tv America Reports FOX News June 1, 2023 10:00am-11:00am PDT
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>> keep mind i'm a single mom, my daughter goes to her father's every other weekend, and i sleep in, i wake up for fox and friends, sometimes i get up early in the morning and just binge all day. "the chosen," "emily in paris." >> harris: "emily in paris." >> kayleigh: don't forget to dvr the show. here is "america reports." >> you really need to ensure that we have a two-term president to be able to see this to conclusion. you do one term and they reverse it when they come in, you can't have it be reversed. you got to have humility. you can't be prideful, can't be just about you. >> when he says eight years, every time i hear it, i wince. if it takes eight years to turn this around, then you don't want him. you don't want him as your president. you ought to go to the third, fourth, fifth or sixth guy. >> john: the race for the white
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house playing out in key battleground states as the two leading contenders for the republican nomination hit the campaign trail. hello to you. >> hello, john. happy friday eve. anita vogel in for sandra smith. former president donald trump meeting with faith leaders in des moines, iowa as he b barnstorms the state before he joins sean hannity tonight on fox news. florida governor ron desantis makes a two-day, five-town blitz across the state before campaigning in new hampshire. >> john: the field for the gop primary will grow more crowded. mike pence, chris christie, and doug bergham will show their hats into the ring next week. rich edson is live in urbandale,
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iowa, the former president taking aim at desantis today, and desantis saying you know, that's not the way to go about this. >> it's been back and forth and intensifying, certainly after ron desantis got into the race. we have seen that since the former president has been in iowa, he arrived last night. came here to the west side conservative club to meet with folks here, he's headed back east towards des moines to meet with faith leaders. the former president has been criticizing the florida governor. he has been hitting him on covid, immigration, his loyalty, after desantis jumped into the race. desantis says to curb the federal government, the next republican president needs at least two terms. trump said he would -- trump would only get one more so now trump is responding to that. >> i've been watching desantis go out and say i've got eight years, it's going to be eight
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years, let me tell you something. right there you should vote against him. it will take me six months to have it totally the way it was, we'll have it fast. >> desantis left iowa yesterday, is campaigning in new hampshire today. alluded again to trump and criticism that over the past few years the former president, with his comments, his endorsement, cost republicans the presidency and control of the senate. >> we've got to end this culture of losing that's infected the republican party in recent years. you know, we should have 55 republican senators right now had we not flubbed so many races over the last 4 or 6 years. and so there's not going to be any mulligans on this one. >> more republicans jumping into this race, three more are planning to do so over the next week. former new jersey governor chris christie who ran in 2016, dropped out, endorsed trump and is now a critic. former vice president mike pence
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and north dakota governor doug bergham. bergham is expected to announce next week in fargo. pence will come to iowa for his announcement wednesday. john. >> john: bergham has to get more name recognition, no question about that. see you soon. an attorney for hunter biden has deposed the owner of the repair shop where the president's son left behind a laptop in 2019 later as you know became public. the deposition came as a result of his team counter suing mac isaac after they sued for defamation. biden and the lawyers have not publicly confirmed the laptop was in fact his. >> and the debt ceiling bill passing in the house, heads to the senate where some gop opposition could drag a vote down to the wire and time is of
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the essence with the u.s. at risk of an unprecedented default in just four days. new reaction from both sides of the aisle in the senate, delaware senator and rick scott will join us later, but first chad pergram, how much pushback are we expecting in the senate on this. >> anita, there will be pushback but it will not torpedo the bill. senators saw 317 votes for the bill in the house last night. they do not want to get in the way of a congressional train barrelling down the tracks. however, members still want their say on the bill. >> we have to do it in an orderly fashion and give the senators an opportunity. the senate is a unique institution. any individual senator can stop the train and ask for an amendment and debate is unlimited unless there's an agreement.
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i hope there will be an agreement soon. >> rand paul has a plan to put spending, tim kaine hopes to strip out the mountain valley pipeline, he says it has nothing to do with the debt ceiling, lindsey graham disagrees with how the bill controls pentagon spending. >> i've got an amendment to raise the debt ceiling for 90 days, no strings attached. i'm not going to let us default, but i'm not going to destroy our military in the name of raising the debt. i don't want to here [bleep] about default, i don't want to default. >> they'll likely give those senators votes on their plans but could require 60 yea for adoption. kills the amendment. the right is staring stag gers at kevin mccarthy. >> it wasn't an easy fight. i had both sides upset but i was focused on you and will stay focused on you. i'm waking up tomorrow to go after everything we didn't get today but i will improve each
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day. it was not an easy task. the president not willing to meet with us, a lot of different things we could do better. >> the senate could vote on the bill as early as tonight. however, if there is no agreement, this could bleed into the weekend. back to you. >> anita: thank you, chad. john. >> john: new details emerging about the commencement speaker at the city university of new york who used the stage to repeatedly slam israel. the activist has an extensive history of making anti-semitic remarks on social media, but some are calling for the school to lose billions of dollars in federal funding. >> institution that continues to fail us, that continues to train and cooperate with the fascist nypd. may it be the fuel for the fight against capitalism, those who
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need our protection, they will carry the revolution. the revolution lives so loudly despite not being televised. >> john: mike lawler is working on legislation to pull dollars government on colleges promoting anti-semitism and joins us now. congressman, that was not the part of the speech we played there that really was anti-semitic in nature, it was this part of the speech. >> israel continues to rain bullets and bombs on worshippers, murdering the old, the young, attacking even funerals and graveyards as it encourages lynch mobs to target palestinian homes and businesses as it imprisons its children. >> john: your reaction to what she said. >> you know, john, in 2009 i graduated from manhattan college, valedictorian at my class. i spoke at the graduation, a message hopeful, optimistic,
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focused on how my fellow graduates could impact the future of our country. what we heard was just a diatribe, anti-semitism at its worse and shameful for cuny to ruin the graduation for the fellow graduates. and i've introduced legislation that would hold these institutions accountable. you look last year, uc berkeley was going to allow an anti-semitic event on its campus, here you have a speech, promoting the bds movement, anti-semitic to its core. they do not deserve federal taxpayer funds to promote this nonsense and so that is why we have introduced legislation and i'm going to push for passage to strip any federal dollars for
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colleges and universities that allow for, to promote or engage in anti-semitic behavior on college campuses. it has to stop. >> john: the bill is very simple, stop anti-semitism on college campuses act, says the institution will not authorize, facilitate, provide funding for or support any event promoting n anti-semitism on campus, and pull federal funding for student loans and other grants. what's interesting about this and shocking about this, this was in some event that was being hosted by some fringe campus group that had the support of cuny, this was the commencement address at the school of law from a person who as we pointed out the very top of this is well-known for posting anti-semitic views on social media. how did she become the commencement speaker? >> that's any question. when i was chosen as
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commencement speaker for manhattan college, i had to show them my speech, i went through it with them, and they understood, you know, exactly the message that i was delivering. the fact that cuny allowed her to take the stage and spew the diatribes and pure hatred is insane. we have seen a rapid rise in the number of anti-semitic hate crimes in new york and across the country and failure to act by many folks in new york. 99% of the cases have not been prosecuted. when you allow this to occur, you are allowing that anti-semitism to run deep in the veins of america and it must be rooted out. >> john: you are not the only person struck negatively by the speech, so was mayor eric adams of the city of new, i don't -- new york. >> if i was on the stage when the comments were made, i would have stood up and denounced them immediately because we cannot
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allow it to happen. the silence that we are seeing in the midst of the hate we are experiencing will never be the silence that will be in city hall as long as i'm the mayor of new york city. that is not acceptable. >> john: this apparently is the second year in a row the law school's commencement speaker has engaged in anti-semitic rhetoric. the city university of new york seems to be making a habit of this, congressman. >> look, these institutions are becoming breeding grounds for group think and hatred, and also the hatred of law enforcement, of the nypd, calling them fascist. it's an entity that keeps new york city residents safe and ensures that she has the right to spew her anti-semitic
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diatribes, but the american taxpayer should not have to fund it. we need to stop the institutions from breeding hatred and rhetoric that is destructive to our nation. >> john: you said a couple of things at odds with each other, said the nypd protects her right to spew anti-semitic hatred but saying can't allow it to happen in places like cuny. how do you reconcile those things? >> you have the right to do it but we don't have to fund it and these institutions take federal dollars, they should not be promoting or promulgating events that promote this, and so the point of this is to not interfere with someone's first amendment rights, but to crack down on the use of federal taxpayer dollars to promote such hateful rhetoric and speech, and that is where we all have an
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obligation to speak out and denounce it, ensure that taxpayer money is not used to fund it. >> john: cuny got recently $12 million for federal funding, your intent to hit them in the pocket book. always good to have you on. thank you. >> thank you. >> john: anita. >> anita: well, portland changing its tune on the city's homelessness crisis. what lawmakers are now considering banning on public property. plus this. [indiscernible] >> john: a woman living in oakland shares her story being attacked by teenagers and she was not the only one sounding off at a community meeting about the city's out of control crime. henry whimmer is a business owner also a victim of crime in oakland. we will hear from him next. nts to support immune,
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>> john: portland may soon reverse course on homeless policies with officials in the city considering a proposal that would ban camping in parks and on sidewalks during the day. this is angering some advocates who oppose criminalizing homeless encampmentes in the city that once distributed thousands of tents. dan springer has more. how many people would this likely affect, dan? >> portland has around 5,000 homeless people living in hundreds and hundreds of unsanctioned camps throughout the city, that could be coming to an end starting in about a month. the city council will vote next week on a proposal that would ban all camping from 8:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. and during the evening hours camping prohibited
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in city parks, on sidewalks, and in 250 feet of schools and daycare centers. people would get a written warning on the first and second violations. on the third could be fined up to $100 and/or jailed up to 30 days, that was the most controversial part for many people who spoke out against it last night. >> slapping $100 fines on homeless portlanders will result in warrants, jail time that raise rather than lower barriers to health and housing, key to our success in solving this problem. >> much of the problem is self-inflicted, oregon decriminalized drug use, passed out 22,000 tents and 70,000 tarps in the first two years of the pandemic, littered public parks and sidewalks. portland has lost population three years in a row for the first time. many have pointed to crime and homelessness. a poll done earlier this month showed 75% of portlanders agree that homelessness here is an out
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of control disaster, so the measure has plenty of public support. >> use our landscape as a restroom, drug items thrown over our fence into our lot, can't find a landscape person that will come and clean it up. cut down our trees, breaking into employees' vehicles, our company vehicles, stealing our tools. >> the big question will be how will this be enforced or even will it be enforced if it goes into effect july 1st. a low priority call for police who are already stretched very thin, it will be up to the portland street response, a group of aid workers going out there unarmed enforcing the ordinance. if it happens, it will be a game changer in portland. they have had problems many years. >> john: and nobody saw it coming, either. anita. >> anita: rampant crime in
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oakland is putting residents and businesses on edge as more than 500 people turned out for a community meeting this week to voice frustrations over the relentless rise of burglaries and robberies in the neighborhoods. when a city official heard the complaints at the meeting he defended the criminals, saying he sees individuals who are "hurting and struggling." let's bring in henry whimmer, the owner of the oakland business opened mind music, and henry, thanks for joining us today. i see you are there in your shop, looks like a great record store. i know you were at this meeting, and there was a lot of outrage about the ongoing crime there. more than 500 people showed up. listen to a sample of some comments from the community. >> we need to stop the violent, killers, coming after y'all. who wants to live like this. >> one of the most terrifying things in my life. >> wow, so you can imagine a
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number of people were particularly insensed when they heard from the interim chief of violence prevention and suggested that perpetrators of crime were hurting and that they needed help. what did you think when you heard that? >> i see a lot of people upset and understandably so because crime has really been rampant in the time i've been in the rock ridge neighborhood, which is really a beautiful, wonderful neighborhood. we have seen smash and grab car thefts being fundamentally the major problem in our neck of the woods and we really strive to be in harmony with our neighbors, we have a great community here, people look out for each other. we want to be providing music in harmony and one great program that oakland is doing is the macro program, which is working with mentally -- mental health issues and working in stride
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with the police. so that's one good thing. but it really takes all sectors of the community. it takes people like me, monica, my partner and i, we independently stopped two crimes in process. we saw somebody casing a car with a flashlight in twilight and i ran out and yelled at the guy and he definitely hopped back in the car. but the cars with tinted windows are up and down college avenue here and it's a major problem. the oakland police force is per capita the smallest of the major city and it has a vast territory to cover. so it really is a multi-tiered problem and problems with education and economic opportunity along with police force issues. it's a multi-tiered problem. >> anita: no doubt it's a challenge for sure and you know that better than anybody else, you yourself have been a victim
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of crime. i understand you were loading the car with merchandise from the shop, went back inside a few seconds and then what happened? >> well, there were pedestrians near my car, it was about closing time, and there was daylight and it was a fraction -- like ten seconds i was in the store saying monica, we need to get going. in that time a pop of the back window, grabbed our laptop and were gone in a matter of seconds. so the -- this criminal element is quick, it's nefarious, it's predatory, and it really takes a lot of eyes on the prize in essence the best deterrent is light, and i appreciate you guys shining light on this issue because it really is a major problem here, not just in oakland, but in many metropolitan areas and we as business owners and neighbors, we really want to do our part to help each other keep an eye out to try to deter some of this crime. >> anita: yeah, no doubt.
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sounds like you are doing your part for sure. we are glad you are ok. and just want to mention the name of your store, open mind music, looks like you have a lot of great vintage records behind you, hopefully you get a lot of customers and a lot of traffic in there. henry whimmer, thank you so much for joining us, appreciate it. >> thank you, anita, we have been doing this 21 years and we are product of our neighborhood. >> thank you, have a great day. >> john: love a good record store, takes me back to my youth. virginia principal discovers her middle schoolers are participating in organized fights. just wait until you hear who she says was hosting the so-called fight club. >> anita: plus the debt ceiling deal has passed the house and a vote could happen as soon as today in the senate. will lawmakers beat the clock before a potential default? delaware democratic senator is up next. >> any change to this bill that forces us to send it back to the house will be entirely
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unacceptable. >> produce a deal that moves every key republican priority in the right direction. s is taking your favorites to the next level. hold on, chuck! you can't beat the italian bmt. uh you can with double cheese and mvp vinaigrette. double cheese?!? yes and yes! man, you crazy. try the refreshed favorites at subway today.
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she's a lot more active. and she's able to join us on our adventures. get started at betterforthem.com >> leave these mountains where the air is rare and take with you the confidence that your years have prepared you for whatever is ahead. resilience, creativity, endurance, commitment, you are going to need those qualities as you continue your careers because the world you are graduating into is not only changing rapidly but the pace of change is accelerating as well. >> john: that's president biden speaking earlier today to cadets at the air force academy commencement ceremony, a week after the president nominated air force general charles brown, jr., for the joint chief of staff, and uncertainty with the russia war in ukraine, nuclear
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threats from iran and north korea and rising tensions with china. brown will need all the talents he has. >> anita: a principal in virginia says some middle school student began a fight club, complete with brackets and betting. lunsford middle school writes many parents were well aware of the child's participation. griff jenkins is live in washington with more on this. what more do we know about this? >> anita, this story should alarm parents everywhere. 11 to 14-year-olds pitted against each other for money in organized brawls, posted to social media, with some of the adults allegedly helping out. now, lunsford middle school principal sims stepped in to shut it down and says in this letter, this, we would like to take a moment to inform parents of outside influences that have tried to make their way into the building. students have created fight clubs, some elaborate with bracket, betting and challenges,
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and many parents are well aware of their child's participation in them, some hosting in their garages or basements. she continues, we cannot tell you how to parent but when your children create tiktok and instagram pages using lunsford name and hold the fights in hallways and bathrooms we will take action. most fights appeared to have been taken down, but one father unaware of the fight club was outraged it was going on. >> they can hurt themselves, hurt others and go to any extent. as the father of two kids i don't want them to do this, and not in the school, yeah, definitely not. >> a loudoun county public school representative issuing this statement saying violent behavior and fighting and promotion on social media is
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have no place in our school community. we reached out to the sheriff's office. they say they are investigating but no charges have been filed at this time. >> anita: unreal some of the parents knew about it and that's the last thing they need in loudoun county. john. >> john: good lord. senate is the next stop for the debt ceiling deal after it received approval from the house and the next guest is urging his senate colleagues to pass the bill after previously sharing some doubts about it. chris coons serves on the senate appropriations committee and is here from the russell building. thanks for being with us. you initially had some reservations about this. you have now come around to support it. give us the elevator speech on why. >> john, this is a compromise that will give us two years of budget predictability here in the senate. i'm a member of the appropriations committee. there is extra initiative in the bipartisan deal to fully
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complete our annual appropriations process. it will be tough to do so with the reduction in spending that will happen under this bipartisan agreement, but frankly some of the core priorities that i had continuing to provide robust support for our veterans, for example, to fully implement the pact act we passed last year, protecting incentives from the transition to a cleaner energy economy under the inflation reduction act. those things were in there and i'm positive that getting this done and avoiding the threat of default is in the best interest of my state on our country. >> john: recent development, your colleague from the state of virginia, one of my senators, tim kaine, wants to introduce an amendment to strip the pipeline from the debt ceiling bill. is that something you would support? >> i'm not likely to support. if that amendment were added to this bill, it would have to go back to the house and we no longer have the time to amend the bill that's come over to the house from us. we need to take it up and pass it before we hit the limit of
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our debt ceiling on june 5th, so although i respect senator tim kaine and his concerns about stripping jurisdiction away from a circuit court, i am going to support this bill in its current form. >> john: so is it you don't support stripping the pipeline or not enough time to go back and do that. >> there's not enough time to go back and do that. frankly, as i've understood this issue, this is also a pipeline that's been years in the process, and where it's already had a whole series of approvals. one of the provisions in the bill i think will enjoy bipartisan support is to streamline some of the federal permitting processes that can go on for years and years and years, identifying a single federal agency that is responsible for coordinating reviews and permit approvals. whether you are principally concerned about the transition to solar and wind and clean energy or make sure we still can take advantage of american produced natural gas, so both
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parties, we need to have a more predictable and streamlined permitting process. one of the positives from my view. >> john: mitch mcconnell says he supports the bill, but pointed fingers at democrats. >> the fiscal responsibility act avoids catastrophic consequences of a default on our nation's debt. just as importantly it makes the most serious headway in years toward curbing washington democrats' reckless spending addiction. the bill the house just passed has the potential to cut federal spending by $1.5 trillion. >> john: the senate minority leader said the democrats finally got reined in. what do you say? >> that's his characterization. i would say that both parties,
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presidents of both parties, majorities of both parties have shown enthusiasm for spending under different ways. under president trump, senator mcconnell, republican leader led and championed one of the biggest tax cuts in american history, our balance sheet, whether we have an annual deficit, whether we have a growing debt, is the balance between revenue in and spending out. and for the period that president trump was in the white house, we raised the debt ceiling without any focus on curbing spending or reduction in our deficits. that has now become an obsession with president biden in the white house strikes me as being more a focus on disliking the areas of spending the democrats prioritize, the environment, education, healthcare, and preferring spending that republicans prioritize, tax cuts and defense. frankly, we need to reduce our
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deficits. president biden has a strong record on reducing deficits over his predecessor and i think we can agree it's a bipartisan compromise that makes positive progress in that direction. >> john: see if it comes to a vote tonight, schumer wants to fast track it, we'll keep watching it. thank for joining us, appreciate it. senator coons. >> anita: so-called quick fix weight loss trend is going viral on tiktok. nicknamed nature's oh -- ozempic. >> john: will they hold the fbi director, christopher wray in contempt of congress? we'll tackle that coming up.
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♪♪ >> john: what if the hit song was called "mongolian rhapsody," many queen fans are wondering, mongolian scribbled over with the now famous bohemian rhapsody. one of many freddie mercury belongings set to be auctioned this fall, and the machine, with sherman and peabody, and 1985, and there we are, the much younger me.
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>> anita: look at you, john. >> john: cutoff brian adams t-shirt, along with freddie mercury, rocking rio. he was a lovely fellow, very nice. what's interesting, i was down there with a camera crew, and i went up to him at this party and said do you mind if we have a chat, oh, no, sure, no, no, not with the camera, but happy to talk to you. we did not get the interview, but did get the photo to last forever. >> anita: hope you have it in a frame. >> john: it was a hot night in rio. melting. >> anita: you have the t-shirt on there. thanks for sharing that. >> john: and now back to 2023. new health fad on tiktok, a plant-based substance called berberine, medical experts are
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advising caution. dr. marc siegel at nyu langone medical center and fox news contributor. good to see you and chat with you on this one. of course, summer is coming and everyone wants to shed a few pounds, what's the problem with berberine? it's a plant-based compound and users say they are down as much as 18 pounds. >> the first problem, tiktok, it's all over the place and people are sudden experts, calling it nature's ozempic, ozempic i have a problem with, it's overprescribed. now anyone can get berberine, it's been around 3,000 years, it's a chinese herb that they have used. it's from different sources, you can get it from the plant, golden seal, and a bush, but chinese, anti-inflammatory,
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lowers blood sugar, decrease blood pressure, it can be good for the heart. but as far as weight loss is concerned, there was a study in 2012 that people who took it for three months lost five pounds. you will not lose a lot of weight with this. a lot of debate about which diabetic should get this. doctor is out of the equation, and so is the fda. it's considered a food, it's not something the fda can regulate. what's the down side? i've told you, there are up sides. down side is it alters the microbiom in the gut, you can have gas, diarrhea, constipation, we don't know what the long-term effects are. so, once again tiktok is stepping into waters it really shouldn't be. it's something that maybe i
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would consider but not something out there people should be seeing on tiktok and suddenly taking it. >> anita: always best to ask your doctor, but before the show, john was doing some research on it, it's so interesting, we were all talking about it and he noted, he found it can be helpful for people with heart arrhythmia and high cholesterol. so like you said, there are some good side effects as well. >> by the way, john looks amazing in this picture from the 1980s. and i'm not surprised that he's doing research on this, and he's absolutely right. i left out cholesterol, absolutely lowers cholesterol, john is right and lowers fat levels, try -- and i have supplements that work, i may consider adding this with you not without telling my patients it can affect your bowels, definitely affect your bowels. >> anita: those looked like some
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side effects you would not want to have. and john doesn't need any berberine, so -- but it's good to know the positive effects. dr. marc siegel, thank you so much for the great information on that. good to see you. >> great to see you, anita. and john, i'm very impressed, amazing. >> anita: john. >> john: ah, well. >> this [bleep] -- oh, my [bleep] god. oh [bleep] [bleep]. >> grab the buoy. >> john: video surfacing of the louisiana teenager who jumped overboards into shark infested waters in the bahamas and new questions how he simply disappeared. >> anita: a possible serial killer captured in texas. a man believed of killing an 8-year-old girl in 1982 may be
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a series of cold cases going all the way back to the 1990s. casey stegall has been looking into this, he's in dallas now. why do police think meza was involved in the other murders? >> this stuff is really wild, you cannot make this up. because they say the 62-year-old man they now have in custody has allegedly confessed to not only killing his roommate as you said as recently as may, but also taken responsibility for the 2019 strangling death of his female neighbor. police say raul meza provided them with information about those crimes that has never been made public. perhaps most chilling, investigators say he called homicide detectives himself and said you are looking for me, but he did not reveal his location. u.s. marshals jumped into action and made the arrest in austin at a hotel on memorial day. >> he was ready and prepared to kill again and he was looking forward to it.
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>> we don't know how many people he killed or would have killed. >> in 1982 he was convicted of killing an 8-year-old girl in austin named kendra page. cops say he also raped her before disposing of her body in an elementary school dumpster. meza was sentenced to 30 years in prison under a plea deal. but he was released after serving only 11 for good behavior behind bars. so records show he was rearrested in 1994 for violating his parole, and then spent the next several years in and out of different jails. so central texas police say they are scouring their cold case files to see if meza is perhaps responsible for any of their unsolved murders. they believe he could be linked to, get this, at least ten homicides in austin alone. while he has been in custody, he has said that he has allegedly confessed to two murders down in san antonio, 80 miles southwest
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of austin, john, those have yet to be verified but he is off the streets. >> john: casey, this is texas. what was he doing out on the streets? >> that's a good question, and a lot of the investigators down in austin are saying people made mistakes 40 something years ago in essence allowing this man to slip through the cracks, how he only spent 11 years of his sentence behind bars, absolutely crazy. more tonight on this on "special report." >> john: rapes and murders an 8-year-old girl and does 11 years, that's nuts. casey, thank you. >> pretty wild. >> anita: new at 2:00, the voters of san francisco ousted their far left district attorney from office last year for not enforcing the law. so just wait until you hear the job he has now. brian kilmeade is here to discuss all of that coming up. but it does so much more.
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