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tv   FOX and Friends Sunday  FOX News  July 2, 2023 5:00am-6:00am PDT

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♪ god bless america ♪ land that i love ♪ stand beside her ♪ and guide her
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♪ through the night with the light from above ♪ from the mountains ♪ to the prairies ♪ to the oceans ♪ white with foam ♪ god bless america ♪ my home sweet home ♪ god bless america ♪ my home sweet home ♪ rachel: that was beautiful. god bless america indeed. that was performed by the us air force heritage of america band. with us all morning, brightening up our day with all these patriotic tunes. i don't want him to go away.
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it has been great. pete: we are glad to have you with us on this sunday morning leading into the fourth of july on tuesday, the three of us will be together on tuesday morning celebrating. sometimes i can't count. rachel: it has been a big weekend. lindsey graham told donald trump, in this beautiful town in south carolina called get. am i correct about that. pickett, south carolina, this historic town and they announced that donald trump was going to come and they basically shut town down because people were not getting not just everyone in town but from neighboring states. it was huge, 50,000 people showed up. donald trump on stage doing what he's does best, lindsey graham getting not so great of a response. a little bit of booing for him,
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donald trump tried to clean that up but also took time to talk about all the people coming after him from the biden administration, saying when i am in office, if i get an office, i'm going to take the gloves off and actually have a special counsel look into the hunter biden corruption. >> i have always respected the office but when they indicted me for nothing, now the gloves are off, now we have to say it like it is. under crooked joe biden, i took the name away from hillary clinton, i call her beautiful hillary now. when i get back in office i will appoint a real special prosecutor to investigate every detail of the biden crime family of corruption. so incredible.
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martha: allysia: i don't remember him taking it easy on president biden but this is personal for him, not just about winning office but proving them wrong, bring in fox news sunday anchor and chief legal correspondent shannon bream to join us about this and other issues. rachel: what does it mean when he says we are going to take the gloves off. what does that say to you? >> reporter: a lot of people say okay, you had four years, there was time to take the gloves off, get the swamp in order, he suggested what happened in dc, the roots are deep, whether democrat or republican you will find out from the state department to treasury, energy, everywhere else, longtime bureaucrats are not going anywhere and they could do a lot to stymie what you are trying to do policywise.
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take the gloves off when you come to washington, nobody doubts that's what donald trump would do. will: the hunter biden investigation can get confusing, so many names involved. what we learned with the irs whistleblower, gary shackling said that when charges were brought, when evidence was brought forward regarding hunter biden, the potential prosecution was constantly thwarted, was turned away. he says about the delaware us attorney wanted to bring charges but was pushed back from washington dc and other places, he didn't have full authority. here's a quick flashback of what he said about how that investigation was interfered with. >> i was there and witnessed this, he started with he is not the deciding person whether charges are filed, you follow
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where it leads you, the dc us attorney's office in march 2022, they presented this case to them. at the same time as that was occurring, there were points of discovery from the agents which is a typical step when getting ready to charge. i wasn't in those meetings, i asked to be in those meetings, we didn't help% of them but after that occurred he was now looking to charge in that district. will: david wise, that delaware attorney is saying he is pushing back saying that's not true, i had full authority, could have brought this case if i wanted to. he said as the us attorney for the district of delaware my charging authorities limited to my home district. if the venue for a case lies elsewhere, common practice is to contact the us attorney's office and question whether they want to pardon on the case. it may request special attorney status from the attorney general.
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after the above process, i would be granted authority in the district of columbia or california or anywhere else. why -- he is saying i could have done it. shapley is saying you told us the time you didn't have the power. how do you sort this out? it is he said she said. how did the american public learn the truth? >> reporter: gary shapley said he was in those meetings, contemporaneously recorded it in e-mails. of the people in those meetings might be able to answer the question. also remembered david wise now set in communications with jim jordan on the hill, the chairman saying i am open to having conversations with you to discussing this further, the doj will work with the committee to work on a timeline. you have to hear from him. he can explain or rebut what gary shackling has said but others who were in that room might need to come before the committee and explain as well if it gets to that because there were witnesses, there were other people in this
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e-mail chain who said yes, that is how the meeting went down. the truth has to lie in their somewhere. a very very positive thing that david wise seems open to having conversations in the committee, and other interview, he's got to be the one to clarify where these sides do not match up. will: as you point out there are other people in the meeting and you know shapley took notes that day and other people verified they heard the same thing. it is not really he said she said. you need the other witnesses to step in, they heard as well. rachel: rachel: being a whistleblower is troubling for your career. the biden administration made it more difficult, many of them said they were told coming forward would be career suicide. joe: i want to make sure people understand the allegation of
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the whistleblowers david wise said he wasn't allowed to press charges so if that is proven true by corroboration in this meeting, that is not a smoking gun, that is now let's point microscope at david wise and find out why he said that we didn't press charges, could come down to what motivated him and what didn't. >> is not the deciding official on whether charges are filed, that according to gary shapley so the question becomes had somebody telegraphed that to wise at some point or was he representing that to the team because he had decided not to bring charges? what he said is no one is ever limited my power and another thing gary shapley said is wise told him he asked for special counsel status which would have helped him to work around some of these things and was denied by the justice department. what he's saying in his latest letters i've got the authority. if i feel i need to go above and beyond in these districts i can ask for special attorney status which is something else that he says justice told him
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if he needs that to move forward with the cases it would be granted. joe: is the goal to litigate this or to simply impeach merrick garland? >> wise said this is an ongoing investigation, that is one of the reasons i cannot give the committee information about it. july 26th, that hearing that hunter biden will have with the judge has to sign off on this if they do that. i think it is a bigger, wider stretch probably for some of these committees on the hill who want to launch investigations to get to the bottom of what happened with the investigation, not necessarily to get more charges for hunter biden but to find out whether he was given any special treatment. will: if that was communicated to him in some way that he couldn't pursue these charges what would that have to come from? with that have to be merrick garland? is there another layer of bureaucracy between merrick garland and david wise? where but the response. ally in stopping the investigation?
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>> there are other people, certainly people between david wise and the ag, the department heads. monaco is over there. maybe those folks will give answers as well. maybe there was a misperception. maybe david wise misunderstood something. maybe he had emails that say i would discourage this. who knows what message he thought he was getting. other people will have to testify. rachel: there's a pattern of covering up and blocking investigations at all turns. this isn't out of line with a pattern. i want to talk about the supreme court rulings which were very very important and will have an impact on the 2024 election, donald trump in south carolina taking a victory lap saying all these decisions conservatives wrongly approve of and like i am the guy who
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brought that to you because i put the three conservative justices on the supreme court when i was in office. >> president hillary clinton would not have picked these justices and we hope would not have gotten these decisions, love or hate them that's absolutely accurate, donald trump said i brought you the court that brought these decisions so whether it is a free-speech case with the colorado web designer who by the way, said that this is going to be a denial of service for some of the on the basis of lgbt q status, the report said clearly including justice new gore such this is not about providing service to people when they walk into a business. this is about doing custom designs when you don't agree but a particular viewpoint. it's a free-speech case, not a freedom of religion case but striking down race-based admissions in colleges and striking down the student loan debt, the president wants to find a workaround, very upsetting for the left. they are using it and they say they will use on the campaign trail and it will benefit them.
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will: i was listening to a local radio station in new york. they described that case as opening the door to discover nation against same-sex couples. there's a complete intentional miss representation. and the docent, they quote soda mayor and ketanji brown jackson because they get it wrong, they mischaracterize what happened in that case as well. rachel: i want to read from neil gorsuch come he wants to be clear on that point. in his particular case, colorado does not seek to ensure the sale of goods or services on equal terms. it is not about serving someone who walks in. this web designer says i have lgbt q clients and we work together well. it's not about serving, the court wants to say it is not about the messenger, you got to serve the person but it is about the message. if you feel as an artist you're being forced to endorse a message, that's when the court
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said to distract to prevent. will: i believe that was the cake designer. i was confusing the website with cake designer, the cake design was asked to make something completely -- it was graphic. joe: he was selling already made cake, it was what he was selling on the cake. rachel: the web designer argued the same thing, i took web design work for people all the time, i have boilerplate stuff but that is something else. any thoughts on how you think this could impact these decisions can impact the 24 election? >> reporter: you had the president say i tried to do something to help all of you suffering student loan debt, tens of millions of people, republicans couldn't stand the thought of helping middle-class americans. they are trying to hurt you while i am trying to help you. no doubt we will hear those themes out there. rachel: we will hear more on fox news sunday at 2:00 p.m.
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on the fox news channel. you always have a great lineup. >> we will talk about all the foreign policy, certainly a big part of nikki haley's resume, if she fights for this nomination and we have democrat congressman to talk about the report out of afghanistan. will: we will be watching. rachel: she's the expert, couldn't have a better person on today. >> two people dead, 28 others are injured including 3 critically after shooting in the south baltimore overnight. the city's mayor spoke early this morning. >> a reckless cowardly act that happened here that has permanently altered many lives and cost two people their lives. i want those who are responsible to hear me very clearly which we will not stop until we find you.
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will: hundred people gathered for the brooklyn days of operation. no arrests have been made and police are asking anyone with information to call detectives or crime stoppers. travel headaches continuing as 7700 flights were delayed yesterday at 274 were canceled. already today, 700 flights are delayed, 275 cancel. it has been so bad for united airlines they are giving 30,000 frequent flyer miles to passengers affected by the travel chaos. the ceo reducing or changing schedules to relieve airplane james after he was under fire for taking a private jet out of the same airport while many passengers remain stranded. the philadelphia phillies scoring a blistering 19 runs in their route of the washington nationals. alec bound tying his rbi with 6 rbis and then this grand slam to help reach the team's highest run count in 5 years.
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meanwhile in toronto, red sox outfielder beating bo busch out at the plate, this could all throw to steal a 7-6 when on the. jays. to look for credible plays, focus on specific teams, how do we choose -- the rangers with the astros yesterday, right over there. joe: we came to the braves every time, they won 7-0 every night, can't do it every time. rachel: will delays and united flights affect me when i need to fly out? even by tuesday? >> no, sorry. joe: hopefully we will get news on your flight but if you have spare time and want to read
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have got a book out called on broken bonds of battle, it's on sale now. this book has a lot about me in it that is in the lens of 10 people i served with and have known, goldstar wife who was beside me today. i was injured, lost his life, this book is a great testimony on how we need people who have gone through things themselves to help us, it is a great opportunity for me to share with you these 10 people that are heroes to me and you will find them to be heroes as well. if you want a copy, i'm doing a lot of signing on july 5th, you can sign up using the qr code on your screen, the most technology ever associated there, you can purchase it at foxnewsbooks.com. check us out. >> you are number one. >> number one on amazon, that's a testament to you all as much as me. your loyalty to watch us and read about this.
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will: new york city throwing away taxpayer dollars, the city sending cash to residents and hope they fill out a survey but most of it ended up in the trash. rachel: a new social media trend has people pouring beer on themselves to get a tan. doctor janette nash what -- --nesheiwat has that. ♪ ooof, still yellow. whitening toothpaste can only do so much. there's toothpaste white, and there's crest 3d whitestrips white. so much whiter! crest. he snores like an angry rhino. you've never heard an angry rhino. baby i hear one every night... every night. okay. i'll work on that. the queen sleep number 360 c2 smart bed is now only $899. plus, free home delivery when you add an adjustable base. shop now only at sleep number.
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well i guess i would've gotten us xfinity... and we'd have a better view. do you need mulch? what, we have a ton of mulch.
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>> want to know the best secret there is? ♪ will: this is happening. this is a tanning trend going viral. social media users posting video of pouring beer over there skin, the most affordable and quickest way to get a tan. experts are warning about the extreme dangers. fox news medical contributor
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dr. janette nesheiwat joins us now. before we get to the dangers, how does beer help you get a tan? how does summary convince themselves of this? >> we see all kinds of tiktok challenges can remember the tide part challenge? the benadryl challenge? some have been deadly had now this. young people pouring beer on their skin thinking they can get a tan and this is not scientifically proven but the thought is the ingredients in beer, the grains, the yeast, supposedly this ingredient can activate the melanin in your skin which gives us our color. the real purpose of melanin is to protect us against uv rays so that we don't get skin damage but this is not scientifically proven and it could be harmful because beer is slightly acidic and it disrupts the natural skin barrier protection you would
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normally get which could lead to skin irritation, skin inflammation and even infection not to mention sunburns, skin cancers. will: you think -- they are not selling anyone on they are protecting themselves from the sun. they are trying to enhance the idea of getting a tan. >> there's no safe way to get a 10. one in 5 americans will develop skin cancer in their lifetime. the most common cancer worldwide. it's really important that you make sure that you protect yourself otherwise you can develop sunburns, skin cancer, sun poisoning and this extreme heat wave coming our way, you want to be careful to avoid heat exhaustion and heatstroke. will: you have tips on how to protect your skin. >> if you want to spite your age, race or religion, everyone should be using some protection, sunblock at a minimum of spf 30 and reapplied
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as well because if they're sweating are you are swimming it can come off. spf minimum of 30 and make sure you are wearing proper clothing, sunglasses, hat. this will protect you as well and make sure you are careful with the time exposures, limit your sun exposure especially between the hours of 10:00 and 3:00 when there's the peak level of uv radiation and make sure you stay hydrated. drink your beer, wash your hair, marinate but don't wear it on your skin. will: it doesn't help you get tan, a help you get a sunburn and your sticky. >> and you smell and attract bugs. will: still had, helping our heroes, tunnel to tower celibate independence day by gifting mortgage free homes to those who sacrifice for our nation. frank stiller joins us live with more on his inspiring gesture, plus a performance by
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the u.s. air force heritage of america band. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ what you need. you could save $700 dollars just by switching. ooooh, let me put a reminder on my phone. on the top of the pile! oh.
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subject 2: it doesn't feel good because you can't play outside with other children. subject 3: as a parent, it is your job to protect your family. but here is something that i cannot do. i cannot fix this. i don't know if my daughter is going to be able to walk. i don't know if she's going to make it till tomorrow. [music playing] interviewer: you can join the battle to save lives by supporting st. jude children's research hospital. families never receive a bill from st. jude for treatment, travel, housing, or food so they can focus on helping their child live. subject 4: childhood cancer, there's no escaping it. but st. jude is doing the work, continually researching towards cures, giving more than just my child a chance at life. interviewer: please, call or go online right now and become a st. jude partner in hope for only $19 a month.
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subject 5: those donations really matter because we're not going to give up. and when you see other people not giving up on your child, it makes all the difference in the world. interviewer: when you call or go online with your credit or debit card right now, we'll send you this st. jude t-shirt. you can wear to show your support to help st. jude save the lives of these children. subject 6: st. jude is hope. even today after losing a child, it's still about the hope of tomorrow, because. childhood cancer has to end. interviewer: please, call or go online right now. [music playing]
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joe: tunnel to towers continuing their patriotic mission paying off the mortgages of more than 30 goldstar families. the remarkable foundation, giving a fully equipped smartphone to staff sergeant benjamin webb. a 3-time purple heart recipient and 15 year veteran of the united states marine corps who suffered multiple concussions and shrapnel wounds during his tour of duty. tunnel to towers founder and ceo frank stiller joins us now. tell us about this marine with three purple hearts. >> she's a great american hero serving our country and three purple hearts, survived 3 different -- it is amazing and you know what happens to these guys when they have these injuries. some visible and some not. his body is riddled with
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shrapnel, traumatic brain injury and he has gone through a journey that has been incredible. he didn't want to live at one point. you know how many suffer like that. he's come out the other side and we put him in a mortgage free smart home that gives them back a lot so he's going to get the use of one leg can barely move and a couple years ago, he was in much worse shape. it's a great day for tunnel to towers foundation but a better day for staff sergeant ben webb but this is where the donations ago, viewers help us with $11 a month. joe: your an innovator. in this world of helping servicemembers your an innovator because you don't say you got to be missing at least two limbs, you got to have this type of injury like my legs. you understand the complexities
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of traumatic brain injury but also the idea of the goldstar family, the legacy. how do you help someone who made sacrifice, the war and at home and that is the other half of your program, giving home stiff surviving families comes from. tell us about 31 goldstar and first responder surviving families. >> pictures of these heroes who made the ultimate sacrifice for our country and our community as police officers, many served our country first before they became first responders. it's a promise the tunnel to towers has made a promise your viewers joined us on to make sure we take care of these families. if they are willing to go out and protect us we've got to take care of the families left behind and that is what we are doing here for independence day, independence weekend, make sure we always step up and do the right thing because so many
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of them, those 31 plus staff sergeant ben webb. there's a lot more that has to be helped. joe: we see people from all backgrounds but chose different careers in life to serve others. it is independence day. how do you serve? >> i will be with my family. i will be here later on, a special on fox, we pray, i pray for these great heroes, their families are safe, their families somehow learn to live with this sacrifice their loved ones have made and we celebrate our independence, celebrate this country, the greatest country that is ever existed. it made the ultimate sacrifice. joe: your a special person, the team that works for you. if we could clone you and put you all of the country we would be a better place. i'm proud that i got to know
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you, all the good work you are doing, visit t 2 t.org to help our nation's heroes and their families. thank you for stopping by. >> tens of thousands of volunteers all over. >> you may or member him as jesus in the passion of the christ but now he's starring in a new film focused on the dangers of human trafficking. he joins us to discuss the important true story behind his latest project. here's a performance by u.s. air force heritage of america band. let's hear it. ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ in the name of the father and son, holy spirit. amen. lord jesus, come to us now. help us to surrender ourselves completely to you. help us to listen to your voice. even when we're distracted or tired, we pray this in the name of the father and of the son of the holy spirit. amen. thank you so much. i just want to encourage you that if you want to join me in more prayer, check out hallow it's the number one prayer app in the world. [ applause ] the day you get your clearchoice dental implants changes your struggle with missing teeth forever. it changes how you eat, how you feel, and how you enjoy life. it changes your smile
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for copd, ask your doctor about breztri. breztri gives you better breathing, symptom improvement, and helps prevent flare-ups. breztri won't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems. it is not for asthma. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking it. don't take breztri more than prescribed. breztri may increase your risk of thrush, pneumonia, and osteoporosis. call your doctor if worsened breathing, chest pain, mouth or tongue swelling, problems urinating, vison changes, or eye pain occur. if you have copd ask your doctor about breztri. >> mass unrest across france in the way, police involved shooting that took the life of
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the 17-year-old. 45,000 officers have been deployed throughout the country as a manual macro delays a visit to deal with the crisis. rachel: our next guest says french policy and lack of accountability are partially to blame for divisions in the country. will: joining us is associate fellow of the royal historical society, thanks for being with us this morning. we had various conversations about what has been going on in france, clearly there are issues regarding the specifics of this incident. what happened regarding this 17-year-old but what we are watching take place across the country clearly is much deeper, clearly has something to do with some fault lines in french society and french culture. >> absolutely right. the proximate cause of this violence is the killing of a 17-year-old who according to some stories didn't stop his car when he was told to stop
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his car and drove towards the police and was shot but as you mentioned this is fundamentally a problem of french society, france was the colonial power and had a massive amount of migration and unlike the uk or the united states, some parts of france are not related. this was to boil down. there are stories of looting against any kind of republican symbolism of the french state and even stories about people trying to assassinate the mayor of a paris suburb. this is not a protest for justice, this was preplanned and this is a societal problem. rachel: talk about why assimilation in france is different or more difficult to attain? >> good question.
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fundamentally french society is centralized and top-down compared to the american society. law enforcement in france is a top-down measure. they have different laws, their human rights laws are tied up in european courts, they don't have a death penalty, don't do anything to ngos. that is one part of the angle, the conformity of the french state. it is compromised. the second part of this issue is the preplanning thing as i mentioned. when you have a protest or violence, you immediately have messages from what's apps. this is what we see in palestine, what is happening in the suburbs of france. this is is not sport radical or spontaneous violence. there's a whole cadre of people targeting as you can see, the shop that have been targeted. they are kind of like having a moment similar to 2020 in the united states except in 2020
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was more sporadic. joe: you compared to 2020, we made a direct comparison, we don't know what we don't know but in this country we have groups like antifa, blm as an organization organizing -- either groups active in france that are behind this? >> there absolutely are groups. extremely active in france. there are groups active in this community. as they say in france, the suburbs of paris, there are, it is a heavy situation and they have their own what's apps groups, their communities, mosques to plan protests. it is absolutely heavy. will: i heard you talk about the top-down nature of policing but to follow up on your
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statement, assimilation issues in france are different than they are in germany and the uk. why is that? does it date to the colonial era? french cultural superiority? what makes this so unique to france? >> the closest comparison when it comes to colonial issues is the united kingdom. there's been migration in the united kingdom from postcolonial countries like india, but on the other hand in france, the cultural superiority and top-down nature of the french state britain were the first colonial nature of the british state was one of detached involvement, migration that happened in the uk, migrants themselves had a measure of assimilation on their own party. that didn't happen in france. the migration that happened, france gave up on their colonial power, fighting to the last moment. there has been bad blood during the migration crisis, people
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still consider france a colonial power, the second generation of the french so they don't have closure that britain has. rachel: super interesting. thank you so much. thank you. joe: the new york city health department shelling out $9 million in taxpayer money to send out a $5 survey, the city attached $5 bills to each mental health survey they sent out. now they think most of the cash along with the survey, 6% of people responded out of 210,000 surveys sent out. the dream of flying cars could be a reality. aleph aeronautics getting approval from the faa to begin testing for the world's first all electric flying car. it can fly up to 110 miles,
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driven up to 200 miles on roads, you can even preorder a 2-seater car for $300,000. it's not immediately known where it might be legally allowed to drive a flying car. those are your headlines. now we will send it over to chief meteorologist rick r reichmuth. >> reporter: it is a cloud car. it is coming. i'm sure it is coming. take a look at the roadmaps. if you think it is too hot where you are right now, this is a live shot, 39 ° as you are starting your day, certainly a nice morning and we don't have as much wildfire smoke, canadian wildfire smoke not that bad in any one spot but everybody on the east coast if you notice your skies a little hazy this goes down towards florida, the wildfire smoke we
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will see throughout the day. and improved a little bit behind the storms throughout the day today and tomorrow. this is all happening. 20 acres in canada so far, worse they had before was 1995, the this was the entire fire season. this is the beginning of the season. it is an amazing story. rachel: you remember him as jesus in the passion of the christ. now he is starring in a movie on the trafficking crisis with a powerful message that god's children are not for sale. he joins us next.
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>> the new movie shedding light on the fastest growing mental enterprise in the world, human trafficking. >> giving a child his freedom. >> it felt good. >> been at this for 12 years. ♪ my country it is of thethe
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>> why are you doing it? >> because god's children are not for sale. rachel: a tsa agent who dedicates his life to rescuing children. it hits theaters tuesday july 4th. you can purchase tickets, angel.com/freedom. jim caviezel joins us now. it is an honor to have you on to talk about this film. i watched it and i will say it is a thriller. it is a crime story. if you love than genre you will be satisfied but it is a tough topic and i had to guard myself to watch it. why did you want to do this film? >> first of all, it points to trafficking, you are going to go for a thrill ride. it is incredible inspiring.
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before what did you learn from this film about what is driving child sex trafficking? >> the money, $152 billion a year business, put that in perspective, that would be nfl football team, pro sport in the us, world cup soccer and sending a kid to college, every 18-year-old goes to stanford university for four years, that would be one hundred $52 million. rachel: what is your hope for this film? >> looking for 2 million people to come to the theater for the 2 million trafficked children. it's a bigger empire, there's organ harvesting. rachel: it is the most evil thing on the planet. >> we don't have a south order. celebrating 4 july. rachel: complicit in it. >> the media needs to go down there. why don't they? it is hard.
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hopefully, that will occur but the politicians -- rachel: that's what this film is about. god bless you for doing this film. i hope people watch it. i love that you decided to premiere on july 4th. i hope it is freedom day in terms of awareness for all the children caught in this awful world. >> i want to say this is an inspiring film, the most inspiring moment is when the former trafficker turns to me and says when god tells you to do something you don't hesitate. rachel: it is an honor, god bless you and all those children. i hope people meet that challenge of 2 million free ticket sales. this is the most important. >> shout out to all my brothers that helped me. look the part. rachel: you look the part to me.
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you can purchase tickets now, angel.com/freedom. coming up, shady plan, how the white house is exploring options to block out the sun. does this sound familiar? >> since the beginning of time man has yearned to destroy the sun. i will knew the next best thing, block it out. way back in 1982 we took care of about forty kids and had to turn away over two hundred and fifty. it's the emotion of that moment that said man that just isn't fair, and i think it was at that moment that operation smile was born. every three minutes a child is born with a cleft condition. thousands are waiting for the cleft surgery and care your support gives. they need you. give joy and a new smile. scan the code or go online to give today.
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♪ america ♪ america ♪ god shed his grace on thethe ♪ and crowned via good with brotherhood ♪ f

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