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tv   FOX and Friends  FOX News  July 17, 2023 4:00am-5:00am PDT

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schools to low income communities. >> brian: ian, i appreciate what you do. all these parents appreciate what you do. you are changing lives on a daily basis by making kids reach their potential, better teachers, longer days, more demands, better results. it's hard to beat that formula. ian rowe, thank you. >> thank you. >> brian: you got it. just teacher's unions that are stopping it. meanwhile, the second hour of "fox & friends" starts right now. >> steve: hour two of "fox & friends." we start with a fox news alert. russia says two people have been killed after what they are calling an ukrainian attack against the vital bridge that links crimea to mother russia. >> ainsley: it comes as the kremlin says it is halting the deal allowing the equities port of ukrainian grain. >> brian: it's going to be substantial. alexandria hoff is live in washington. alexandria, what's the damage? >> talk about the damage for
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that bridge, because it is logistical and symbolic in many ways as crimea bridge only artery that connects russia to the peninsula. supply routes for the war against ukraine cut off early this morning after cream lip says naval drones caused the partial collapse of the bridge. no word when that's going to be repaired. symbolically is another hit to president putin's pride. he opened the bridge himself by driving on it in 2018. that was in celebration of annexing the region from ukraine. at the same time, you mentioned russia has pulled out of the unusual war time deal that had allowed ukraine to export grain. the goal there was to avoid a global food crisis. we have seen prices rise since this was made. the biden administration is trying to remedy a u.s. military supply short fall which was revealed to the world when the president let this slip earlier this month. >> the ukrainians are running out of ammunition.
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the ammunition they call them 155-millimeter weapons. this is a wash relating to nutritions. and they are running out of that ammunition and we are low on it. >> well, the white house's john kirby said yesterday that the administration is working with the defense industry to restock. >> we are working very closely with the defense industry to try ramp up particularly for artillery shells. we gave cluster knew missions to ukraine while we ramp up production. we are having very, very strong considerations with the defense industry and we believe we will be able to get there. >> i sure hope we do. kirby was responding to the centers for strategic and international studies that found replacing inventory could take between 4 to 7 years. >> brian: alexandria looked like drones that did it but they didn't get the train. the train is the one that delivers a lot of the weaponry, correct?
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>> yeah. you are exactly right, yeah. this is a route for vehicles and for trains. it seems like the train could have been the target of this. they only got the westbound side of this roadway. if these were naval drones i don't know how accurate those could be. this looks like something, unfortunately, that can be repaired. and that access is still in some way will be able to get through during that time. >> steve: it's going to slow them way down. and that's what the ukrainians want. all right. alexandria, there you can see that one of the spans has collapsed. thank you very much. it happened at 3:00 in the morning, obviously they wanted as few casualties, civilians as possible. >> ainsley: yeah. we have a lot of bridges in this in new york where the train runs and shares the bridge also with the cars, the vehicles. and that's what happened here. the vehicle side, the section that the vehicles travel on was the one that was destroyed. the train does still work as you were saying, brian. a mother and a father, i heard this morning, were killed. their daughter was in the car,
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too. and she was injured. >> brian: right. that's sad but on a daily basis. the russians are targeting civilians that, is never the intent of the ukrainians. >> the russian economy is in free fall according to the "wall street journal." 93% drop in their currency. the ruble is in free fall, they say. moscow has a huge chunk of oil and gas products down 36%. so, they are getting hit hard. they also are firing a bunch of generals. and they are -- this guy popov is popping off, ripping the generals that are in charge and the people calling the shots in moscow. meanwhile, the wagner group is beginning to relocate to belarus. so they are out of the fight going for now a base in belarus. the deal that was explained to us that everyone said was a ruiz. turns out it might have been the deal. one thing going on there. one thing is pretty clear the president of the united states saying we are out of ammo helps
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the russian cause ridiculously and the fact that jake sullivan is on cnn saying well, the previous administration said we are out of bullets and never did anything to fix it they never tire of blaming donald trump two and a half years in to their reign, they are blaming trump when trump had all the money pour inspector general defense and all they have done is cutting below inflation. so they are really cutting defense below 3% and blaming trump for the problems they have. >> steve: well, the problem for us, for all of us in the united states is we have run out of a lot of stuff, you know, when joe biden let slip and we just saw alexandria play that soundbite where he goes we are out of 155 caliber rounds, they say -- john kirby was on with shannon bream over the weekend said because we are running low on things we are going to ship them a bunch of these cluster munitions as a bridging solution even though they are outlawed by 130 country by most of the world says they are too dangerous to use even in
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war. so, they have looked at exactly how long it's going to take to restock our knew missions when it comes to the 155 caliber they are estimating that the javelins we have given to zelenskyy will take 8 years to replace. and the stinger missiles that we have shaped trillion over them over there. this is jaw dropping. they say it will take 18 years to replace them. so when the president reveals we're out of stuff, we're out of a lot of stuff. >> brian: a couple things, that's if we do the current way we are doing it. we have to adjust the way we are doing it. and we have got to get into almost a war-time footing. it's a for profit business not only do we need stuff and we will write the checks for this stuff but the other country also buy it from us where we can make a profit as well. so the current situation they
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consolidated too much in the 1990s. there is no market pressure on them. and they say we need a long-term deal. you want me to make javelins, i need a 10-year commitment. if i ramp up and make javelins and you stop ordering them after 3. i lose money and i have an obligation to my shareholders. you sign a 10-year commitment. you begin to incentivize these defense contractors to spread out refan out and possibly mandate that they separate say we made a mistake in the 1990s. don't go doing what you are cooking now. clearly there is a problem. >> i would love to talk to an expert that knows exactly what we have in our arsenal. again, they are not going to tell us. the president was not supposed to tell the entire world that we were running low on this. >> brian: john kirby confirm? >> ainsley: exactly. they are not going to he will it us. where are we getting that information? how do you know it would take that long to replenish. surely we would be able what if needed it for a war next year. >> steve: it's in a foxnews.com
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story. but, the worry is, what if somebody around the world blows up and we have got to do something about it, the cupboard is bear. >> maybe that one shelf is bare. hopefully the other closet is full. >> brian: president trump said he would end it in 24 hours. went into detail the russia-ukraine fight. here is what he told maria how he would do it? >> i know zelenskyy very well and i know putin very well. even better. and i had a good relationship, very good with both of them. i would tell zelenskyy no more. you got to make a deal. i would tell putin, if you don't make a deal, we are going to give them a lot. we will give them more than they have ever got if we have to. i will have the deal done in one day. >> brian: the problem is one country invaded the other, took 20% of their country unless russia agrees to get out, there can't be a deal they might have done it though if donald trump were in charge.
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the withdrawal would have looked different in afghanistan too, i believe. >> steve: nonetheless, we need more bullets. and it's taking way too long. all right. meanwhile, let's go north of the border. we're going to tell you the story. remember that canadian pastor. a fellow by the name of arthur pawlowski. facing 10 years in prison after he delivered a sermon to truckers blocking the u.s.-canadian border last year. and this guy had been arrested five times that was the one time he was arrested on the tarmac. >> steve: right. exactly. he was arrested five times because he defied court order involving covid and stuff like that. right now he is facing 10 years in prison. his son was in brussels at the european parliament on the fourth of july. and he brought to the world stage his father's plight. and the lawmakers there embraced
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him. couldn't believe what's going on in canada. watch this. >> i'm here today in desperation, a cry for help. i would like to stand here and tell you all the things about freedom and democracy that i like but i no longer know those things. they have been taken away from us canadians. canada has fallen. my father was just found guilty of inciting mischief for giving a sermon to the truckers. when they went and stood for our rights in 2022. a christian sermon that referenced the solidarity movement was criminal in our government's eyes. a charge is that also a a penalty of up to 10 years in prison. this case sets a precedent to all canadians and the world if you allow this to happen that anybody, including politicians and media do not have the freedom to say or express what they have on their hearts for fear that what they say is
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mischief and could be liable to prisoner. >> brian: it's hard to believe that justin trudeau would continue to get reelected when all he does is take rights and privileges away from this democracy to our north. and it's unbelievable that he got elected again because he continues to do this. what he did to the truckers, what he did during the pandemic. instead of him realizing wow, i went too far, which a lot of people feel happened here, and people are recalibrating and sobering up. he feels emboldened by and it knows exactly who to blame. listen. >> there is an awful lot of misinformation [inaudible] people on social media, particularly by the american media are spreading a lot of untruths. if you look at the various curriculum, you will see that there is not what is being said out there about aggressive
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teaching of conversion of kids to being lgbtq. that is something that is being weaponized. >> brian: talking about muslim kids. >> steve: the reason he was there, hundreds have been protesting against gender ideology, which is being taught in canadian schools k through 12. and he was at a mosque in calgary last week. and he was blaming the u.s. right wing for canadian muslims who were opposing the lgbtq+ curriculum in canada. he said there's a lot of misinformation floating around out there that simply is not true. >> ainsley: well, and the pastor that has been arrested five times, he was actually -- he was at his church and he p police and they were trying to inspect it for the easter service for 2021. this is just a pastor. is he preaching to the truckers. this is my church we will do
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what we can for covid. he wouldn't let the police. in now is he under house arrest. he awaits a court daten august 9th. he spent 50 nights in two different prisons and abused and humiliated by the staff. the staff he says they tried to insta city gait other inmates to hurt him. >> brian: unbelievable. >> steve: it's quite a story. >> ainsley: he has a son too. adorable. >> steve: sticking up for his dad. >> brian: talking about sticking up, justin trudeau one of the countries not close to the 2% necessary gets the benefits of nato not going to spend 2% on your military. maybe we should focus on that a little bit. >> steve: 7:13 on this monday morning, and carley joins us with news out of the filly area phillyarea. >> we start with a fox news alert. this morning's train derailment in a philadelphia suburb is prompting a level 2 hazmat response. a 40-car freight train derailed 5:00 a.m. eastern time causing
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officials to call for evacuation of some homes in the area. at least 10 of the train cars reportedly came off the tracks. so far no injuries have been reported. but a white substance was reportedly seen leaking from at least one tanker. no worked yet on what that substance may be. the train is reportedly owned by csx and was traveling on tracks owned by norfolk southern. a georgia man accused of killing four people and injuring two police officers was shot and killed after an intense manhunt over the weekend. the search for undriveway long morgan saturday morning after three men and one woman were killed in an atlanta suburb. long more was killed sunday after he opened fire on arresting officers. and to the crisis at the southern border. a caravan of migrants new take on this situation. >> group formed in southern mexico. they are going to walk up to the united states border.
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and remains to be seen if the border patrol will be given the tools that they need to stop this kind of traffic. this administration specifically is encouraging. this they continue to tout that they are being successful on the border when we can see with their own eyes that they are not. >> nearly a thousand migrants are reportedly part of this caravan. many of them from venezuela. moms on social media are going crazy over a new packing hack, some saying it will change your life. especially if you are traveling with a baby. check it out. >> grab one of those inexpensive over the door shoe organizers. lay out every single outfit per day, roll it up and throw it into each one of those little slots, then you have every single outfit per day all ready to go. roll it up, stick it in your suitcase then when you get to your destination, unroll it, hang it over the door and easy access for all their clothes. >> that hack is spreading quickly getting millions of views and shares on platforms like tiktok. i have to remember that.
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>> brian: lombardi thing is if things need to be ironed? >> carley: i feel like kids go through more than one set of clothes a day. >> carley: they do. >> steve: my wife has been packing like that only she rolls everything up. nothing winds up wrinkled. brilliant everything is in its own little cubicle. that is so smart. >> ainsley: when hayden was little, this is when she used to let me dress her. >> steve: she is still little. >> ainsley: she is 7 and wear unicorns and anything flashy. >> steve: me too. >> ainsley: chris can relate. >> brian: same as gutfeld. >> ainsley: bows in her hair and smocked dresses those would get wrinkled. if you put things in a dry clean -- in the clear plastic bag, they do not wrinkle. >> steve: that's what my wife does, rolls it up and puts it inside. >> ainsley: it works. do you know what i do? i have a huge, it looks like a coffin. a huge bag. >> steve: we have seen it. you could put a person -- you could
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put two people in that bag. >> ainsley: i take it off out of my closet on the hanger. the hanger is here. next piece the hanger is here. next piece the hanger is there and there i do that layer after layer after layer. get to the hotel you pull it out and hang it right up, easiest packing and unpacking thing to do. >> brian: domestic staff the eight people. guy and traveling you pack up my stuff that makes me look good and sexy. >> carley: your butler. >> ainsley: if you can't afford a butler. >> ainsley: ains. >> brian: most people can afford butlers. >> ainsley: how do you pack? >> steve: my wife does. >> ainsley: kathy packed for you, three kids and herself every time you all went away. >> steve: now she is packing for grandkids. >> ainsley: she is a keeper. i will not do that sorry. >> steve: all right. still ahead. >> ainsley: maybe that's why it hasn't worked out for me. [laughter] >> brian: it's working now. >> steve: a fox weather alert.
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flash flood battering the northeast as new jersey has declared a state of emergency. a live report from janice dean coming up. >> carley: car. >> ainsley: but first, feeling down there is an app. for that apple looking to put users in the right head space. >> brian: finally. >> ainsley: brian needs this. >> brian: yes. >> ainsley: alouds travelers to mood. without a mood ring brines brian those work. kurt the cyberguy is jogging our direction. steve how are you? ♪ get into the life where you belong ♪ right where you belong ♪ ♪
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all right. here to dive into what this means for apple product users, kurt the cyberguy. kurt, good morning to you kurt kurt good morning. the first question that comes to mind here is did it ever occur to them that it could be the devices itself that's not making us happy? that's bringing about kind of a funk in our lives at times when we immerse ourselves. >> steve: everybody has a better life than me. kurt kurt right. and then on the plus side here. this is coming out in september. it's just going to be one more journaling aspect of apple's real dive into mental health.
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what they're saying is we are going to create this journaling app. that's connected to whether you are at a level 2, 3, 4, some scale of a potential being depressed. and with the youth in america post covid, really that is an epidemic. so they are taking a stab at this. it will be interesting to see how effective it is because, do we really -- are we used to asking ourselves am i happy right now? what happened to make me happy? and making a record of that. >> steve: okay. let's go over to the big board. and we show the new mental health features. first of all, you can log your state of mind. can you track your mood, ranging from very pleasant to unpleasant selections. and determine their risk level connect to resources. can we zoom in to the left part of the screen? because that essentially is what apple users will be able to -- you can see down at the bottom it looks like, kurt, you slide
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that slider, how unpleasant a day. >> slightly unpleasant is what the choice is right now. so, you know, this is a double-edged sword. it's like so i'm logging that i'm slightly unpleasant. i then will say okay, it's this time of day i was at this particular place. and it was right before i saw you. because i would dial it up being happy to hanging out with you. >> steve: listen to you. kurt kurt truth be told. i just don't know if it's going to be that cure all for mental elliott had. awareness of us what makes us sad and what makes us happy? probably. if people are using it. >> steve: sure, my question is, let's say you slide it over to very unpleasant on that pleasant scale, will apple then suggest hey, you are having a bad day. you should do this, this, or this? >> i think after you get a bunch of measurements together it may suggest that hey, if this app. is telling you that you -- we noticed that you were really unhappy at this time of day doing this particular activity,
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and maybe you would want to address that. >> steve: okay. something we need to address real quick that. is there has been some sort of security breach with apple product. >> rare for apple. but if you have a mac book or mac computer you really want to do a critical update right away. malware is targeting that platform. and we have got solutions online for you with that. >> steve: all right. check out cyberguy.com. cyberguy live. thank you very much, kurt. >> good to see you, steve. >> steve: coming up on this monday, president trump challenged over his 2016 campaign promise he made in a wide ranging interview this weekend. >> drain the swamp? >> i did. i fired comey, i fired a lot of people. a lot of people i fired. i fired comey very early. >> steve: monica crowley says one of trump's enduring strengths is that he was never a washington insider and, as you can see, she is live as well coming up next on "fox & friends." ♪ wake me up ♪ before you go, go
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♪ >> brian: back with a fox weather alert. flash flooding causing problems through the northeast this weekend. new jersey even declaring a
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sterng that happened yesterday. >> ainsley: this coming as officials have now found five people dead in pennsylvania. state officials say they expect to find even more victims. and first responders are still searching for the 2-year-old litigation girl and her 9-month-old baby brother who went missing during the storms. >> just heart breaking. millions of people in the southwest are dealing with record high temperatures with parts of death valley seeing temperatures as high as 130 degrees yesterday. what's today going to look like? let's check in with senior meteorologist janice dean out on the streets of new york city with the very latest. so, please tell me it's not going to rain today. >> janice: well, we do have the potential for rain in the forecast, really for the next couple of days. tomorrow we have a cold front that's going to swing through and that's going to bring the potential for flooding. let's take a look at it. we did have flood warnings all of this weekend. really up and down the i-95 corridor. this front moves through and then tomorrow through wednesday we are going to be dealing with the threat for heavy rainfall in
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the area and ground is saturated. it's not just new york. we have had 40 flood-related deaths already this year for many states. it's just been, you know, a terrible year for a lot of weather deaths. we have the severe storm threat today for the ohio valley. large hail, damaging winds, isolated tornadoes, and then the air quality, we have the smoke returning from canada unfortunately is supreme with respiratory issues make sure you are listening to local officials and keeping your forecast in mind. real quick, what's your name where are you from. >> brian throughouten from savanna georgia. >> happy birthday my friend what's your name. >> kayleigh from new orleans. >> andy from new orleans. >> janice: thank you for being here today. >> thank you. >> janice: send it back inside. still very humid out here. >> they are doing the right thing they are hydrating behind you. very good example. >> steve: thank you j.d. >> janice: thank you, you have got it. >> steve: carley joins us with more news from pennsylvania.
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>> carley: an armed woman in pennsylvania taking matters into her own hands after finding four strange men inside her apartment early yesterday morning. police quickly found two of the suspects both suffering from gunshot wounds. they were transported to the hospital and charged with burglary. officers are still searching for the two other suspects. san diego lifeguards are now warning beach goers after spotting at least three great white sharks just on friday alone. the sharks were seen eating a sea lion off the coast of black beach. lifeguards say the sharks weren't aggressive but are still telling beach goers to use caution when entering the water. experts say great white sightings are common in the summer months since the coast provides an ideal nursery habitat. and voting ends today for round 1 of the u.s. multi-championship. last year's winner of the emit bailey and his mom both joined
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the show yesterday as he defenders his title. we did it fun thing hair cut and contest and got so big last year some incredible experiences having his hair cut cool little kid. >> carley: he used the money to buy a go cart as all kids should. if he wins this year he will use the money to get another kid into racing. those are your headlines. is he one it root for. >> steve: e. did the whole interview looking straight ahead we said can you turn to the side? and then the beautiful mullet just flowing down. good luck emit. >> brian: he has a wonderful personality, too. >> steve: thank you, carley. >> carley: you are welcome. >> steve: donald trump opening up about his regrets 2016 and what he would do differently if elected in a year or so. >> i wouldn't have put a guy
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like bill barr in. he was weak and peak. pathetic. there i wouldn't have put jeff sessions. [. >> why would you put them in the job. >> look, every president you took. >> you didn't know what to expect. >> i didn't know the people. i have known people better. >> you didn't drain the swamp. >> i did. i fired comey a lot of the people i fired. i fired comey very early. and, you know, there was a question as to whether or not you could. but i fired comey. if i didn't fire comey, i don't think i would have been able to serve out my term. >> carley: monica rule crowley served as assistant under secretary under president trump and joins us now. >> great to see you. >> ainsley: what do you think did he drain the swamp? >> one of president trump's enduring strengths and really one of his biggest bases for his appeal is that he wasn't out of washington. he wasn't part of the establishment. he wasn't part of the swamp. so in 2016 he ran on this
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premise that he was going to drain the swamp. but one of the big draw backs of not being part of the washington establishment is that he just didn't know. he didn't particularly know how the system worked or how to -- how many people he was going to have to appoint to key positions. so he was really reliant on others to make these recommendations and some of these people were not particularly as america first as he was. maybe outright even hostile to him and his agenda. >> brian: bill barr was key that that administration. >> president trump can you advise your opinion on certain people you appoint. there is a vast number of position ofs that any president has to fill. so you are going to get some bad eggs here and there. i will say this. he had four years in the end to take on a whole array of issues. and he did an extraordinary job in a short amount of time bringing the economy back, rebuilding our military, getting the border and illegal immigration under control.
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ending our involvement in foreign wars. so i think when he is reelected and enters office in january of 2025, he will take that hard-earned wisdom and make sure that all of his personnel totally in alignment with the aa first agenda. >> steve: he only had four years if he will reelected he will only have four years and he couldn't drain the swamp the first time and now you hear him complaining about all these people he hired. whatever happened to the buck stops here? he is the -- he was the guy, ultimately, whose name was on the line with i hired these guys. >> martha: yeah. going to exploit that line of attacks he has andy answers for it and primarily the answers i laid out. did he thoroughly drain the swamp? no, he didn't. he was so distracted with the massive, never-ending assault on him and his presidency coming from the deep state the permanent administrative state, the propaganda press and so on
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that he was depending off so many attacks at the same time that i think next time around he will take that hard-earned wisdom and make fend mentally different choices. you will see an astonishing second term for president trump. >> ainsley: what's the future for this? iowa, new hampshire, south carolina. we have two candidates from south carolina. desantis is all over the state of iowa. kim reynolds is going to be the governor of iowa. going to be on our show later today. what does this lock like going forward as we are about a month away from that first debate? >> the debate will be interesting. we will see if donald trump shows up. >> ainsley: do you want him to? >> he is so dominant. is he running 40 points ahead of governor desantis his nearest competitor. there is no effective reason for him to show up and be a punching bag. nobody counter punches better than donald trump. not concerned about that. but, for him there is no real incentive for him to show up. but he may. he is the ultimate showman so he is keeping everybody guesting including fox news about whether or not he will join.
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but, look e he is not an unknown quantity. it's not like he has to go out there and establish name recognition and show everybody who he is. he has got a long track record as president, very successful policies. everybody knows him. and i think effectively, the republican primary is over. >> steve: he has said, you know, i don't need to debate because i'm so far ahead. i think if they had a poll a majority of americans on the republican side would say we would like to see him at the debate. let's see what happens in a month. monica, thank you very much. >> a pleasure, guys, thank you. >> steve: 21 minutes now before the top of the hour. coming up on this monday, at the right place at the right time. oklahoma police are thanking a good samaritan for tackling a suspect who is running from the police. the quick action caught on camera, we're going to tell you what happened coming up next. >> ainsley: and climate czar john kerry is in china for climate reset talks. but will the communist country budge? their global impact compared to the united states, next.
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reason brian u.s. climate envoy john kerry touching down in beijing yesterday to discuss efforts to restart climate negotiations with the communist country. the top carbon polluter by far. 2021 far exceeded the united states, india, russia and japan combined. last year china's coal power capacity was six times more than the rest of the world combined. they had four times the amount of power of coal approvals and more permitted, more coal plants than the past seven years. why are we there? joining us now to discuss this and so much more from the texas public policy foundation jason isaac. jason, i know we have to reign n china in but they don't seen reinable. >> no they don't. one thing doing meeting at least
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our air quality standards. i hope czar kerry is advocating for this. this is an area where we have been a world leader over the last five decades reducing pollution 80%. world leaders in clean air. number one whether it comes to access to clean and safe drinking water. this is something quite honestly the chinese people deserve but they don't. i have joked with congress all the technology the chinese steal from us. it would be nice if they would utilize our pollution control technology and they don't. that actually impacts our air quality here in the united states. it makes its way across the pacific ocean. impacts california the most. >> brian: so here's the other thing. they are building electric cars. they are proud to flood zone with electric car technology. we know they have the rare earth and stuff buying in places like congo. then have all the solar panels. dominated solar market. on one hand polluting with fossil fuels irresponse sib blismt on the other hand, they are getting ready for a
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transition. >> yeah. they are baiting us. they are actually over 40,000 kids in the congo working in chinese-owned and controlled mines to feed our electric movement, if you will. for no environment benefit whatsoever. we continue to produce more fossil fuels in this country and do so more responsibly than anywhere else in the world and economic prosperity has led to incredible environmental leadership here in the united states and any country that has a high carbon lifestyle has a clean environment. and john kerry lives this high carbon lifestyle but, yet, is he going to china to profess against it which is incredibly ironic. i'm sure he is not going to turn his emission reports into congress like is he supposed to do under a biden executive order that he is supposed to be recording his admissions and he is not doing it. >> brian: you always look for leverage, jason, right now, according to the "wall street journal," china has almost zero growth in the second quarter. they might be more vulnerable now than ever economically. you might be able to incentivize
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to do something that's actually in our interest for a change. >> yeah. perhaps they could buy goods made in america unlike what we are doing is buying solar panels made in china to the detriment of these kids working in the congo, the slave labor we know that is happening in china. sews solar panels if we need them should be produced here in this country in the united states. again, reproduce things more responsibly than anyone else on the planet. >> brian: thank you so much. we will see what he comes back in a matter of moments i'm shurer will be back in a private jet. go down to carley shimkus downstairs to my immediate right if you are following her. >> carley: police in tulsa, oklahoma tackled a suspect as he ran from the cops. the help of man was just passing by in a truck. he clearly was at the right place at the right time. the suspect who gave officers a false identity tried to flee after police started asking him questions, turns out that suspect had a warrant for
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burglary, conspiracy, and more. he is now also facing recysting arrest and possession of drug paraphernalia charges. and lionel messi's official unveiling miami almost being upstaged by mother nature. spectators crowd the gates and storm the stadium trying to avoid lightning. it was delayed but did go ahead despite the wet conditions, owner david beckham almost did slip because of a slippery walkway during the event. i hear, brian, you have to be very careful on where you place your feet when it's raining outside. >> brian: right. even if you are david beckham with tremendous balance. >> carley: that's right. >> brian: and as ainsley says endlessly sexy. >> carley: no bicycles terrain. >> brian: why were they doing that press conference 2:00 in the afternoon on sunday. why wasn't that mainstream event? would you get to the bottom of
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that, carley? >> carley: i will, brian. >> brian: thank you. fan looking for photo op. toledo a crash. criminals ransacked a million-dollar florida home as real estate insiders warned this troubling trend may only get worse dash next exclamation point.
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>> another shocking case of illegal squatting making headlines this dime down in sunshine state. police kicking 10 people out of a million dollars house in fort lauderdale. they were illegally occupying this home. our next guest says this is one of hundreds of similar cases that he has encountered. broward county florida property appraiser marty join us now. >> thank you so much for having me on. i really appreciate it. >> ainsley: thanks for coming on. this seems to be a big story we are covering this more and more. what happened in this one case? >> so, this is a very interesting story. just to give you an idea there are a lot of crimes that allegedly occurred here. the first thing that occurred the house at issue was actually stolen by a person who was arrested and he stole it through the court system by basically saying that the actual owner of the property no longer wanted the property and then the return of service went to his buddy who is in a mobile home in another
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county and he said oh, yeah. i represent the property on, we don't at this point in time anymore, put it in this other guy's name. the court issued the order. gave him the property. he was arrested and he is actually in the broward county jail. he then moved a bunch of his buddies and other people into the property. what happened when somebody steal as property. not only is the actual owner of the problem a victim but they can also victimize the community. in this situation, one of those individuals right about 2:00 our 3:00 in the morning one day walked out of this property, went to a neighbor's property, tried a whole bunch of different doors and actually was able to break. in and he was actually standing over the bed of the neighbor and his wife. the wife woke up, of course, was screaming, the dog chased the man out. he was arrested for burglary. they gave him an ankle monitor, released him and he went right back to the stolen house. when i found out about that, i wanted to get rid of all the people in the house. i wanted to remove them all. we actually worked with law enforcement, with the police department with the broward sheriff's office and fortunate
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live we did and were able to return the property to the rightful owner. and, also, were able to protect the property by removing the squatters that were in the house. i think something that's very, very important that people don't always know, it's very important to remove people that don't belong in a house that don't own the house for a few reasons. the first is you want to get the property back to the actual owner. you want to protect the community, but you also need to protect the people that are actually squatting in the house because they are living in very dangerous conditions. there's no electricity. no utilities, and in this situation they even had a child in there. and so they are living in these conditions that can be dangerous just on a lot of levels. and that's why this is a very big priority of our office to really undertake all of these cases in broward county. >> ainsley: gosh, i see these commercials on fox all the time how to protect the title of your home that somebody could steal your title which seems crazy. they left floor damage. they left wall damage and a large bug infestation. not fair to the homeowners but i'm glad down in florida you are
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getting these squatters out. up here in new york the squatters seem to have more rights than the homeowners. they get to live there and you can't get them out. marty, thanks for what you are doing. >> thank you so much. i appreciate you so much you having me on. this is a very, very big deal. as you know, in our office, we have a great program called crimes against property team. and what we do is work with law enforcement and we put people in jail that steal properties. and i love to talk about it and i'm so appreciative that you have allowed me on here today because i hope that everybody else in the country does the same thing because people that steal these homes pick on the most vulnerable folks we need to hold them accountable. thank you so much for having me on. >> ainsley: thank you for coming on. it's not fair to the homeowners who worked hard to buy these houses. a big hour straight ahead. stay tuned. we'll be right back. ♪ lowe's knows a style refresh is even more refreshing ...when it's at the right price. that's why, we've we pull our favorite looks together in-store and in in the app. so it is easy to get the look you want for less.
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