tv FOX and Friends FOX News July 12, 2023 4:00am-5:00am PDT
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mask. impact your eyes with full view. keep this in the car and take it with you everywhere. cbrn chemical, biological, raid lodging call and even nuclear. and if there is a wildfire, any sort of particulate in the air, it's not only going to protect your breathing, going to protect your vision as well because if you can't see, you can't evacuate, right? >> steve: so true. >> super, super important peels of a gear. >> steve: great advice. if you would like more information go to skip bedell.com. >> ainsley: they make them for children, too. >> skip: absolutely. if you feel sizes for kids as well. >> steve: it's 7:00 in new york city. it's 75 degrees. ainsley, what happens next? >> ainsley: the second hour of "fox & friends." >> steve: starts now. >> no comment for biden for ukraine to join nato only when the time is right. >> cannot accept a country actively engaged in a war. >> involves slammed the timeline as absurd. >> ukraine will make the
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alliance stronger. >> christopher wray testifies before the house judiciary committee. >> suspected to defend the bureau's words of potential political bias. >> directed the fbi to interfere in our investigation of hunter biden. >> impeding his ability. >> student progress stalled during the last school year. the average student would need an additional 4.1 months of instruction. >> kids were allowed to get bye bye doing less. that's back sliding. >> scary watching it happen because i didn't know how much higher it was going to go. >> catastrophic flooding rushing through vermont some areas seeing nine inches higher than ukraine irene. >> i don't know anymore. i don't know what to do. >> it is impacting parents' willingness to want to take their kids. >> a welcome trend for visitors at disney park. crowds are thinning the july 4th weekend was one of the slowest in nearly a decade. >> with respect to our parents rights [inaudible] > >> brian: we begin this hour
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with a fox news alert. president biden meeting with ukrainian president zelenskyy on day two of the nato summit. he was just getting huge applause. the meeting is coming as the g over 7 announces more support for the war torn country after all this is a counteroffensive. however, nato is not going to invite or even provide a blueprint for ukraine to join the alliance. jacqui heinrich is live in lithuania with the very latest. hey, jacqui, i know we are digesting some of the remarks he just gave. i don't know if they were in english or not. were they? >> well, there was a live translation happening at the time so we couldn't hear what president zelenskyy was saying, brian. he just took questions alongside the u.n. secretary general ahead head of this g-7 meeting with g-7 leaders that was not on the schedule until this morning. they added that to announce a long-term security package for ukraine that is being compared to the $3.8 billion we give to israel annually. it's the first time, also, that
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we are seeing president biden alongside zelenskyy after zelenskyy expressed fury that this summit is going to end without even conditional invitation to ukraine to come into the alliance. zelenskyy called that an outrage and warned that russia will likely use the lack of an invitation as a bargaining chip in negotiations to end the war. >> i would like to say that we have some positive news on the new packages of defense support coming from our partners. we can state that the results of the summit are good. but should we receive an invitation they would be-the optimum.ent on to say that he is confident ukraine will be in nato after the war is over. the alliance did issue a joint statement committing to an invitation when certain conditions are met. president biden's undersecretary of defense told fox it's not just the concern that bringing ukraine into the alliance right
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now with a hot war ongoing would draw every nato country into direct conflict with russia. >> ukraine has to meet those same standards that every other nato member does in terms of democratic reforms, security sector reform, interoperability which means our military is going to work together. so there are conditions that every country has to make. so the door is wide open for ukraine. but there are still some steps left to go. >> meantime, there is a bipartisan push in congress to prohibit the u.s. from giving ukraine cluster bombs in a proposed amendment to the ndaa that's the annual defense policy bill coming out of the hill. members behind this push include g.o.p. representatives matt gaetz and anna paulina luna and also more than a dozen house democrats. undersecretary told me the cluster bombs only going to be given to ukraine the next 6 to 12 months while the u.s. ramps up production of other kinds of ammunition. they have already more than
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doubled production of unitary rounds. this was the best military advice that was unanimously agreed upon by every member of the president's cabinet because the message they want to continue to deliver to putin is that he can't just outlast everybody, guys. >> steve: jacqui, that's how you started where zelenskyy was presented with this new long-term security agreement, and it was there to send a strong message to mr. putin. hey, look at everybody who going to give stuff to ukraine. you know, maybe you should start thinking about driving that tank back to moscow. >> that's right. i mean, i think they were trying to satisfy the concern from zelenskyy, that if not even a conditional invitation to join the alliance, if zelenskyy went home without that, that would signal to russia that maybe to end the war they could try to force ukraine to say we will not in the future try to get into nato. and they wanted to, in addition
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to that commune quay that they put out communique that they put out, this military assistance is going to come from the g-7 countries. >> brian: jacqui thanks so much. i appreciate it. she has been on like 48 straight hours. >> steve: doing a great job. two european official and one official saying biden administration about giving atacms. elite long range missiles that match and exceed the quality of the french have pledged. the big fear was not giving them atacms was two fold. we don't want them hitting inside moscow and they could reach. number two, they have proven that they can be trusted when it comes to that. and the last one is we don't have many. we have a small arsenal attack only about 4,000 have been manufactured since the missile was developed in the 1980s by
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lockheed martin we don't know how many we should give because we have all own need for them. the overall theme for when this conflict is over america has to do a much better job of producing weapons if not only for our own defense, everybody wants to buy them. there is a profit in all these sales. taiwan is still waiting. turkey is waiting. a lot of our allies are waiting. they have to transition out of that russian stuff that we can't resupply and fix into western defense systems. they are not happening right now. for some reason, we are not producing weapons. after 20 years of war, we never heard about this, this new system is we are not able to make the stuff even when people have money to pay for the stuff. it is mind boggling. a. >> ainsley: several things shocked me this morning as i was preparing for the show. donald trump said why are we giving them these cluster bombs these munitions. he said biden, first of all, inned a investor tently admitted
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we were running out of some of our ammunition. he said that is classified information. he never should have said that to the public. then he said and then that's why we are giving these cluster bombs because we are running out of our stockpile. >> steve: we need stuff. >> ainsley: we need to keep our own stuff. instead of focusing on giving all this equipment, focus on ending the war. cluster bombs some of them don't detonate and go off. when a child steps on them or when a civilian steps on them. innocent people. then also something that surprised me when intrels he wasn't shy about his slasks. look, everyone is giving him. >> brian: this happened just moments ago. >> ainsley: people love him he is a hero. he is upset they are not letting him into nato right now. he has to understand we can't allow him in because we are putting our men and women in harm's way. we have to fight russia. >> steve: it's a process. >> ainsley: another that i think that surprised me is skipping the dinner. nobody sent blinken in his place. he said he had four full work days. how many days do you work?
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>> ainsley: he is the president. he can't do one more full work day. >> brian: we saw him shirtless on the beach, sadly. i would. >> ainsley: fighting with the beach chair. >> brian: the problem with donald trump's theory. i appreciate the fact that a lot of people are against the cluster bombs. great debate. but you can't end the war in 24 hours unless you give 20% of ukraine to russia. russia is not going to leave. unless they are forced out. obviously we wouldn't have a 500 day war. unless you say ukraine, just give up part of your country, this thing is not going to end this way and russia is not going to leave voluntarily, obviously. if mexico decides to take some of texas, would we say let's just end the war and not fight? of course we would fight. we would get texas back. don't tell me you claim texas. we would keep it. don't tell me you don't agree with 1845 when the acquisition of texas -- that's not going to happen. why would we expect ukraine to give up their country. >> ainsley: senator kevin cramer a republican from north dakota.
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he said i'm fine with it. if they are going to fight with these cluster bombs. the enemy has them. we are going to have them too or ukraine can have them too. they are not playing by the rules. then we will fight with the same a artillery. >> steve: outlawed 1 # 0 countries. the only ones that haven't signed is ukraine, u.s. and russia. let's see if they ever get them. there is now some entire support in the house and the senate not to do it. and, in fact, more than a dozen democrats say don't do it. two republicans matt gaetz and anna luna from florida say no. cory booker, chris murray. bernie sanders in the senate oppose on the democratic side. and j.d. vance and a couple other republicans say there is not a good example of cluster munitions fundamentally changing a conflict and a great cost, i think, to our moral leadership, which i have heard is a lot of the reason we are supporting ukraine. so, let's see what happens with
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the cluster bombs if we ever actually send them over there. meanwhile. >> brian: let me add this before we go. the president is going to have a hard sell to get an election year continuing to write checks to ukraine. for the main reason that he just blew up because he said we are out of stuff ourselves. there should be more oversight. no question about it. >> ainsley: we have given them 800 million. >> brian: that's why there should be a rush to get this over with now before politics overwhelms national interest. >> steve: all right. so let's go back to what i started to say regarding bipartisan. you would think that there would be bipartisanship, we just changed to the atlanta -- it to the georgia state house. you would think that in georgia, the state of georgia, there would be bipartisan support for school choice and things that impact your kids. well, apparently that's not the case. because there is a georgia state representative by the name of meisha maynard. she is a democrat, actually, she was a democrat until recently. because a number of. >> ainsley: on tuesday.
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>> steve: a number of her compatriots on the democratic side angry that she supported school choice bill to help disadvantaged kids. she has decided, you know what? apparently i'm not a democrat anymore because that is something the republicans are standing for and that's why i'm going to switch to the g.o.p. here she is last night with sean. two things i have run on district safety. parents are asking for choices. right now there are schools that only 3% 3% of children are meeting proficiency. that's not acceptable. the option that the democrats are giving is keep it there until we fix it. it's getting better soon. it's been like that for 50 years. the democrats wanted to defund the police. i was on twitter with one of my former colleagues the other day. she said i never voted not
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defund the police and some constituents brought up her vote and said this is the vote that you did. we need to make some changes and i'm happy to do so. >> ainsley: she went on to say that without school choice, you are abusing the black communities. and she said she standing up on behalf of dissed a vantaged children on behalf of school choice. if you talk to the unions, why aren't you full school choice? if you are in a bad area, of the schools aren't good, why can't moms and dads take their kids out of that district. you give them the money because x amount of dollars are spent on each child. and they can go to a different school. and that school gets the money. shouldn't they be rewarded? the child and the school for being really great and for, you know, having good test scores and teaching the children what they need to know. it only makes our country wiser, more intellectual and better and able to stand up to other countries and be a world power. it's beneficial for everybody. if you ask the unions they say you are taking money out of our schools and then these bad
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schools more people are going to leave and then that's fewer dollars going to those schools and those schools are going to fail. >> brian: the theory is, and it's a strong one. if you start giving people choice, every school starts competing for the student and, therefore, the competition is fundamental to america will produce a better result. hey, stay with the public school in my area. it is great. well, you have got to go private school. these guys have no incentive. these teachers aren't good. then you start doing the same thing. this is the same debate they are having in pennsylvania now and josh shapiro just double-crossed his legislature and went ahead and went back against school choice and vetoed his own measure he agreed to. now seeing the same thing in georgia. if you look at the results from charter schools, they are substantially better with more schooling than public schools. especially in minority areas. you would think if you pride yourself on minorities first, you would not be for -- you would be for vouchers. you would be for school choice but the problem is you get your votes from unions and the
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teachers unions is as powerful as it gets. in terms of rules, it's still not happening for the pandemic -- for the people, for the kids who persevered through the pandemic and back in full-time school now. we are still seeing grades depleted. >> steve: we are. whether it comes to our money, when we pay so much in taxes, it's our money. we should be able to take our kids to the schools we want. it should be portable. one other thing that former democrat, who is now a republican said, she was asked if she thought she would wind up with pushback from the democratic party and she said yes. she said the most dangerous thing to the democratic party is a black person with a mind of their own so it would not surprise me. okay, now, let's see what surprises us about the background. we are in georgia. okay now we are in a classroom. >> ainsley: it's very appropriate. the latest national study from the northwest evaluation association revealed some dismal numbers when it comes to the pandemic. how behind are our children?
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>> steve: way. >> ainsley: talk to any teacher and they say they are behind. that was definitely the narrative when the kids were going back to the classroom. now we are finding out kids need an additional 4.1 months of schooling to catch up in reading and 4.5 months catch up in math. >> brian: yeah. what a disaster and what's been done for it. some district offer free summer school. mom, i have an idea instead of being out in the summer playing with my friends let me get more math. in it's not going to work unless there is some type of incentive for these kids to do it for the teachers to teach it. sadly, i think we are in a situation wherewithal this covid money, i'm surprised they haven't given it to places like the huntington learning school or other areas in order to give these supplemental education opportunities to parents that are concerned about these numbers. >> steve: because, brian, the teachers feel like they can do a good job. unfortunately what this organization has laid bear is the fact that they are not doing a good job. we have not caught up. everybody was looking at this survey and this is an organization that does this for
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a living, that's all they look at are numbers. how far ahead or behind are our kids and the numbers just even though the pandemic is so far in our are rear view mirror, the after-effects of it when it comes to our kids are lingering and it's going to impact a generation of american children. >> ainsley: last year my daughter was in first grade well i guess -- last school year she was in first grade. it goes fast. so her kindergarten year she had two teachers that were wonderful. and they had been in the school for their entire careers they had retired this past year. i talked to them at length. they have said this is the first year in all of our decades of teaching that we have seen the kids behind. she said, ainsley, we are trying to let the kids talk a little bit more in class because they have been without each other for so long. >> steve: the socialization. >> ainsley: they needed to socialize. they are not paying attention. paying attention in class is something we need them to do. they love talking because they have not talked to their friends in a year, basically.
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she did say we have never seen this happen and so they were working really hard. in our school, thankfully, does give a big packet of math homework. hayden has to do that every night. it's a lot. you want them to enjoy their summer but at the same time i don't want her to are four months behind. >> steve: a lot for the parents. >> brian: fifth graders behind 15 hers. seventh and eighth graders fell short of pre-pandemic by 16 to 19%. we have been out of it for two years. we should be able to catch up. >> steve: i wonder if anybody has done a study to look at whether -- you know, home school children did they fall behind in the pandemic? i mean, their parents were right there with them in many cases. >> ainsley: i didn't hear last year when we were if first grade i didn't hear they were behind. it was really that first year everyone came back we were hearing that a lot from the teachers in our schools. >> steve: it's tough news to give you. it's all fair and balanced got to tell everybody everything. right, carley? >> carley: that's exactly right, steve. and in 2020, you know, imagine
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having a 5-year-old in 2020 you had to do zoom kindergarten. a lot of my friends had to do that. the attention span and now all trying to catch up. so sad. possibly they can make up. >> ainsley: our zoom preschool 30 minutes. >> carley: zoom gym class ridiculous. >> ainsley: we had a zoom theater class they were doing lion king in my living room. >> carley: more news to get to. in pennsylvania, manhunt for escaped inmates michael burr ham 200 officers searching for the suspect. >> we continue to find items. that leads me to believe there is still a likelihood he is here. on the right track. we will eventually capture him and put him back into the criminal justice system. >> carley: now we are seeing newly released ring doorbell footage from durham back in may. it shows him on the front porch of a home just hours after
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police say he killed kayla hodge kin and torched her car in the driveway. vice president kamala harris once again demonstrating that she has a way with words during a conversation about transportation she made this about accessibility. >> this issue of transportation is fundamentally about just making sure that people have the ability to get where they need to go. >> carley: some sarcastic marks on twitter with users thanking harris for the brilliant analysis. >> steve: well, she is right. >> brian: ultimately. >> ainsley: get where we got to go that's the definition of transportation. coming up, plot twist the supreme court speaking out on new reports claiming justice sotomayor's staffers prodded law schools to buy her new book. >> brian: where are the ethics? >> ainsley: going to join us to talk about it. >> brian: oh my goodness. i'm so offended.
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people will want her book. you better have a bunch. i mean, the scandal here there is one really is the fact that she's used her staff as to do this. i mean, there are no rules against the supreme court justice writing a book. if you want to write a book i didn't read. just ask, but i'm sure it's a fine work of literature thing is that if she uses court staff and others around her to try to make money for her, which is effectively what's happening right here. that is actually sort of ethics crossover and the only answer so far the court is there is no specific rule against this right. well no. maybe there isn't a specific line saying you can't use staff to help make you money on selling your book. but but here's the thing. um two things are jaw dropping
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about this from this associated press report number court, which i did not realize. and the other thing is, when it comes to members of congress or the executive branch. essentially they can't do what the supreme court can when it comes to squeezing people in an audience to buy your book. >> i wonder if it there isn't some kind of to be in place. both political sides are tearing each other apart at the moment about this sort of issue. >> steve: really? i hadn't heard. >> it's been around there. you know, and you know, maybe it is a question. maybe there are some things that need clarified. i just worry, you know, the supreme court has to be an institution in this country that is above the political fray. it has to be. the constitution does not hold together if the supreme court is turned into sort of a branch of nastier. it has to have public trust. that public trust has definitely
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been eroding. remember, this is still a court that can't seem to work out where, perhaps the biggest leak in judicial history came from. so, there are a lot of reasons for people to feel fear about the supreme court in a moment. >> steve: the supreme court did put out a statement. what they said was if we could put that back up. justices routinely travel and speak to university, college and law school audiences. chambers, staff, those are the people making the calls, assisted justices in complying with judicial ethics guidelines for such visits including guidance relating to publications. but there should be no requirement or suggestion that attendees are required to purchase books in order to fully attend. in other words, despite what's happened. there will be no shakedowns in the future. >> this is like sure they can speak at law schools, sotomayor is not talking about speaking at law schools. she is plugging a children's book. that might be different. >> steve: the book is called "just ask" and we are just
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asking. thank you very much. >> my pleasure. >> steve: guess who is not coming to dinner. president biden skipped out on an official nato meal last night. not the only thing he is dodging. how about the. marianne williamson reacts. she is live and she is next on "fox & friends." ♪ nion from innovation refunds at no upfront cost. sometimes you need a second opinion. [coughs] good to go. yeah, i think i'll get a second opinion. all these walls gotta go! ah ah ah! i'd love a second opinion. no. i'm going to get a second opinion. with innovation refunds, there's no upfront cost to find out. so why not check like i did for my small business? take the first step to see if your small business qualifies for the erc. from prom dresses to workouts
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♪ >> brian: we're back with a weather alert. devastating flooding forces over 175 high water rescues in vermont yesterday. >> ainsley: just awful. this as new satellite images are revealing the extent of this week's torrential rainfall that drenched much of the northeast. >> steve: fox weather multi media journalist brady campbell joins us from montpelier, vermont with the very latest. it looks like the water has receded but, brandy, i see a lot of mud. >> that's right. the water is gone but left behind this muck. if you guys take a look at the ground can you see how thick it is. this morning they have crews already trying to clean it up. very slippery. people have been falling in. this it's really a hazard at this time. let's take a look at some of the video. those images that led to this. just really across the state
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here in vermont. many areas had over a foot or over a half foot of rain that led to flooding on monday night causing many to worry about the wrightsville dam breaching making the situation worse. at this time it's not a threat but governor scott says thousands have lost property because of the flooding. parts of montpelier and ludlow and surrounding towns they were hit the hardest. some underwater and stayed that way until the afternoon on tuesday until the water rekeyed. again, 175 rescues at least were needed across the state. some too dangerous to do by boat so they did call in the national guard to assist doing so by helicopter. the state says this could be a days or weeks long effort to get this process cleaned up here. back to you guys. >> steve: all right, brandy, thank you very much for the live report from vermont. meanwhile, janice dean has been talking about how there's more
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weather headed her way. >> unfortunately a dry period right now. rounds moving into the northeast. as brandy mentioned water is receding for the winooski river. crested 21 feet. the wrightsville dam yesterday thought it was going to burst. 3 feet away from the spillway. thankfully the water is receding. look what happens in the next 24 hours. another batch of rain moving into the new england region as well as parts of the mid-atlantic and neath getting flooding over the weekend. that's going to be something concerning and something we will have to watch over the next couple of days. also want to make mention severe weather threat for parts of the plain states and excessive heat alert stretching across the southern tier of the country temperatures surpassing 100 degrees for a lot of these areas, stretching from california to texas and the texas river valley. this is a dire situation, some of these areas have been experiencing this heat for four to five weeks and that is a big
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concern. it's not going anywhere. steve, ainsley, brian, over to you. >> steve: thanks, j.d. >> ainsley: president biden raising eyebrows after dodging dinner with nato leaders last night citing a heavy workload. >> steve: i bet he had a big breakfast then. that's not the only event is he skipping. the dnc still not scheduling any debates against his democratic challengers including our next guest. >> brian: he really doesn't have much of a campaign yet. democratic presidential candidate marianne williamson joins us now. great to have you on the couch. >> thank you for having me. >> brian: you're reaction to the president saying i'm going to bail on dill dinner when you neat with nato allies. >> this is an important meeting. if the president says i have work to do and work with my team on my speech, i don't fault him for that. >> steve: you know, one of the things that's going on right now, there is some bipartisan criticism that the administration is going to give ukraine cluster bombs which are outlawed in 120 different nations, except the united
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states, russia and ukraine. what do you think about that? >> i think cluster bombs should not be used. there is a reason for the geneva convention and international law they could hurt innocent children and for years to come. >> steve: because they don't all detonate at once. >> exactly they can have terrible repercussions after the war is over. they should not be used. >> ainsley: tell us why you want to run for president and put your family through that we see what happens to donald trump and you are returning against the current president. >> there are many aspects of it that are unpleasant. there is no doubt about it. but there are other aspects about it that are exhilarating. the excel lear rating part is talking to the people of the united states. i don't think the people are the problem in this country. i think we need to remember that i think there is a political system that often does more to thwart and to suppress the voice of the people than to facilitate the voice of the people. that's the problem we have. i believe that we have too many legislators who when push comes
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to shove do the bidding of their own corporate donors and billionaire donors than to actually serve the health and safety and well-being of their own constituents even when poll after poll after poll shows what their constituents want, too many legislators go against that because of what their donors want. >> brian: let's take a look at the polls right now. the sitting president has 64% right now. is he not campaigning much. r.f.k. jr. got. in isn't really welcomed on many left wing outlets he has 17% and you have 10%. how do you expect to close the gap when the president will not engage with you? >> well, it's difficult, of course, i think many people think that the president should engage. you have a majority of democrats democratic voters and democratic leaning voters who do want to see a debate and do want to see their options. this, to me, is about our democracy. you know jefferson said the only safe repository for power is in the hands of the people. the people of the united states, particularly at a time like this should be very aware of their options. that's what a candidacy is. i see a campaign as a long job
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interview. and the voters are decide hog am i going to hire for this job. the president should debate his opponents. he absolutely should. >> steve: it's a job where only one person gets the job. and you want it. joe biden says he is absolutely fit to be president of the united states when it comes to his age and mention acuity and things like that. do you think so? >> well, you know, for me, even if he at the top of his game, i think i'm a better candidate. even if he was at the top of his game i think i have better policies and better agenda for the next four years and better person to face the republicans. in 2024. >> brian: do you think is he too old. >> i don't want to get ageist about it. trump is two years younger, i think. every person has to look at that and choose for themselves. we have all seen the gaffes and also his team says well, when it comes to decision-making he does fine. i feel that i have plenty to challenge the president on based on serious fundamental disagreements on policy.
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>> steve: marianne if anyone is watching and would like to donate what's your website. >> thank you. marianne 2024.com. thank you so much for having me. >> brian: next, bringing down the mouse, disney execs may be left wishing upon a star after dismal summer season and empty parks. we break it down next with fox business host dressing great charles payne. have you met marianne? >> yeah. ♪ they customize your car insurance so you only pay for what you need. check it out, you could save $700 dollars just by switching. ooooh, i'll look into that. let me put a reminder on my phone. save $700 dollars. pick up dad from airport? ohhhhhh. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ choosing a treatment for your chronic migraine -
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♪ >> brian: welcome back. mickey mouse is feeling lonely especially in the magic kingdom eerily empty. really bizarre thanks to a combination of things. let's take a stroll and see what is going on with disney not only their stock price but the foot traffic. first off, think about it. how much did it cost to get to disney when everyone was going $3.50 whether it opened in 1971, then it went to $85. still middle class but we can do
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it. family of five not that expensive. now at $175 the results have been substantial the park traffic is down. in fact, if you think about it, the best way to show how park traffic is down is how long the lines are. when you talk about the magic kingdom. 29 minutes, 47 minutes right before the pandemic the average wait in the line. no fun but shows you how popular it is. now it's down to 27 minutes on almost all rides on all parks. big question is bob iger says i want to retire. i have got to big this guy bob chapek to take over. he has been a flat out disaster taking on government, ache he is saying to left wing employees. iger wants to come back and stay and wants a huge wage what does it mean. still fighting it out with ron desantis. support desantis support trump. i'm staying out of disney. hurts park price, foot traffic to the employees. here is ron desantis talking
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about why it's necessary for him to take on disney. >> my wife and i really believe parents should be able to take send their kids to school and not taking on cartoons. stood up to rights of education bill. i think it is impacting parents' willingness to want to take their kids to the disney stuff. >> brian: they are suing bang and trying to get their word out. in the meantime people are taking sides and suddenly disney is knee deep in politics. bring in making money's own from fox business charles payne. charles, your reaction to what disney is seeing at their greatest asset and that is their theme park. >> they have four major component of their business. this was the one seen as rock solid. you have a hot movie year, sometimes a cold movie year sometimes. tv same kind of thing. this is absolutely phenomenal. in some ways people kind of saw it coming but not to this degree. july 4th was the third fewest
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attendees than the last year, july 4th think about that. that should have been the number one day. two other days were as bad in the last 52 weeks. it's been unmitigated disaster. and here's the thing that's a little disappointing when bob iger came back, i thought he was going to say listen. >> brian: it was a window. >> reset the company. instead he picked back up on the battle with desantis and here's the thing. you can argue bob iger his job is to shareholder improvement is he supposed to build this company, tell the audience how bad things have gotten. march of 2021 the company 317 billion this morning 165 billion. they are down $165 billion in two years. >> brian: disney plus is still going to be profit be in 2024. >> many people doubt it. espn, take a look at numbers. this is another one of corner stone they had 90 million
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subscribers like our business down to 75 million subscribers. these are many solve the biggest names that they have have all been given their walking papers some say i pay you not to work. they have overall laid off 7,000 people including their biggest names what does that tell you and what do investors think when they see that? >> that speengs four itself. right now wall street 10 buy recommendations. in april of this year there were 21 buy recommendations. what does wall street think yesterday one of the most respected analysts on wall street when it comes to the entertainment space she suggested that disney will be bought within the next three years. let me tell you how amazing this is. a few years ago disney should buy netflix. netflix is worth more than disney right now. just miscue after miscue after miscue how could you get in cultural battle with the governor of state that you have your primary business in when
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the whole business is imploding? it's nuts. >> brian: let go to of the freedom trail. >> that's nuts. >> brian: other movies have bombed out bob iger says i want another contract i want to stay off my yacht and work some more. >> they will probably give it to him and he can do the job focus on business and family experience don't get involved in social stuff. >> brian: 1-800-ron desantis call it truce. >> 3.50 gone up for inflation would only be 26 bucks now. >> brian: what is it now 175 charles charles exactly. >> brian: if i wanted to see you tune in at fox business 2:00. >> charles: important read in an hour. market is going to go haywire. >> brian: the futures are up. thanks so much. >> thanks, buddy. >> brian: day two of "fox & friends" survival series. skip bedell shows us the way to
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survive. he didn't show me last hour maybe he will show me this hour. ♪ i'm a survivor ♪ remember the things you loved... ...before asthma got in the way? fasenra is an add-on treatment for asthma driven by eosinophils. it's designed to target and remove them and helps prevent asthma attacks. fasenra is not for sudden breathing problems or other eosinophilic conditions. allergic reactions may occur. don't stop your asthma treatments without talking with your doctor.
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ice. works on the power of the sun from solar panels. >> steve: i love that. >> charge it up. take if you. refrigeration. no power, can you keep your food and medical supplies cold. speaking of cold. this is a cooler/filter. i love this thing. so, it's a five gallon bucket that has spigot at the bottom. take ited from the lake from, a mud buddle u. puddle from anywhere. got these ceramic filters inside. >> steve: seriously? >> skip: poor the water in it comes out the other end completely pure filtered water. >> steve: sea water? >> skip: i don't know about salt water lake water or river. >> ainsley: amazing. >> skip: three things come with this handy tote. emergency power that has a jump start kilt. allows to you jump your battery and a compressor to pump up your tires. you have emergency food and water supply. we heard about so many people pear irising over the winter they got frozen in their cars, right?
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emergency first aid kit, heating blankets. things like this like a puck light that can be found in the snow. all the things that you need to keep warm and keep safe. and when you are all done with them, they all fit right inside this awesome organizer. >> steve: that's great. >> skip: that goes right in your trunk. and you keep it all organized. i love it. >> ainsley: genius. >> steve: final stuff? >> skip: real quick the speed round. i love this a sun kettle. fill it up with water like a thunderstorm moss. put it sun boil water for you. take it with you. hot boiling water to use to mix emergency food. >> steve: coffee. >> skip: coffee? >> brian: winter? >> skip: any time you have the sun uses the power of the sun to boil water. >> steve: so cool for more information got to scott biddle.com. >> brian: don't go anywhere. ble. for adults who are undetectable, cabenuva is the only complete, long-acting hiv treatment you can get every other month.
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cabenuva is two injections, given by my healthcare provider, every other month. it's really nice not to have to rush home and take a daily hiv pill. don't receive cabenuva if you're allergic to its ingredients or if you taking certain medicines, which may interact with cabenuva. serious side effects include allergic reactions post-injection reactions, liver problems, and depression. if you have a rash and other allergic reaction symptoms, stop cabenuva and get medical help right away. tell your doctor if you have liver problems or mental health concerns, and if you are pregnant, breastfeeding, or considering pregnancy. some of the most common side effects include injection-site reactions, fever, and tiredness. if you switch to cabenuva, attend all treatment appointments. ready to treat your hiv in a different way? ask your doctor about every-other-month cabenuva. every other month, and i'm good to go. the best advice i ever got was to invest with vanguard for my retirement. the second best? stay healthy enough to enjoy it. so i started preparing physically and financially.
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so you don't have to. zevo. people-friendly. bug-deadly. (janet) so much space!... that open kitchen! (tanya) oooh definitely the one! (ethan) but how can you sell your house when we're stuck on a space station for months???!!! (brian) no guys, opendoor gives you the flexibility to sell and buy on your timeline. (janet) nice! (intercom) flightdeck, see you at the house warming.
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