tv Outnumbered FOX News June 20, 2023 9:00am-10:00am PDT
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hello, everyone. this is "outnumbered." i'm emily compagno here with my co-host kayleigh mcenany and harris faulkner and also joining us today, fox news contributor and former state department spokesperson marie harff and former georgia congressman and host of the doug collins podcast, doug collins. now, the president's son has been under investigation for five years for tax and financial allegations and a firearms charge that stemmed from allegations that hunter lied during a gun purchase claiming he did not abuse drugs. but that contradicted admissions in his own autobiography where he detailed an addiction to crack cocaine. this plea deal will likely allow him to avoid any jail time. his lawyer releasing this statement -- with the announcement of two agreements between my client, hunter biden and the united states attorney's office for the district of delaware, it is my understanding that the five-year investigation into hunter is resolved. hunter will take responsibility for two instances of misdemeanor
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failure to file tax payments when due pursuant to a plea agreement. a firearm charge which will be subject to a pretrial diversion agreement and will not be the subject of the plea agreement will also be filed by the government. i know hunter believes it is important to take responsibility for these mistakes he made during a period of turmoil and addiction in his life. he looks forward to continuing his recovery and moving forward. but while hunter is admitting guilt to those crimes, that's not what president biden has been saying. >> mr. vice president, your son hunter is on the republicans' wish list for the impeachment hearing. >> great guy. >> did hunter biden commit a crime? have you spoken to your son, mr. president? >> i love my son! >> emily: congressman, it's sort of hard to believe that the president, as he stated multiple times had no knowledge of or no participation given that this was a five-year investigation.
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now with this conclusion of pleading guilty, what say you as a former sitting congressman and as an attorney? >> it's very frustrating to see this. and it's five years. predates the biden administration. this is known. and i think that's been the problem that the non-admittance is something is going on here and you come up with two misdemeanor charges, basically a gun charge. it just doesn't make sense. when people out there are looking at this, they don't understand number one, it's a five year investigation and members of congress don't understand all the evidence they've seen through the laptop and through everything else and through their own admissions and they come back and say this is what happens when they see other issues that have been born? what concerns me is his attorney says we put the five-year investigation to rest. statement from the department of justice is ongoing. which is true here? is this a completion of this? what about all the other sources of income? this gives me more questions than answers. where did the money come from? what was it used for? this was an admitted drug addict that had a lot of problems and making millions of dollars.
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there's so many questions here that are left unanswered and i think it will leave the american people and other members of congress very frustrated. >> emily: you covered this extensively last hour. what are your takeaways? >> harris: leo terrell, former civil rights attorney said something ground shaking. it goes to your point. the d.o.j. leaving in our reporter even said this on purpose the line about their investigation continues. and why would that be? leo terrell says it's to stonewall anybody looking into the rest of hunter biden's charges or allegations. and so they can say no, you can't touch anything that we have because we're still investigating. even though the case is closed, they can say they're still sort of looking at things. what would they be looking at? somebody has got to compare whatever they have at the d.o.j. or hope they would look into the 17 recordings that are in that -- mentioned in that 1023 at the f.b.i. if and when those surface, an unredacted form in that 1023
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that tells us so much more, too. if the d.o.j. is protecting evidence in the case, if you will, by saying that it's continuing its investigation, you can't really get them to move off of that. and that -- that to me is not >> one more quick thing. what she brought up there is suspicious activity reports with the large amounts of money. and the d.o.j. investigating or not, this is still out there. if that is -- ok, if not, where are the tax forms on this? where is the tax returns on this? why isn't that part of this? are we wiping that slate clean? this leads to so many questions and at the end of the day it's not healthy for the bidens and the country. all these questions are not left. everybody will say it's good to be a biden with this d.o.j. investigation. >> emily: question for you on everything that my colleagues are saying. do you feel that the general sentiment on the left this is a troubled young man who has now pled guilty to charges stemming from dark chapter in his life
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and, therefore, he will continue to move on and rehabilitate. or do you feel that those questions that the congressman elucidated and harris talked about regarding evidence and a mountain of concepts that we have yet to see formal legal action on. do people on the left ask those same questions or do you feel they'll be satisfied now with the level of accountability? >> well, i think a few things, emily. first, d.o.j. looked at every aspect of his life over a 15-year period much greater than just the question of tax returns, the gun charge. they looked at everything. this is what they believed they could actually make a case on in court and get a plea deal on. i think the democrats believe that hunter biden is a very troubled person. he has had a difficult life, particularly after the death of his brother, beau. he is now sober. you know, his oldest daughter got married at the white house. the bidens put out a thoughtful statement. they talked about their son struggling with addiction. democrats will tell you he should be subject to the laws
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like everybody else. and i think one of the challenges and you were obviously in congress, you know what goes on there. a lot of republicans in congress are making a lot of insinuations about things they believe tie hunter's behavior to joe biden. things they believe hunter biden did that could have hurt joe biden in some way. but so far, there's been no evidence to tie them together and to make real these sort of really outlandish accusations that republicans in congress are making. and i think republicans are politically trying to make this an argument especially when the leading republican candidate on the other side is facing legal troubles very seriously of his own. so i think going forward, democrats will say hunter biden should be held accountable. he also doesn't have a government position. he doesn't work in the white house. he's not part of the administration. in any way, shape or form and he will be held accountable, i think so, after today's news. >> no one has been able to tell us who the big guy is. maybe you have an answer. the big guy was getting caught, and the big guy by all accounts is joe biden. testifying to that end who was a
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business partner. bottom line here, hunter biden got a sweetheart deal. that's what this is. i talked to a former d.o.j. official, direct quote, i would never have allowed a pretrial diversion for a crack user. you know what the diversion is? that's what he got on the gun charge on the felony. there's that. leave it to the liberal media to do their yapping about this. listen to what they have to say. >> we're seeing hunter biden take responsibility. that's not going to stop republicans, i venture to guess. i suspect we'll have lots of howling from the g.o.p. and ignore the facts as they have ignored the facts throughout this process. certainly, this is a day of closure for the president's family. >> the child of the president agrees to plead guilty to two crimes historic in and of itself though it may not satisfy some critics of the president and his son who have been looking for, perhaps, more blood here. >> trump republicans have been trying to stir up conspiracy theories left and right. one after another have been d disproven. they don't like the facts.
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they love conspiracy theories. this is another one that didn't play out for them. >> why does this seem such a potent issue for republicans? >> well, why does it seem like a potent issue for republicans? because they have made it so. they have been focused like a laser. >> house republicans are going to keep this up. they've decided to go all in on this as a way to keep the republican base enthusiastic. >> kayleigh: james comer is going to continue to investigate. i'm interested to get his reaction in his oversight committee. i'll say this. politico made an excellent point a few months ago that the benghazi hearings, that's all noise. what happened after that? hillary clinton lost an election. the republicans, good luck with that. >> emily: i think this is a small fish designed to satiate
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the masses. we see through it. it raises far more questions than it has satisfied answers other than the question of what's the d.o.j. doing with our tax dollars? i guess the answer is a little bit. but not enough. we're also following another breaking news story, the coast guard set to give an update in less than an hour on the search for that missing titanic submersible. the search growing more desperate by the minute with the sub estimated to have less than 48 hours of oxygen supply left. more on that next. i brought in ensure max protein with 30g of protein. those who tried me felt more energy in just two weeks. uh... here i'll take that. -everyone: woo hoo! ensure max protein with 30 grams of protein, one gram of sugar. enter the nourishing moments giveaway for a chance to win $10,000. frustrated by skin tags? dr. scholl's has the breakthrough you've been waiting for. the first fda-cleared at-home skin tag remover clinically proven to remove skin tags safely in as little as one treatment.
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been more than 24 hours since we've been covering this. not a lot of movement. the search has now become a desperate race to rescue the sub's five passengers with its oxygen supply only expected to last until thursday afternoon. scientists told me last hour, that's under the best conditions. they almost have to go to sleep at this point because if they're under duress, if they're hyperventilating, if they're breathing heavily, it's not going to last as long. think about that. the sub launched sunday morning off newfoundland, canada. and lost contact with its support ship above it less than two hours later. that was in an area some 900 miles east of cape cod at a depth of 12,500 feet. 2 1/2 miles below the surface of the ocean. those on board face a terrifying reality. they're trapped in a 22 foot tube with no seats and only one pitch-black window.
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and i talked about that oxygen supply running out quickly. now, they're learning the identities of those on board. five men including the c.e.o. of the tour company oceangate. who made that vessel. a british billionaire, a prominent pakistani businessman and his son. and an accomplished french mariner. 250k to get on board. and now, we just wait and they are likely, kayleigh, in darkness. water temperature around zero celsius, so about 32 or below fahrenheit. >> kayleigh: i'm so scared for these individuals, and a 19-year-old, you know, young kid who has his whole life ahead of him. it's tragic to think about. where i begin to worry, i was reading in "the daily mail" that a manned submarine like a u.s. navy submarine can go 2,000 feet. this is 20,000 feet. so you have to use a remote operated device. and this expert, his name was gallow, he worried that if we even find them, and if they are
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in a treacherous way or, you know, maybe entangled, can we man a rescue operation at that depth? he said the water is very deep. two miles plus. it's like a visit to another planet, to your point. it's not what people think it is. it is a sunless cold environment and high pressure. i really hope we find them close to the surface. because i worry deeply. >> harris: yeah, i mean, the -- just the thought that the scientists, brenton addler was telling me last hour, you have two choices inside. i want to know what it feels like inside the sub for those people, can they survive it? can they hang on? based on what we know. and he said, well, you really, really, really hot if they can't control any electrical, you know, output, yeah. if there's nothing to make that a situation. if everything is off, you're dangerously cold. >> it's just, you know, when you think about it, your heart goes out not only to these. now their families are behind this that we're not seeing.
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the faces of these five is someone who believes in the ultimate of life, this is the tragic moment and you're worried about them finding them. there's so many other questions. if they do find them, can they get them back up with the pressurization? there's all kinds of issues there. not to give up hope. hope is all we have ever have in this life, have hope and keep going. it makes a tragic occurrence that this is not looking very well. and thinking about it, it made me think of the fact how often we take the rise to space, the tourism space shots, this down to the titanic. we've made them so -- which is great for our technology. we made them so common that nobody thinks anything about what will happen? yet, it is very real and the most unexplored area in our universe is the ocean. we don't know what's just off 300 miles off the coast here as compared to what we know what's on the surface of the moon. and your heart just breaks. i mean, it does. >> harris: that's an interesting comparison. and one of the tourist passengers, british billionaire
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actually went on a space trip. he's been in both situations and one was not much bigger than the other when you looked at how many people were inside that craft that went up of jeff bezos. when you look at this, too, i can't imagine what they're telling the families. we're going to get an update soon. there's no way to get a message. they were texting each other when they were close enough to the surface to be able to do that. i was reading today about the rudementary ways they were pulling together. we were talking about that. it was kind of like mcgyvering is what you said yesterday. i'm so curious to know, what can this vessel withstand? >> i think we will learn more as this develops, to your point. i instantly thought of deep space, especially the parallels between the vessels themselves and the extreme cold, the extreme heat, the incommunicado nature of it. the fact that you are all of a sudden totally cut off from earth essentially and this is why the power of prayer is so
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important because the families and the rest of us that are praying for them, they might not be able to receive our texts but they can feel our prayers in this moment. and i note every life is equal. included in the five that are there, paul henry, he's a leading expert on the titanic. he'd been to the wreckage over 35 times. really a paramount, unequivocable voice and expert, historian on the titanic. i look forward to their successful recovery so we can continue to learn from him. and final point, in 1999, i sailed around the world as part of a semester at sea on the u.s.s. universe, and the universe explorer. and young man fell overboard at night on november 9th, i remember. and the rescue crews successfully rescued him. he was returned alive. it was amazing. the captain came on and said in the over 100 years of experience that our crew has had rescuing, we have never had a successful rescue that resulted in no injuries. and my point is that as everyone mobilizes to rescue these five
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individuals, the risk to them, too, is paramount. and we should include them in our prayers. >> harris: that's very, very good information based on what it can take to go get somebody in that much trouble. >> emily: exactly. >> yeah, this company, you can find videos of interviews this company have done. >> harris: i've been watching them, too, they're addicting. you want to know more. >> you do. and just the fact that it was basically a game, you know, a console controller that they used to bring this up and down. it kind of looked like they were being held together with duct tape. there had been previous situations where the vessel had lost communications for a few hours. i saw another woman interviewed this morning on another channel that had been on that trip, that had been lost for several hours. so i think to your point, you know, we take for granted our technology. we take for granted that we sent someone to the moon, that we can do this. this is still very dangerous. and there are people who explore and they love to do that. and they should. but this is a tough day. tough day. >> harris: i'm reading from that cbs reporter that i think you
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watched that same video. he said i can't help but notice how much of the sub seems improvised. we can use these off the shelf components. he was being given a tour inside of oceangate's submersible. we run the whole thing on this game controller and then he holds it up in the video. and you realize, wow, they're going 2 1/2 miles beneath the surface of the ocean and prayer. that's what we'll do. we'll pray. >> amen. >> harris: the president seems to be ignoring the very obvious. what he's choosing to focus on while in california instead of the top issues people are really struggling with in that state. crime. homelessness. that's next.
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gavin newsom and his rich liberal donors. what he isn't talking about is the rapid climb of homelessness or the population exodus. one of his challengers for the democrat nomination, well, he's talking about it. robert f. kennedy jr., he hit the streets of san francisco shining a spotlight on the brutal homelessness and drug crises sweeping the state. >> this is one of hundreds of street corners in san francisco that has been occupied now by the homeless by tents and by people who are sleeping in the open air. we need to rebuild our nation from the ground up. >> kayleigh: so harris, focusing on important issues and our president is in a swamp marsh announcing climate change funding? >> harris: well, bobby kennedy jr. doesn't have to be modified
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in order to make appearances. there don't have to be modifications made around him so that he can make sense. i mean, i look at what he said yesterday when he was with gavin newsom. and maybe most importantly, i have committed it -- committed to it by 2020, we will have conserved 30% of all lands and waters the united states has jurisdiction over and simultaneously reduce emissions to climate impact. 2020. in the future. and look, anybody can make a mistake. i get that. it's just that it's added to a whole host of things that are -- and this is -- that was day one of 20 days of him out on the campaign trail. kennedy is hitting it hard. you'll see others, republicans are going to hit it hard during this next 20 days because biden has -- the conditions have to be modified for him to have, you know, a modicum of success not to gaffe, not to and i'm sorry to say this. not to fall. i don't want anything to happen to the president of the united states. but it is our reality when he says watch me that we watch him.
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>> kayleigh: and we watched him in the marsh and we watch that gaffe. we have it so we'll play for you, doug. >> 2020, we will have conserved 30% of all the lands and waters the united states has jurisdiction over and simultaneously reduce emissions to blunt climate impact. >> kayleigh: does he know the year? >> obviously we're having trouble with it. the curious thing i have is he getting his remarks there or off the picture actually the teleprompter. i think there is probably a teleprompter. question is he reading wrong? is he going off prompt? don't know where it's at. and it's not just this one event, harris. i get it. i've been there. we say, you know, mess up a lot, whatever. this is a regular pattern here. and i think the interesting thing here about r.f.k. jr. and the contrast here is most of americans, most, even pollsters on both sides look at this. the climate agenda is not except for one smaller part of the
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democratic electorate. crime. when you have at&t leaving san francisco just announced, they're leaving, flagship store coming out. nordstrom's are leaving and you're not talking about these issues of crime and homelessness which is under your administration, that's where the disconnect comes. they have robert kennedy jr., i have a lot of my democrat friends say this is just a problem. he's now been on rogan which appeals to an independent audience and the idea about debating the vaccine. he's hit something. whether he can overtake the sitting president, probably not. he's making more waves than democrats will have to take seriously because it's a vast contrast between the two. >> harris: you know what he can do, get a number of democrats to stay home because they won't want to vote for who is on the ticket. that's the problem. >> he can win new hampshire and he can win iowa because of these rules at the d.n.c. i saw in politico a few weeks ago that the white house was relying on the media to elucidate robert f. kennedy jr.'s record like they wouldn't have to. like clockwork, here we go.
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nbc knowing that robert kennedy jr. was the headline of nbc article "the conspiracy candidate, what r.f.k. jr.'s anti-vaccine crusade could look like in the white house." is the media doing the bidding of the white house? >> it's the truth. he's a conspiracy theorist on a number of different issues and he says things all the time about vaccines that are just not true. >> harris: he says fact check them. feel free to do it. when kamala harris told them there was a vaccine, i didn't hear you pipe up. >> joe biden is going to be the nominee and this election will be a choice between him and whoever the republican candidate is. i think that, you know, climate change actually is a huge issue for younger voters. independent younger voters, democratic younger voters and increasingly republican younger voters because they see what's happening in our world and they want someone to pay attention to it. the democrats are talking -- joe biden talks about crime. he talks about immigration. and so do members of the house, by the way, and as the house moves further to the right as kevin mccarthy gets pulled further to the right, when we
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look at the full ticket it's going to be on the ballot next november, joe biden will be at the top of the ticket where democrats have gotten things done. he's passed legislation on a number of issues that the democrats and independents really really like. we are starting to see some of that funding, the jobs coming back. manufacturing. prescription drug prices coming down. those are things that people care about. not r.f.k. jr. and his tiktok. >> kayleigh: i want to get to emily. if 20% of your party is supporting r.f.k. jr., is 20% of your party conspiracy theorist? >> i don't think 20% of the party is supporting r.f.k. jr. i think you can look at any poll, i don't think that 20% of democrats are supporting him. >> we've all talked about polls, you know this, kayleigh. >> kayleigh: off by 20%. >> emily: what i'm hearing is the same dismisssive quality that we heard from pelosi when a reporter asked about his mental acuity and he said don't bother me with that.
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this is why "newsweek" calls r.f.k. jr. fringe and esquire called him a crackpot and however, he's capturing 20% of the democrat party's vote. clearly, he isn't prodder and he's not crackpot and not fringe. and every topic that voters find important. when we sort of slough off his video as a weird tiktok video, so, too, does the president and every one of his surrogates engage in the use of tiktok as a very important vehicle to them of the one voting block that matters which is young climate change prioritied children. and that is who he's talking to in california. in california where i'm from, your vote does not matter. if you do not prioritize as number one climate change only. if you dare to speak up about crime, if you dare to speak up about underserved populations getting the worst end of the deal by the fleeing businesses, the fleeing pharmacies, the fleeing everything, your voice still doesn't matter. it is all about them sort of knee jerking to this voting
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block that they have prioritized over all other americans. it is not working as evidenced by those polls. >> harris: you've got to read what bobby kennedy jr. is saying about green. no, he's not a.o.c. and even, republicans and some pretty high up on the hill are listening to some of his ideas because they're baseline money base. we can afford to do some of those things. dig into it. because he's going to come at the president with some of this stuff. >> he is appealing to a lot of people. i can't wait to see joe exotic make games on joe biden. i'm joking. coming up, the academy awards are out with brand new diversity rules that would make some of the most iconic movies of all time not eligible to win best picture if they were made today. that's next.
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>> ♪ shine on ♪ ♪ you and me be rocking all night long ♪ >> harris: the oscars are getting major pushback for their new diversity rules. which would disqualify some of the greatest movies ever made from winning best picture. the motion picture academy's new guidelines will force filmmakers to disclose the ethnicity, gender and sexual orientation of a film's cast and crew members. and if a film fails to meet the academy's minimum requirements, it will be automatically disqualified from winning the award show's top prize. and under these new rules, some previous best picture winners would no longer be eligible for the award if they were made today. "the godfather" schindler list
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and gladiator would be disqualified for not featuring enough minority actors in leading roles. i don't even really know how to touch that. like i don't -- so whatever we don't like, we're going to change the rules on and then cancel it? >> it raises so many questions, too, about historical authenticity. for example, if you were like with schindler's list creating a historically accurate depiction of something that affected a particularly ethnic and religious group, then would you make an exception? would you not be able to? >> apparently. >> that poses the question which we've covered before on this couch which is according to hollywood, you are unable to play a part of someone that you don't authentically represent. remember? are there enough people to then go around filling each box that they have created. once again, this is, i think, at its seed, at its root, a long time ago, well meaning writer clauses effective and important. this is an absolute travesty and, once again, it's just theater coming out of theater.
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>> i think hollywood needs to get more diverse and i think they need to pay women as much as they pay men that they put in big movies that make a lot of money. i think they have a lot of work to do for being better at a lot of thing. i don't think this is the way to do it. i think that, emily, you made a good point. if you're making a historically accurate movie and you want -- like this feels like they're trying to solve the problem with numbers and statistics and not with actually looking very deep into who they hire. not necessarily on camera. but behind the camera, right? there are hundreds, thousands of people who work on movies. >> harris: this is about what's in front of the camera. >> my point is it should be a bigger conversation. it shouldn't be check boxes that you go down to be part of the oscars conversation. it should be hollywood actually saying, how do we make hollywood more diverse? how do we feature more diverse stories? how do we tell more diverse stories? that is an important and bigger conversation. much bigger than this. >> harris: yeah. you know, the problem that i have with this -- one of the many, doug, is the fact that it takes us back to when people were in black face just to try
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to get in the movies they wanted to be there diversity for diverse's sake. schindler's list is particularly important for people like whoopi goldberg and what she said about the holocaust and i'm paraphrasing her. but accurate on the merits. so i'm really concerned and i'm curious to know what you think about this. does this take us forward or does this take us backward? >> i personally think it takes us backwards because we're now not, you know, of merit and saying you're a good actor and i believe you do give activity for all backgrounds. everybody have a chance to be actors and play in movies. i had a question about this and i was just reading this. all minority cast couldn't win an oscar? if it's an all minority cast, there's no diversity there. can that win an oscar? >> harris: but there would be diversity among the groups of people. i see your question. >> then you got a box.
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what is the boxes here? when you look at that from that perspective it's like saying, look, we all can do better. we can all get, you know, and treated better. and look, when you raise the type, everybody gets raised and nobody should be left behind. i'm tired of putting -- and ok, now you put an actress or actor in there and you meet the box. you've now diminished their acting skills. you now diminished them because we put nu this movie so we can win an oscar. give me a break. >> harris: to this point, you've got women and an all women cast but someone who is not a biological woman comes in, what do you do? >> kayleigh: that was the thought in my mind, how does this play into erasing women? that's what you're doing when you allow a male to win in a women's category. they were thinking of taking away the gender category and this actor spoke out against that and said, no, no, don't take away those categories. she got so much blowback and this quote was interesting. she said i'm receiving literally thousands of messages from people saying this is why they don't engage in liberal social justice anymore because we cannot even ask questions in
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good faith. people are quiet quitting the left and it's because of productive combative extremists. really interesting point there. i think she's spot on. >> harris: might not be so quiet. very loud depending on how it goes. coming up, what artificial intelligence can tell you about just by analyzing your selfie. some of us are going to have a loft material for this. i don't know who.
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>> coming up, the coast guard will be holding a press briefing for the submersible, captain jamie frederick of the first coast guard district will be briefing on that search effort for five people on board that missing sub, approximately 900 miles off cape cod coming up live at 1:00 eastern time from coast guard base boston. brand new developments on the search live as "america reports" john and i will see you then. >> ♪ star ships were meant to fly ♪ ♪ touch the sky ♪ >> it appears artificial intelligence is now playing politics. using something as simple as a
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selfie to determine a person's political preference. interesting. the danish study found it was right more than 60% of the time. raising all sorts of privacy concerns given how many selfies are available on social media. marie, i don't think 60% is really that good. it's kind of like if you guess, you're right. 60%. and it was just either conservative or liberal, right? you have a 50% chance of being right and this was all, i think, selfies of europeans and their political preferences. i would love to see how this translated to our country. >> kayleigh: i would like that, too, apparently the right leaning europeans have a very specific trait. according to the daily mail, the tech found that right wing politicians were more likely to have happy expressions while people with neutral expressions were more likely to identify as left wing. >> emily: i don't want to like -- look. you're smiling. you're happy. and i don't want a debbie downer this, i feel like it takes us down the line of like oh, his
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jaw is this. that must mean this. i would rather say something like or feel something like, the joy in that person reflects a spirit of christ. the joy in that person reflects their faith, their love of family, you know, their good attitude and let them tell you what their politics are. >> harris: i don't want a.i. looking for christians. we already have the f.b.i. >> kayleigh: this part were good at guarding their emotions. as a right wing man, are you particularly emotional, doug? >> i'm glad we're on the couch here. let me discuss this here while we're on the couch. i'm emotional. look, i think -- i love you. i really do. look, i think one of the things that it said is conservatives are happy, you know, positive outlook. it's going to be better, you know, liberal outlook maybe not. i don't know. she's having a hard time with this. >> heard a donald trump speech?
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that's not happy, man. >> seen his smile? he's a good guy, come on. i think the biggest thing here is people are people. and to try to put us into, you know, a box because of how my selfie looks. my son would tell me, doug, dad, you don't know how to take a selfie. much less how i am with it. >> kayleigh: how scary that you can someone's selfie and put it through an a.i. app. that's a conservative, you're out. >> harris:. >> harris: i go back to the low percentage. like that's not that good. and if we're going to categorize people, i think it's got to be higher than that because you know that there is going to become one thing out of all of this labelling and that's discrimination. whether it's at the formerly known i.r.s. looking for conservatives bend or wherever it is. i don't find it in a nation or how it is in europe. we don't need anymore division. we need to be americans together. can a.i. spot just the american dream seekers? >> kayleigh: yeah, 61% is a big
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red x with a circle around it. failing grade. >> exactly, 90 and higher is the only acceptable percentage. if you're not first, you're last. >> kayleigh: more in a moment. conquer financial reports. conquer 2000-word essays. conquer a 6 course menu. rule over what you write with the smooth writing, longest lasting gel ink pen in america. do you g2?
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banning tenants from cooking meat and fish because she doesn't want the smell drifting into her upstairs apartment. she's not the only one feeling the heat. peta is being roasted for doing -- the root of why people think it's ok to eat other animals. congressman, so much to unpack here. >> ok, i love the other animals, putting us on the same level as the other animal, as they say. they were all the same. my faith background says he created the earth, created all and put the fish and dominion under us. it is food, it is there. going by this landlord, do whatever you want to, baby, it's america. if you want to keep everybody out, do it. and leave them alone, if you want to pay that much money to live in that building, you got other issues besides what i'm going to do with rent. come on, give me a break. >> what's so fascinating, it's legal for the landlord to do this and people can ca
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carry in take-out meat, but it's her not wanting to smell it, which then sort of begs the question what other weird things are out there with landlords, like i don't feel like smelling your axe body spray, i don't know. >> maybe for her it's the smell, for peta, it's about conviction. and we want to regulate what you put in your mouth. >> can i have a barbecue only building? i love that smell. >> i'm there, i'm there. >> and share with me every day. >> i'll be in there for life. put sauce on it, let's celebrate. you know, i remember years ago there was this what you shouldn't heat up in the microwave at work and it was fish and a lot of people have a problem inhaling that, like recooked fish smell. i'm wondering, how can it just be about cooking? if you bring in outside food and warm it in the microwave -- i
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wish they would outlaw funky people who don't shower. can you do that in your building? and then ail pay. >> half of new york city -- >> so many stories of crazy landlords. >> go somewhere else. >> go somewhere else, exactly. >> free market. >> you stinkies. tune in tonight, guys, kayleigh will be hosting fox news tonight at 8:00 p.m. eastern. >> we have james comer from the house oversight committee, you will want to hear his reaction from the hunter biden news, senator ted cruz, and former vice president mike pence who i worked with in the trump administration, good policy questions for him and saving his reaction to hunter biden exclusively for the show and then monica and a good friend of our couch, leslie marshall, so, join me this evening at 8:00 p.m. >> that's great, a great discussion for sure. thank you for joining me last
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night. we had fun. >> do you think you are going to cover vegan landlord requirements? >> the lead, james comer is perfect for it. >> thanks to everyone for watching us over your steak or vegan cheese. now here is "america reports." >> sandra: fox news alert, begin a brand-new hour. any moment we are expecting to get an update from the u.s. coast guard on the race against time to locate and rescue five people on board that missing submersible that was exploring the wreck of the titanic. we hope to learn a whole lot more very shortly. hello, welcome, everyone. >> john: john roberts in washington, and this is "america reports." u.s. coast guard has searched an area about the size of massachusetts without making any leads and will expand the hunt into deeper waters to find the submersible missing for nearly 48 hours now. >> sandra: and the
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