a. to figure out and file all those insurance claim forms. >> that's another thing helps doctors in the doctor's office did decrease the massive amount of paperwork. absolutely. >> steve: doctor, thanks so much. he is going to be the first one in the office today. >> and i'm ready to use my a.i. >> steve: thank you, mark. coming up on this thursday -- rather, wednesday. pete hegseth and senator cruz coming up. first our friend skip bedell is here to kick off grow your own series this morning. what's he growing? something for the kitchen. ♪ ain't nothing like
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graduation ceremony. so we fixed it. next, more than $30 million. that's how much an 1100-year-old hebrew bible sold for, breaking a 30-year record and making it the most valuable manuscript ever purchased at auction. finally number one, fox news dignity takes the top spot. to get the latest news and analysis. the platform dominated the month of april, beating out cnn and the "new york times." great job porter berry. now, ainsley, take it away. >> ainsley: thank you so much, brian. with grocery prices there has never been a better time to get into gardening. >> steve: i was in the garden yesterday. here to show you like you never done it before on day one of
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grow your own series home contractor skip bedell. >> hey, guys. >> steve: skip, that looks fantastic. >> ainsley: veggie pods. >> steve: usually in the ground and up aand away from the animals. >> veggie pod. world's best gardening bed. we have like 12 of them. as you can see the first thing you will notice, raised up off the ground so makes it easy on your knees and back. don't have to get down on hands and knees and dig and work the dirt. keeps all the critters out of the vegetables along with the tops that allow the sun and all the goodness come in but keep the birds and insects and rabbits, a deer, everything else. >> ainsley: comes in different sizes. >> small, medium and large. can you see they come up on stands. also even wheels. even if you have a city you can roll this around and move it around to the sun. >> steve: skip bedell sprung a leak. >> there is the thing i love about the most. a built in misting system. >> steve: that's awesome. >> you can mist your vegetables. self-watering wicking trays you
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don't have to add water up to six weeks during the summer hot months. >> ainsley: plug in the hose and set the battery. >> put a battery timer on hose and basically does all the work for you. self-watering wicking trays made out of food safe polymer i'm getting sprayed. if you want to grow seeing trables. this makes it so, so easy. >> steve: what is this cover on the outside. >> this is the top keeps the bugs and insects out. >> this is a warm house top. this allows to you extend your season. so you can. >> steve: start early? >> start early. >> steve: it's a greenhouse. >> run it late. it heat in. >> ainsley: we love them at our house and our friends have one and they raved about it whole summer two years ago when you introduced us to it? >> i'm a huge fan vegepod. >> steve: back in the old days at the end of the tomato season he would cut open a tomato and save the seeds. we had heirloom tomatoes back in the 70s. >> i have heirloom vegetables
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here. this is the wise company. this is their seed vault. this bucket comments right here prepared with 39 different variety of heirloom vegetables. great list which i love. it shows you all the vegetables in here and also shows you companion plants. too things to plant next to your vegetables and plants a void. so it comes in my larr sealed packages makes it really really easy. and also, all these vegetables, basically you can last up to 10 years. steve, 10 years shelf life on the heirloom vegetable seed. 10 years, 39 different vegetable varieties. up to 4500 seeds in this bucket. right now skip 20% promo code. if you put in skip 20 on their website at ready wise.com get 20% off of everything you see right here. >> ainsley: if i went on their website i could pick out which seeds i want if i want to grow roma tomatoes i buy that packet? >> no. it all comes in this bucket. 39 different vegetables,
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ainsley. so 4500 seeds come in this bucket. and they last up to 10 years which is amazing. you get a couple of these buckets you are good to plants for years to come. >> ainsley: i have a little one and this is so great if you have children at home to teach them how to grow their own vegetables. haven't we all had great memories with our parents. >> self-sufficient and not relying on the system. god forbid shortages. see the price increases. grow your own vegetables. makes it eetzy. take the guesswork out of it. tell what you to grow next to what. if you don't know anything about gardening. comes in this bucket and put it in the vege pod you can't go wrong. >> steve: that's the thing in my neck of the woods we have dear and squirrels and raccoons. we have bears. so something like that would be fantastic. because after you raise something from the seed, you don't want peter rabbit chewing it up. >> that's right. peter rabbit, the deer, the bear. >> ainsley: this is the time to plant. get your heirloom seeds in and use vege pod.
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skip 15 for 15% off vege pod.com. >> steve: for all the information go to skip bedell.com and our website foxnews.com. fantastic. it is li chili out here. >> steve: we are staying outside. "fox & friends" hour two starts right now. it's 7:00 in new york city. >> brian: all right. we start this hour with a fox news alert. president biden is in japan right now. is he doing it this morning with the g-7 summit underway. actually officially begins tomorrow. top issues include jot this down. tensions with china i have heard about that. russia's invasion in ukraine, 15 months old and about to get their butt kicked in my view. president biden faces backlash for going overseas, according to some, during debt ceiling negotiations but is he cutting it off early. edward lawrence joins us live from

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