Skip to main content

tv   Americas Newsroom  FOX News  June 2, 2023 7:00am-8:00am PDT

7:00 am
the word] >> dana: undergoing incomplete circulation at the fall overturned. i don't even know what that means. >> bill: i would need that for that. >> dana: it smart that he learns the root of the word and then he could spell the word. all right let's get to the next one here. >> if the technology goes wrong it can go quite wrong. and we want to be vocal about that. we want to work with the government to put the event that from happening. >> dana: growing concerns over the rise of artificial intelligence at the highest level of industry and government and now a high-ranking military officials raise the alarm of the potential hazards of ai on the battlefield. something that people have been concerned about. welcome to a brand-new hour of "america's newsroom." >> bill: i heard about the story and i was like oh not so much. the money to you day and night
7:01 am
happy friday. the chief of ai tested operation of the u.s. air force involved the coming cutting-edge systems. originally claimed that a drone turned against his human operator during its trust missing. theoretically curing the operator in order to accomplish his regular objective. but now, they're offering some clarity on that story. >> dana: he denies that there is an actual simulation is just an imaginary thought experiment but he says despite this being a hypothetical example, this illustrates the real-world challenges posed by ai pilot capability. with more on this from spot's business and carry i imagine that this scenario is one of the reasons you have many people in silicon valley suggested paths in the development of it because of the concerns. >> that is right. this is also a terminator type scenario but this is one of the things that is driving those concerns, and dana you mentioned the colonel walking back the
7:02 am
such shocking comments he made them in a conference in london last week, and he said it was an example of something that could happen, at this point set out to me and i wanted to share this quote with you from him, he says that we have never run that experiment nor would we need to in order to realize that this is a positive outcome. so of course the scenario in question is the kind of mention is a hypothetical training of an ar an ar drone and it was supposed to take out a missile threat in the human operator told va i do not take up that missile, but the drone was trying to get points if you will by completing its mission. so instead it went and killed the hypothetical, human operator and that's a wild scenario right? and we did receive comment from the air force and they confirmed this wasn't real and they share that with fox news and the department of the air force has not conducted any such ai drawn the sewage waste and they remain committed to ethical and responsible use ai technology. in the colonel's comments were taken out of context and meant to be anecdotal. even if this is hypothetical, it
7:03 am
follows the course of alarm bells earlier this week and industry leaders are warning about potential extinction to the human race, and the yesterday the president even echoed the sentiments. >> 412 reading or eight leading scientists in my oval office in the area of ai. in some a very worried that ai can actually overtake human and the planet. >> subject which back to what you said at the beginning, we wonder why folks are so concerned about artificial intelligence and you and i talked about this before but it's possibilities like this joan scenario even if hypothetical dana? >> dana: thank you kelly. >> will walking these candidates and there you have kc dissent is the wife of the governor of florida, taking her turn on the stage. both of them hit for the cycles they said. ila new hampshire and south carolina to round out the week.
7:04 am
and we will share that with you. meanwhile, another fall for the president. he is raising concerns. he tripped and fell on stage. he had the air force cadets and their commencement ceremony yesterday. mark meredith got the lowdown from the white house with us now. mark today for follow-up. >> good morning to you know i have set the president is fine but it was a pretty spectacular fall and while there was just a brief incident, it is once again reigniting questions about the president's age. they show you the video this is as the president was wrapping up their commencement ceremony, you see that he tripped on stage and then fell. he was tripped over a sandbag and then assisted by secret service detail. not long after that he got back on the plane to come back to d.c. and reporters peppered him with questions about what happened.
7:05 am
>> say see the president to a little bit of a dance there, this is not the first time biden has tumbled in front of cameras each of going upstairs fell off his bike, but one of his closest allies in congress said that this is nothing major to be concerned about. >> i've been saying this all the time, age will have an impact of course, i'm more than two year older than the president, and i do just fine. and i know they have a fall, and if i do i get up as good as he did. >> republicans are likely to use this fall as another example of why they believe the president may not be up for another term in office, if he was reelected into a 24, heb 86 by the time he left the white house, florida governor was asked about what happened in colorado yesterday but take a listen to this. >> d >> people would hope that he didn't sustain injuries but i hope he has a speedy recovery bit i wonder president because i want the u.s. to have a speedy recovery from the injuries he's
7:06 am
inflicted on the country. >> for the white house today staking out the victory lap reporting is possible symbol that the fall will come up this afternoon and we may see my cameras can be speaking at 7:00 addressing the nation about the deal regarding the debt ceiling with congress. >> bill: thank you. thank you sir. they know what's next? >> dana: joining us more on fox radio says -- i was wondering why they were giving an oval office address in the summer at 7:00 p.m.? it drives me crazy some of those decisions by jessica at some point as a fall just a fall? or is it my serious want to show you a couple of things. "the new york post" here says this is a judge problem. richie riley writes in "the new york post" that biden's falls are a serious issue that may hurt democrats in writing they should be thinking long and hard about whether or not this is the vessel they want to write into her in 2020. infiltrating for performing the
7:07 am
u.s. president in the second term extending all the way until january of 2029. are there concerns within the democrats about this? >> they are and i actually think when hillary clinton spoke about this a leak and a half ago, her comments were misinterpreted. people are having knives on that test to attend the american people that they you have a right to be concerned about this and to talk about it and put pressure of the west must also address it. people don't want to be told that what they're seeing is not happening. he is 80 years old, we would ask questions about people's fitness for coming any that age and it happens with ceos and corporate sherman's and et cetera where the boys are concerned shareholders. now that doesn't mean he cannot do the job, i happen to think he can do it but just pushing it away doesn't help and henry had a notable file after this september 11th memorial where she fainted outside getting to the car, and that hurt her chances this is before the october surprise.
7:08 am
and it was in the heat. >> bill: limit your share with fox news and what abc says right now, number four guys, because mental soundness to serve effectively yes or no? 60% say no, that is our pool, but abc wanted to impose says he's in good enough farcical health, but 62% says no. my feeling yesterday was it was a tough moment. because, the web is a better place, when america is a strong country. and when the commander in chief has a moment like that, for all the public to see, it does not express strength. >> he went down hard and he is 80. i'm very glad he seems to be doing okay. and he looked and sounded fine back at the white house that something every american should be happy to see. also anyone can trip over us and that they don't know is there. but, not everyone is present in that everyone is 80. in the number he just put on the screen i think, i think the
7:09 am
point of adjusting the same and there's already a large majority of voters who have concerns in this realm. and whether it is completely not his fault at all, just like a freak accident and no worse at the end of it, i think just the image has spliced together with the other was that you mentioned those will only deepen some of the concerns in this giving this some voters have. even voters they don't hate the president's mental disapprove of his job performance, they are worried that the stamina and the physical wherewithal and then to a fall to do this for six more years. and that is -- if i were a democrat, which i'm not, but if i were would be wary of political that issue. >> can add to that point having a news conference on a friday? >> will be at the advanced people who didn't see that there was a sandbag that could have been in the president's way when he was entering or exiting the stage? deafness except that they could've been avoided.
7:10 am
>> apparently he was up there for a 12 hours. >> i look at this carefully sr with a sandbag was placed, maybe he was at the front of the stage to begin with, maybe 90 minutes and you started your file? you don't know. >> and foxconn happen to anyone. >> here's the big point, why you talk about the debt ceiling at 7:00 at night you should come out at noon on a friday run about the economy. that is really good for americans. >> ì-letter who will be watching? does can be watching the 7:00. i guess they feel like it's big ten but he does things like this so infrequently like and oval office address is a very big deal, and they know it's over. >> they want to show that he's doing what he said he was going to do. that he could cover from the center look at him and he got that huge achievement in american -- you can say that at noon today, not have to do to
7:11 am
make oval office address frankly it is fake to me because in oval office address is where you ask for prime time. and you asked everybody to not run the regular schedule pro program, >> by the way, he could've been doing this not on a friday he started negotiating i don't know, a month or two earlier and he could expect the football. >> the republicans relay and putting out and they didn't get it till march 9th, also he wants to talk about the jobs numbers which are gangbusters. >> thank you justin scott. >> thank you for letting me vent. >> this is turning into the foyer. but thank you all. it is certainly seems like these all too familiar, now a new survey shows that teachers are concerned over what they think is an even bigger threat will take you there coming up. >> dana: plus the race to the white house, how the economy will play a role in the 2024 campaign. before and they're on tour in the house a concert tonight in cincinnati.
7:12 am
and today it is a lou gehrig's thing. the band's founder is fighting als every day. you know him as hop, he saluted to bring hope in some right to his fight. ♪ ♪ experience the farm to home difference for yourself. go to red land cotton dot com and receive 15% off your order with code fox news. veteran homeowners. need to cut your monthly expenses and get cash? call newday and ask for the newday 100 cash out loan. our veterans are getting an average of $70,000. their second high rate credit card, their third, fourth
7:13 am
and even fifth high rate credit card and saving hundreds every month. they're paying off their car loans, too, and putting extra cash in the bank for the security every veteran deserves. the day you get your clearchoice dental implants makes every day... a "let's dig in" day... mm. ...a "chow down" day... a "take a big bite" day... a "perfectly delicious" day... - mm. [ chuckles ] - ...a "love my new teeth" day. because your clearchoice day is the day everything is back on the menu. a clearchoice day changes every day. schedule a free consultation.
7:14 am
i'm jonathan lawson here to tell you about life insurance through the colonial penn program. if you're age 50 to 85, and looking to buy life insurance on a fixed budget, remember the three ps. what are the three ps? the three ps of life insurance on a fixed budget are price, price, and price. a price you can afford, a price that can't increase, and a price that fits your budget. i'm 54, what's my price? you can get coverage for $9.95 a month. i'm 65 and take medications. what's my price? also $9.95 a month. i just turned 80, what's my price?
7:15 am
$9.95 a month for you too. if you're age 50 to 85, call now about the #1 most popular whole life insurance plan available through the colonial penn program. it has an affordable rate starting at $9.95 a month. no medical exam, no health questions. your acceptance is guaranteed. and this plan has a guaranteed lifetime rate lock so your rate can never go up for any reason. so call now for free information and you'll also get this free beneficiary planner. and it's yours free just for calling. so call now for free information.
7:16 am
7:17 am
>> shocking results from a new survey shows the top concerns in the classroom. it's not guns, it is bullies. data shows that the leaking and drug use are more troubling to teachers finish school shootings. jenkins is live in washington so griff why aren't teachers -- i mean pin is a picture on white teachers saying that bullies is the biggest priority here? >> that is a great question dana, i think that's what everyone thinks when they see
7:18 am
there's results in the short answer is that's what teaches most of the front line of about two to the threats facing students. the results of this survey are quite surprising when you consider their work. approximately 300 shooting incidents and k-12 schools in 2022, injured or killed more than 200 people, but in the study they ranked this data saying that despite the growth in gun violence, bullying, rather than active shooters with teachers most common concerns. in diving into those numbers, you see when teachers were asked to identify what opposes the largest safety concerns at school, was this, bullying. as the top of the list, nearly at the top of the list, followed by fight drugs at 7%, self harm 7%, active shooters coming in cement on the list with only 5%. the executive director of the association of american educators agrees with the findings. and this is what he has to say. >> it is true and i'm glad
7:19 am
that they asked a question in the study because only 5% of the educators say that the attack on schools are the biggest concerns because what they are seeing is everyday bullying. that can lead to self harm, and fights and other disruption to the learning environment. >> they also found that arming teachers that 54% believe that it will make schools less safe, while only 20% say that it will make them safer, 26 passaic there would not have any impact on school safety, all being told that given the option, approximately 555,000 of the country's 3 million teachers would choose to carry a firearm at school. >> my goodness thank you. >> people can't buy homes or can't borrow money they can't do anything now. >> if you cannot run the house will delay the federal government is running and then i may be something they need to do a reality check on. >> the administration has led his country down a path of reckless spending.
7:20 am
>> very interesting here, the republican contenders are trying to fix the economy and they would push the idea of if they were to win in the white house. fox business, 4:00 p.m. eastern. there he is happy friday to you. justin pratt swipe your okay, trump is talking about his tax cuts as president, desantis is talking about us tax because this governor, so too is nikki haley, and tim scott is talking about being the lead author for the trump tax cuts in 2017. do you see a crease in these policies do you see a difference or are they all writing the pretty much the same line larry? >> no i know they're saying that, but i think the messaging and the policies behind the messaging are completely different. look, tim scott was very super helpful in the senate. but those with the trump tax cuts that he was carrying.
7:21 am
under largest tax cut i think in the last four or five decades. stanley gone back to reagan. i know that because i was one of the authors of those tax cuts and i'm very proud to have been involved in that. so i think this is going to be a pop back pocket book collection. and i think that real wages keep falling. and i think that you know even today the insulation outstrips wage increases. even though the jobs report had some pluses it minuses. and i think it's going to be kitchen table and i think it's going to be about energy and food and so on and so forth. so low, you did see last night on the hannity show, that president trump was walking through his achievement on energy and on lower taxes and on the regulation, and the promise of more. and mitch stewart desantis, i will say this, mr. desantis is a smart guy, was a good governor of florida, does not have an
7:22 am
economic agenda, and he rarely talks about the economy, and he came out and was having leaks critical of the kevin mccarthy budget deal, which i thought was a huge win in a huge winner for the republican party in general in the house in particular the house republicans and the rest of the country. but mr. desantis had the opportunity to cut the corporate tax, but he landed in florida. but he let it shift from four and a half to 5.5%. i don't know why he should have made a per minute that he did and it was temporary. and he says in his last budget he lowered taxes for people but these were targeted and temporary cuts and self texas and it's not a real tax cut. i think this end of this problem arming the polls are not boats. it's early in the game. so i don't know how this is but it turned out. but i think his problem is he does not have an economic agenda. a future economic agenda. i think donald trump does. and i think that's one of the
7:23 am
biggest reasons for chums leave. >> so the top concerns for voters if you look you say it inflation and high a price and said 90%. a feature is 80%. and they talk about higher crime rates at 81%. one thing you mentioned that is how he was very critical of kevin mccarthy deal. i thought it was interesting and perhaps strategic for donald trump to hold his fire, he was is under tremendous pressure try to help people on the right who wanted to go after kevin mccarthy, and perhaps this instance was to say of could've held her for more. the president trump held that. what you think that says about his understanding of the primary as it is now leading into the general? >> what i think it was good judgment. especially on trump's part. and he had a number of people suggested to him that he should either endorse the plan or stay out of the plan. i think it was good judgment. i mean look, that deal was not perfect, and i know we don't
7:24 am
want to talk about the debt ceiling, still bailing and i'm glad it's over, but the reality is it was a huge victory for kevin mccarthy, wasn't a a victory for joe biden, was a gigantic victory for kevin mccarthy, and it was a huge step, huge first step back towards conservative governance and conservative economic principles. that's what i'll say on that. i think mr. desantis, if he won, he's going to have to work with mccarthy and make a huge mistake attacking him repeatedly over memorial day weekend. ron desantis is too much woke dana, and i kept the health thing, and understand the five or six year old should not be talking about intercourse. i get that, and again how the far left is trying to wreck our culture, i get that too, but mr. desantis won that, he got his legislation to take that stuff out, and i think that's due the third grade, but he kept
7:25 am
going with an attack on disney, and the special district paid by the way, florida has a hundred and 60 special district, he went after disney and now he's in a legal fight, i think people are looking at data scratching their head and saying why you going after business why can't you just sit there with bob iger at the cl and make a deal. but too much woke, not enough economic agenda. people want to know how we can conquer inflation, spend less, tax list, regulate less, and why have you not think our fabulous god-given natural resources cleaning energy fossil fuels, it doesn't mean you're against it, are you denying on the climate, you are not denying, trump's not a climate deny either, but they let a thousand flowers bloom. but mr. desantis has plenty of time, but so far he has not articulated any kind of activity across economic message and it's hard to malign the early going here. >> will talk about it again
7:26 am
when that happens because we got some time it's in big issues there in the table below while down there thank you for coming on. enjoy the weekend thank you. >> bill: dozens of kids go missing in one sitting just two weeks' time, when this is happening and why this horrifying trend is on the rise. plus your tax dollars are going to research, especially in china? we can check this ou. >> we found $1.3 billion flowed to the nations of china and russia. this was very important because congress passed the government accountability office the gal was finding out how much taxpayer money since 2017 flowed into china.
7:27 am
7:28 am
7:29 am
get the exact same coverage as the nation's leading carriers and 100% us based customer support. starting at $20. consumer cellular. - [female narrator] five billion people lack access to safe surgery. thousands of children are suffering and dying from treatable causes. for 40 years, mercy ships has deployed floating hospitals to provide the free surgeries these children need. join us. together, we can give children the hope and healing they never thought possible. it's a mission powered by love, made possible by you. give today. ♪ ♪ make your dream car...a reality.
7:30 am
mercedes-benz certified pre-owned vehicles are rigorously inspected to live up to the highest of expectations. (smelling) ew. gotta get rid of this. ♪tell me why♪ because it stinks. ♪tell me why♪ i don't know i've washed it so many times. ♪tell me why♪ no you tell me why i can't get rid of this odor? ♪have you tried downy rinse and refresh♪ it doesn't just cover up odors, it helps remove them 3x better than detergent alone. ♪yeaahh♪ guess the odor went bye bye. no, that's not us. sorry. rinse odor away with downy rinse and refresh. i suffer with psoriatic arthritis and psoriasis. i was on a journey for a really long time to find some relief. cosentyx works for me. cosentyx helps real people get real relief from the symptoms of psoriatic arthritis or psoriasis. serious allergic reactions and an increased risk of infections or lowered ability to fight them may occur.
7:31 am
tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms, had a vaccine or plan to or if ibd symptoms develop or worsen. i move so much better because of cosentyx. ask your rheumatologist about cosentyx. ♪ limu emu & doug ♪ what do we always say, son? liberty mutual customizes your car insurance... so you only pay for what you need. that's my boy. now you get out there, and you make us proud, huh? ♪ bye, uncle limu. ♪ stay off the freeways! only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ >> a stunning report finds at least $1.3 billion of your taxpayer money going towards research programs in china and russia.
7:32 am
fox business follows the money for us on the hill grady what did you find out? >> hey bill, hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars went to pointless and some downright concerning projects and russia and china if you ask senator joni ernst released this analysis. so let's look at the numbers, if on nearly half a billion dollars flow from u.s. taxpayers to entities in china. even more than that, in hundred $71 million went to organizations in russia for a grand total of $1.3 billion since 2017. and that's what we know of, they suspect the numbers are even higher than that. you won't believe what they say this money went. $2 million to the wuhan lab where covid is suspected to have leaked from for more dangerous experiments. some of them involving facts and coronavirus. it also helped pay for a cultural exhibit on its gender equality through a jeep
7:33 am
beijing-based organization, $1.6 million from the national school lunch program went to chinese companies instead of american farmers, and probably the wildest of all, and russia, u.s. taxpayers gave more than three quarters of a million dollars to help run an experiment at a state run labs involve each cats on treadmills. >> a lot of my effort is making sure that number one as american taxpayers that we aren't supporting efforts of our adversaries. and we're not sending taxpayer dollars into china or into russia, all of these efforts need to be cut off at the knees. and let us all focus on america. >> and senator ernst as well as congressman gallagher in the house are putting their money where their mouth is, introducing a bill that will require government agencies to not only track but also publicly disclose if taxpayer dollars go to any organizations in china or russia. bill? >> bill: that is something to
7:34 am
watch, thank you live on capitol hill is grady. >> dana: is an alarming trend in cleveland, nearly 30 children were reported missing in a span of just two weeks. many of them believed to be runaways. here to talk about it is newburgh heights chief thank you for being here. we just want to show some statistics here. in ohio, in 2022, they were 15,555 missing children. 96% found by police which is amazing, but it is pretty remarkable the 615 are still missing that the january 1023, you think that this trend has gone up for some reason this year? >> yes i think the trend is just a little bit high for the sum of the year, and seeing the number of cases that cleveland has had, especially in the last 30 days is just a little bit alarming. and you and others all kinds of concerns to be involved in this, whether the children are runaways or whether they're not getting involved in drugs or gangs or other violent crimes.
7:35 am
if they were taken against their will. but there's no evidence to show that, and there's no amber alerts for anything like that. but it is an alarming trend for the sum of the year for sure. >> tell me a little bit about the importance of parents having a new photo, a recent photo, so they can get it to you, because you set the public attention is the most important thing in order to get the children back. >> absolutely, the public is a business asset and this, when you look at the cleveland website and shows a number of children and there is no folder available what's happening, and it's a little bit alarming because it is very difficult to track down a name, but it's very easy to check on her face. so, if we get the person's face out there, we can use the public as i accept the bring these kids home safely. >> how concerned are you about young people being online, thinking that they might be meeting up with somebody, and i think you wrote to a producer that sometimes often the people they meet online, is that they
7:36 am
are wolves in sheep's clothing. >> absolutely, it is so easy to go online and report to his a 13 or 14-year-old, you're just looking for friendship or something like that. and that one thing leads to another and relates at 203040 or older person, the next thing you know, they become victimized of this. releasing this time and time and time and again, so really struggling and encouraging parents to monitor their skids social media trends and see what they're doing and see who they're talking to and see who they're hanging out with. then hopefully that will just some attention to the problem. and that they don't become victimized because again nobody licks up and importing expected to be victimized, but you have to understand of a 13 or 14-year-old who runs away from home, or gets involved in something whether it's drugs or gain such human trafficking or anything like that, they don't have personal things and they can't find a job and they don't have a source of income and they have to pay may resort to some thing worse and we don't want that to happen because next thing you know, becomes another situation and it complicates the
7:37 am
situation gets it worse. >> do you know if runaways is in right away from home, do they want to be found? >> some do and some don't. several years ago my agency and several others in the cleveland area work with the marshall service on operation safety net will be recover 36 missing endangered children from the greater cleveland area. i will make some of those recoveries, surprisingly enough some of them didn't even know they were reported missing, and so, i think some of them yes, they do return home, some don't. it depends on the home environment and other variables that contribute to it. >> let's work together and get them home and paints a picture you have this updated recent photos just in case this happens to you. thank you so much. >> thank you so much for having me. >> bill: okay today we have a follow-up. indeed, we do follow-ups and hammer celebrity news. did you know? al pacino one opportunity with test, he said he didn't know he
7:38 am
could get is 29-year-old girlfriend pregnant because of the medical issue that typically causes infertility. and sources says he was shocked to find out that he got the test and she is eight months pregnant, he one approved, now you got it, he is going to be a dad. and this will be his fourth child. at age 83. congratulations. just didn't think that you know we did the stories and forgot about them. >> dana: that might've been an awkward conversation when he said can i get proof? i mean that if the mother of a child, i'm sure they're very much in love and the child of the reason wonderful. >> bill: there you go. >> dana: i'm trying to believe that. >> bill: i have nothing have to say. >> dana: so let us move on to something else. the senate voting to this method the $400 million to get plan, is fine, handful of democrats floating alongside republicans, shown in green on the political shown in green on the political fallout.
7:39 am
7:40 am
7:41 am
7:42 am
our customers don't do what they do for likes or followers. their path isn't for the casually curious. and that's what makes it matter the most when they find it. the exact thing that can change the world. some say it's what they were born to do... it's what they live to do... trinet serves small and medium sized businesses... so they can do more of what matters. benefits. payroll. compliance. trinet. people matter.
7:43 am
our customers don't do what they do for likes or followers. their path isn't for the casually curious. and that's what makes it matter the most when they find it. the exact thing that can change the world. some say it's what they were born to do... it's what they live to do... trinet serves small and medium sized businesses... so they can do more of what matters. benefits. payroll. compliance. trinet. people matter.
7:44 am
>> so a new showdown on president biden student loan handout. the senate voting over to overturn the program the house at a ready done it. setting up a potential veto when the measure hits the president's desk. republicans say it's all a matter of just being fair. >> it is something of a slap of a face to americans who chose more affordable college options, will work their way to school to avoid taking on student loans. while who's paying to convince dave to put into college. >> she knows college shannon green, and all of this. chief legal correspondent good morning to you. so, 5246, test or cinema mansion filled with republicans. that's the president vetoed this is he waiting for the u.s. supreme court to rule on it? >> that the question, the next round of opinions we get from
7:45 am
the supreme court comes on thursday we are waiting on these two companion student loan forgiveness cases. until the current low as early as thursday was gonna happen whether they are going to say that they can make a decision of whether he's gonna go full steam ahead and says he sent a veto it and i believe in this program and we will wait to see what he's going to have to say. >> i think is too far gone the politics that he has to veto it. even though in his heart, you might want to offer from supreme court. but the far left is definitely going to say you've promised us, you didn't deliver, and you really have 20% of democrats saying hey will even take a look at rfk jr. if you're not going to deliver. but i do finding a little bit confusing for people shannon because now with the debt ceiling, people are going to have to stop to pay their loans back, but not this just past and were waiting for the supreme court, so if you do have a student will you make a pretty confused. >> you're probably pretty confused. so the path to happen before the
7:46 am
pandemic, not forgiveness but the pause, and the new debt the other just got done, inc. in august, as the president signed this and in this a couple days as we expect today, and it's starting in august, if you got a pot going the pandemic year loans come back. now the program was waiting ten to $20,000 for a number of millions of student loan followers that is what got knocked down at the senate. and that's what we're waiting for the supreme court to decide. that actual forgiveness of a chunk of your loan. but if you've been a pause, and medicine, people less jobs, those of us for the time, that is coming to an end in august because of the new debt deal. >> okay i don't know how much to talk about what happened in colorado yesterday with the fall, it was a hard landing, but i love you line up a mean kim reynolds was with us the other day and she's race in iowa. without the republicans being there. and joe manchin has a lot to say. he had sharp words for applicants yesterday. and yes tom cotton's coming up to send a tell us about that.
7:47 am
>> never gonna talk about defense spending that's the one thing people felt was not good if your heart hawk in this new deal. so they're trying to offer an amendment not that a cfa last night and it went nowhere. but they are celebrating because he kept that pipeline that his neighboring state democrats contains us to help bring about. so i thought there than a bit ticked up but they haven't done that so they have a lot to discuss. >> you sure do. are there to watch and see if you >> that's true, there latest book is out for an award tonight might look for love speaks, we will see what happens. >> good luck to you on that but either way you're a winner and ions. >> thank you so much and have a great weekend. >> you to. >> first it was chinese balloons, now's the police stations and now i'm near miss what the fight to get now, reports of suspected spies trying to infiltrate our military bases and we will tell you what we know about that. in one of the musicians behind mack zach brown is with us and
7:48 am
how the band is using its music to get back at a baseball game and whether because it's very close to home veteran homeowners to combat today's rising prices. lower your monthly payments with the three c's: pay down your credit cards, pay off your car loan, consolidate your debt with a va home loan from from newday.
7:49 am
7:50 am
7:51 am
- this is our premium platinum coverage map and this is consumer cellular's map. - i don't see the difference, do you? - well, that one's purple. - [announcer] get the exact same coverage as the nation's leading carrier. starting at $20. consumer cellular. the all-new tempur-pedic breeze makes sleep feel cool.
7:52 am
so, no more sweating all night... ...or blasting the air conditioning. because the tempur-breeze feels up to 10° cooler, all night long. for a limited time, save up to $500 on select tempur-pedic adjustable mattress sets. you didn't live this strong, this long to get put on the shelf like a porcelain doll. but one out of two women over 50 will suffer a fracture from osteoporosis. you should know you can build new bone with evenity® for postmenopausal women with osteoporosis at high risk for fracture. ask your doctor if you can do more than just slowing down bone loss with evenity®. want stronger bones? then build new bone; evenity® can help in just 12 months. evenity® is proven to reduce spine fracture risk by 73%. evenity® can increase risk of heart attack, stroke, or death from a cardiovascular problem. do not take evenity® if you have low blood calcium, or are allergic to it. serious allergic reactions and low blood calcium have occurred. tell your doctor about jaw bone problems,
7:53 am
as they have been reported with evenity®. or about pain in your hip, groin or thigh, as unusual thigh bone fractures have occurred. don't let a break put you on a shelf. talk to your doctor about building new bone with evenity®! >> prescribe taking a dramatic tumble. the latest fall is fanning concerns about his age as he prepares to run for a second term. ari fleischer on how much the fall could hurt with voters. plus, the president facing two primary challengers, but the democratic party says we will not get to see him on a debate stage with them. robert f. kennedy jr. joins me and he is called a big problem for biden and the democrats. the faulkner focus, top of the hour. >> u.s. officials sounding the alarm on suspected chinese spies, some are posing as tourists in
7:54 am
hopes of infiltrating security bases in alaska. jennifer griffin has the story. >> hi, dana. u.s. officials confirm chinese citizens suspected of being spies have attempted to penetrate u.s. military bases in alaska in recent months. the incidents increased the last several years. alaska is home to some of the most sensitive military bases. more at fifth generation fighter jets are in alaska than anywhere else in the world, home to america's most sophisticated ground based radar and ballistic missile early warning system. u.s. troops encountering tourists purportedly have is thing for the northern lights and other attractions. in one instance, a vehicle carrying several chinese citizens blew past a security checkpoint. that checkpoint was at fort wainwright, according to multiple sources. after eventually stopping
7:55 am
the vehicle, a drone was found inside. senator dan sullivan stressed the importance his home state plays in defending the u.s. main land and expressed alarm about what he is seeing. >> the spy balloon, russian bear bombers or the new reporting of suspected chinese spies in alaska, this is another wakeup call that we are in a new era of authoritarian aggression, led by dictate ors in china and russia. >> after the chinese spy balloon incident, lisa murkowski spoke on capitol hill. >> as an alaskan, i am so angry. alaska is the first line of defense for america. right? if you're going to have russia coming at you, if you're going to have china coming at you, we know exactly how they come.
7:56 am
they come up and they go over alaska. >> fbi director chris wray said they opened a new chinese government espionage case in the u.s. every 12 hours. >> goodness gracious. jennifer griffin, thank you for the update. bill? ♪ >> how about that, pretty good sound. that's the zac brown band, one of the best out there. tonight, baseball fans in cincinnati get a special show. that band performs on lou gehrig's day to raise money for research. they say 5,000 new cases every year. one of the band's founders is john driscoll hopkins, diagnosed about a year ago. he is known as hop and joins us now in cincinnati. hop, thanks for your time. >> good morning. >> great to have you here. how are you doing, how's your health, how are you dealing with this? >> i feel pretty good.
7:57 am
i'm still playing and singing. i was never a very good dancer, so that's not something we're going to miss but i'm about a year and a half into my diagnosis. i am fairing far better than many. i consider myself blessed. as long as i'm singing it, i'm bringing it. >> hop, were there symptoms that you felt made you want to go get checked that led to the diagnosis? >> i started noticing problems with my right strumming hand and the speed of my digits in 2019. i noticed it again in the fall, i'm sorry, in the spring of 2020 and i remember telling the guys there's something wrong with me, and then covid hit. so fast forward to fall of '21 when we got back on the road, it was still
7:58 am
there and it had gotten a little worse and it wasn't until december that after seeing two different neurologists, a third one came to the als diagnosis. >> we're putting up, you're 52. this is not the fate you expected. we're putting up a website here, hop on a cure.org. want to be sure we get that out to as many people to raise money for tonight. the rays are giving you a big check as well. one of my buddies from high school, jeff webber, was hit with als, we lost him within a year. others find they live for five or ten years, right? >> yeah. i have a dear friend that runs a podcast called i'm dying to tell you. and she's been with als for 19 years. everyone is different. you know, i hope to be active and relatively
7:59 am
healthy for a long time but i just don't know when something might take a turn. and i don't know why athletes and military personnel and airline pilots or pilots in general are hit with this more frequently. it's a mystery to so many. >> and that's why it's so great you can use your voice and the fans that love the zac brown band, counting myself as one of them for sure, that you can bring attention to it and try to get some research that will lead to a cure. what's on the set list for tonight? are you able to say or is it a surprise? >> well, i can't post the set list, but we do have a lot of our hits. it is a 90 minute set. so you're not just going to get a 20 minute how you doing kind of way.
8:00 am
we're going to play for sure. so the number ones and some new material we've been playing with, it will be fantastic. >> have a great time. >> thank you, hop. best of luck to you. >> thank you, buddy. >> nice to see you guys. appreciate it. >> nice to have you on. these are for national donut day. >> he will eat all of them. >> harris is next. >> president biden has rivals in his party and support for them is ticking up, especially robert f. kennedy jr. he is on the trail. and gop contenders are heavy on the trail. with all of that action, biden had no main events for 2024. not sure how many votes he can get, he is certainly getting attention for being frail and aging. i am harris faulkner. you're in

192 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on