tv Fox News at Night FOX News August 16, 2023 8:00pm-9:00pm PDT
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and medications including botulinum toxins. as these may increase the risk of serious side effects. see for yourself at botoxcosmetic.com >> greg: we are out of time. and thanks to our studio audience. i love you, america! >> trace: good evening. i'm trace gallagher. it is 11:00 p.m. on the east coast. and this is america's late news, "fox news @ night." and breaking tonight, a catholic couple in massachusetts since their hope to become foster parents ended with the state rejected them because of their religious beliefs. a minnesota town now scrambling to keep its people safe after its entire police force quit. but we begin with brand-new and very surprising fox news poll released a short time ago that shows one gop candidate more
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than doubling his support and just 60 days. the front runner's lead remains very dominant. senior national correspondent kevin corke is live with a closer look at some interesting numbers. kevin, good evening. >> kevin: good evening. the polls back in august, make now this august. let's be honest. a year before an election, an august poll -- but they can be a fairly decent snapshot for a moment in time which is frankly can alter a strategy for a campaign or maybe furnish a strategy for another campaign. with all that said, as the lead up, it probably won't surprise you and most people that former president trump remains runaway favorite among gop voters. a year plus out from the election. up a whopping 37 points over florida governor ron desantis. interestingly, only one candidate, though, has made a big move since june. and that is [indistinct]. he has doubled his support.
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up to 11% from 5%. that is pretty good. among trump primary voters, ramaswamy's support is up from zero back in march to a whopping 22%. governor desantis is down 15% since then. after a successful day of work in the crowds at the iowa state fair, look at south carolina senator tim scott. he finds himself moving up the fox news power rankings for the gop primary, sitting in third place in the hawkeye state. that is pretty solid. meanwhile, in a head to head of a virtual tie between the current and former presidents. the two men separated only by the margin of error which is plus or minus three points. so clearly, right now, ramaswamy is the breakout gop candidate while government -- governor desantis' support is down. it was at when a person. in february. it is down to just 16% right now. but keep this in mind. it can change all of that in the
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first gop debate. it is a week away right here. >> trace: kevin corke life for us in dc, thank you. let's bring in political scientist lauren wright. i want to get your take because i was looking at this poll and i see vivek ramaswamy go from trump 5% -- from 5% to 11%. what is your take away from that? >> you know, and i think national polls can be really helpful. sometimes it is a great snapshot of who people are paying attention to. and at this stage in the race, that is what most of these candidates including ramaswamy are trying to do. trump has the built-in name or condition. he always has. but for a lot of these guys, they are just trying to get known on a basic level and sometimes when people have a chance to get to see them, they have a positive response. and sometimes, they have a negative response. it is still very early.
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but certainly promising for some of these lesser-known candidates. >> trace: yeah, it really is promising. joe biden, meantime, making an anniversary of the inflation reduction act, marking the one-year period, bragging about bidenomics, except for quinnipiac. people are not heartfelt about the whole economy thing. it says describe the nation's economy. seven and 10 say it is not good. not so good are the poor. 75 plus% say it is not so good. i mean, people just do not like this economy, lauren. >> and those numbers have been remarkably consistent since march when actually only 50% of people instead of 70% thought a recession was imminent. and about 50% across a lot of different polls think the economy is good or excellent. these are just not good numbers for biden. i think it is his biggest weakness. i mean, inflation reduction act by his own admission was not
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really intended to reduce inflation, raising interest rates did that. it was really health care subsidies and green energy support and so when people are looking at prices what they are looking at their everyday lives, they don't see things on the same page as the administration. >> trace: i was outside driving to work. gas is just under six bucks a gallon outside, which is scary. why is joe biden so medicine to answer questions about things that go bad? we are talk about anything from the chinese spy balloon into the inner, the east palestine ohio train derailment to maui. the new york post put up this. heartless joe asked about natalie destruction in hawaii and he took a pass on the whole thing. what gives here in your estimation, lauren? >> welcome no comment is the worst comment when you are dealing with a massive natural disaster. but it is good that he is going
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on monday and look, you know, i studied the presidency. i will tell you republican and democratic presidents claim credit for things they deserve absolutely no credit for. and they cast blame when their policies sometimes have detrimental effects. and i think that is absolutely the case with joe biden's half a trillion dollar injection into the economy. and so he has, in many ways, he is like a normal president. but if you want to succeed in an election year, you have to emphasize your strengths. you should go to the hawaii. people say he is good at grief. he knows how to help families feel better about their lives traveling around the. so he should absolutely go do that right now. >> trace: you got to go to east palestine you got to go to disasters and i will -- and he went there fast. lauren wright, wait to have you
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on. parents in new york city are rightly concerned about tens of thousands of migrant children being placed in local schools. especially with studies that show overcrowded schools lead to under educated kids. ashley strohmier is live with more on this. good evening. >> reporter: new york city's migrant crisis which has seen many asylum-seekers, outside city hotels continues to be a pretty big problem for the big apple and now with the new school year is set to start. city and state officials are struggling to find solution to handle all the migrant children who will be entering the system. >> if you speak spanish, there's nothing stopping you from opening a class. we will give you the room to do so. we can't do this alone. >> reporter: since last year, the city's public school system has enrolled 18,000 migrant students with even more expected. according to one estimate, the
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cost to educate just one of migrant student would cost about $32,000 at the end republican policy that the net and they put the total price tag at more than half a billion dollars. >> that is going to seriously exacerbate the cost to taxpayers and schools to provide the education they deserve according to our constitution. >> reporter: and with all this, students return to the class october 7th. that is three weeks away. officials still don't have any from figures of how many migrants they expect will be attending school this fall. trace? >> trace: that is a problem. ashley strohmier thank you. let's bring in defense of freedom institute spokeswoman angela marino and bethany mandel. thank you for coming on tonight. do you first angela because you can't call yourself a century city or a century state and not have a plan when you got some
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20,000 migrant children leading to go to school. >> these big blue cities are eager to welcome migrants until they figure out that they have to feed and house and educate them. these parents are absolutely right to be outreach about the lack of a plan for these tens of thousands of new students. but where is the outrage for the many thousands of students in new york city's. schools who are already being filled by that system? recent test scores showed that 51% over half of students in middle grades are behind in reading. sso yes, new york needs a plan for these new students. they need a better plan for their current students as well. >> trace: and bethany, she makes a good point. of time you overcrowded schools, every time you throw a bunch of students together without enough teachers, it hurts test scores. it hurts the students that are actually there in the first place. >> yeah, i mean, we are seeing enrollment drops in new york city and so they have declared themselves to be a century city
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and this is the result of being a sanctuary city. i'm not sure why new york city is so ill-equipped to deal with this influx. meanwhile, they think that the border city is better at dealing with this crisis. plus, somehow more equipped. it boggles my imagination. i think this was honestly a great policy move to make this a problem and mares because all of a sudden, they are starting to catch on, this is an actual crisis. this is a problem that we need to deal with. from what i want to move on now. that's parking -- this this is the catholic, well blocks from boston a child because of their lgbtq police. here is mike burke, and i will get your response. >> one of the things is we love one another as god has loved us. i love every person. do i agree it? no. it is hate the sin, not the center. i would love that child —-dash.
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>> trace: bethany, it is like the estate is saying, in what? we would rather have this child in government because the thin with a loving family. it does not make sense. >> yeah, there's so many children out there that are in need of a foster family and honestly competent and not abusive. the parents who are able to provide the best homes by and large for foster children are religious parents and so we are telling all religious parents across the board that you are not welcome to be a foster parent. the people who are hurt are the children who are in foster care, not those parents. >> trace: it is all about you go back on this, this theme of hurting kids. all these policies meant to do well are hurting kids in the long run. >> exactly. there are about 400,000 kids in america's foster systems right now. and to deprive a single one of them of a loving home is just obscene. meanwhile, the way massachusetts is handling this is effectively implying that every single, a look, christian mom and dad in
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america is somehow an unfit parent. that is a massive slap in the face to so many millions of families. and the cherry on top is it is also a friend -- first amendment violation. trying to compel this christian couple to parent the beliefs of the estate and violate their religious values in the process. >> trace: about 40 seconds left. north carolina legislature overrides the governor's veto eliminating lgbtq+ instruction in early grades making it law. it is kind of amazing that you have parents that have to fight time and time again, presently, to make sure that teachers are not teaching their kids and on about sex. >> it is remarkable that the democratic party have decided that we want to talk to your very young child about sex. that is. that is one of their key platforms for their policy. i think they are in for a rude awakening if that is the hill they are going to die on. >> trace: angela, 10 seconds. wrapped us up. >> it is absolutely obscene that
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any parent has to go to a school district and ask, please don't talk about sex with my kindergartner. it is a win for parents. >> trace: angela morabito, bethany mandel, thank you both. meantime, forget defund the police. now it is devoid of police. the entire police force in one minnesota town including the police chief just submitted their resignations. marianne rafferty is live with what this plan ghost town plans to. >> reporter: it is not for a lack of trying. he has been looking all over. he says he is yet to receive a single application. >> like i said, it has been three weeks now. we had zero applicants, and i have zero prospects. i have called -- from the youngest guys out there getting into the game. nobody getting into the game. >> reporter: that has left residents and city leaders in the small town in minnesota worried about whether they will be left on their own after the chief and his entire department resigned three weeks ago.
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>> i think we are all blindsided by it. we are resilient and we are going to move forward. it is hard. >> reporter: despite the lack of sign-ups for those open police jobs, the mayor says there will be a police force. police chief -- smith cautions they need to act now. >> i want to reiterate that we will have police coverage in the city. that is not an issue. >> if you want -- and this is something we will continue going with. something needs to change dramatically. and drastically and it has to happen now. >> reporter: the clock is running out. the chief is planning to go ahead and make his exit in just one week on august 24th. >> trace: million, thank you. let's bring in former sheriff alex villanueva and kelly hyman. welcome to you both.
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i want to play this soundbite again from the police chief. it is 10 seconds and it is well worth it because he makes a very vital point. watch. >> i have zero prospects. i have called every pd around for the youngest guys getting into the game. there's nobody getting into the game. >> trace: zero applications and it is amazing. but who wants to join a team with no money and no backing from politicians? >> all of the chickens have come home to roost. democratic leadership in particular, the recognized law enforcement, moved to defund them, discredited them in every which way possible. who in their right mind would want to take on a job that is perceived that everyone is going to hate? of course people are not going to start applying. cops continue to retire. so the attrition rate is just killing across the entire nation. >> trace: and kelly, you can do your job until the sheriff does
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his job and he can't do his job without people under him trying to protect people. >> and the issue is about being paid. according to police officers, being paid $22 an hour when in the community, other officers are paid $30 an hour. so it is only fair that they are line and they should be paid fairly. >> trace: this is the sheriff who kept us off. this is a robbery and watch this because this robber, look at him. he tracks this woman who is holding onto her purse across the sidewalk. he go. >> gets away. he was, nostrum, the mom. we have been playing this. it went viral. it is crazy. this is nordstrom, also in southern california. they took hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of stuff. this one you have not seen because we just got it in. it is brand-new. it is a san francisco car. okay? what they are doing is they are going out of the car.
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they go and they get back in the car. they still what they can. to get back in the car and the keep going. they know somebody is videotaping them and they don't care. they continued to go, and it happens all the time. your thoughts on this? >> you have prop 47, which in california decriminalized a lot of crime from felonies to the misdemeanors. the other side of the coin was progressive prosecutors like george, a co-author of prop 47, decided, i'm not even going to prosecute the misdemeanors. so you legalize. that is legalized activity you are looking at. >> trace: we see this all the time, kelly. it is zero consequences. some of these people, i mean, they are vicious. they are right back out on the street and these gangs know exactly that there's no consequences, so they continued doing this. >> no one is above the law. in the court of law, you are innocent until proven guilty. people need to be accountable
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for their actions and so legally speaking, they need to be held accountable for the harm that they did and the crime that they did. >> trace: this guy dragging the woman across the thing, he looks pretty guilty to me. those people in nostrum looks pretty guilty to me. the people begging out of those windows looked awfully guilty. the california highway patrol is trying to do a little something about this. they have organized this retail task force. it is in fresno and kern county and the eastern part of california. they are setting up i guess stings for lack of a better phrase, sheriff. here is the head of the central division. >> these operations are unfortunately busy with suspects attempting to steal products from stores. these suspects were arrested. >> trace: i wonder what you think about the chp between these stings. is it helpful? is going to be something that will make a -- an impact on the
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crime we are seeing? >> it one at all. gavin newsom refused to meet with the california state sheriffs association. they are independently elected. they don't owe anything to him and he is is -- is afraid to speak to them. so he will go to the chp and say, you guys do that. that was totally out of their warehouse and they are lost and that they should stick to traffic and patrolling the highways. we veto have to the local sheriff's department and police department. >> trace: kelly, your final thoughts on this? >> my final thoughts is we have wonderful police officers serve and protect us, and we are very thankful. and they put their life on the line, so they are key for all of us. >> trace: and we could use more of them. thank you both. >> you bet. ♪ ♪ >> trace: first up tonight's real news roundup. back to alec baldwin, who could potentially face new charges in the 2021 accidental shooting death. a new report from forensic experts concludes the trigger
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was either pulled or pushed manually. baldwin denies pulling the trigger. new mexico special prosecutor says any announcement on new charges is still pending. meantime, the new numbers show target stores are in a bit of a sales slump following backlash to the company's pride in transgender merchandise. sales down nearly 5% from the same time last year. target says there will be adjustments to the future pride themed plans. virginia's largest school district said today it will divide governor youngkin's newgarden's on bathrooms and pronouns that correspond to the biological sex. the fairfax county public school superintendents as their policies are consistent with federal guidelines. duncan's office has not yet indicated any next steps. so coming up, california governor gavin newsom now claims that he is the best governor in the united states for empowering parents. common sense and carl demaio beg to differ. and later in the nightcap, here is the scenario. you are offered a thousand acres
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of land at no cost with no taxes. but you cannot sell it. would you take it? and if so, what would you do with your thousand acres? build something? create something? let us know on x and instagram @tracegallagher. tell us your man parents dreams and we will tell the rest of the country coming up in the nightcap. it is 8:20. almost 8:21. in fact, it is a: 21. here is a fox news @ night trip across america. a live look and downtown spokane, washington. you can see the historic davenport grand hotel. nice place to stay before you make that a short drive. and over into the southeast in saint augustine, florida, overlooking the water on a hot august night. a live look tonight at the boardwalk in hampton beach, new hampshire, where our producer sean grew up and spent many summers. if you can't join us live, do not forget, set your dvr and watch us anytime.
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♪ ♪ >> trace: the dust told from the maui wildfires has risen to the 110. hundreds are still unaccounted. president biden will travel to maui on monday to see the devastation himself. senior national correspondent william magenis is live. >> reporter: that is the island you see in the distance. down here below is what is left where the search for victims and answers continues even as we learn more about those who did not make it. a family of four who died in a car. family of seven in a house. a man found hugging his dog as they died together trapped in a car trying to leave town. many survivors we spoke to are grateful to be alive but sounded
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-- expressed some despair about the future. >> really hard to see this. i tried all my life within. it is all gone in a minute. >> not just -- we lost everything. everybody. everything is gone. >> reporter: so recovery workers and cadaver dogs sifted through the rubble once again looking for bones, teeth, flesh, anything from which a pathologist can draw dna to obtain an identity by matching a relative's dna. >> this is the absolute worst disaster i have ever seen. it is just carnage. everything is burned. people had no time to get out of the way. >> reporter: the cause of the fires remains under investigation.
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but the surveillance video shows a transformer blowing out minutes later, you can see claims, the same day, closer to lahaina, a cell phone video shows a downed power line ignored -- igniting a brush fire. firefighters arrived and thought the fire was out. instead, high winds reignited the embers. >> i hear a -- coming from across the street. all i heard was electrical -- i looked, there is a power line right there. >> reporter: , white electric defended its decision not to initiate a public safety should off. but trace, i will tell you that is one of many decisions that will come under legal and public scrutiny. >> trace: a long investigation. william barr janice life for us. thank you. fox news at night commonsense department is curious about the conference just held by california governor gavin newsom
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where he claims with a straight face that he is the best governor in the u.s. for "empowering parents." does the governor know that that means to give legal authority because this is the governor who is suing school districts that are planning to notify parents if their child changes gender. new some things notifying parents is dangerous to the kids who are transitioning. it appears that the governor who loves to empower parents is not paying attention because even in deep blue democrats control everything california, polls show that seven out of 10 voters. schools should notify parents about a child's gender identity. but instead of looking at polls, newsom is likely reading the san francisco chronicle, which just ran an article accusing conservatives of "trying to frfromtheir concerns about lgbtq issues as an affront to her parents." maybe conservatives are framing it as an affront because it is. common sense things when you try
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to keep track of secrets from children's own parents, you are eliminating the constitutional rights. it does not seem very empowering. let's bring in california chairman carl demaio. covid to this, this state has alienated parents. >> who does governor gavin newsom. he is getting? or are going to hear? he solved homelessness. the following week, he cured cancer. parents are not empowered. they are enraged. and they are showing up at school board meetings because two-thirds of students are failing math efficiencies. -- proficiencies. we have the worst academic performance while we are spending more and more money. then parents find out that there's a political agenda in the classroom. the object to that, on the sex-ed curriculum and the governor calls them names, ra
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races, homophobes, white supremacists, and then says if the school board listens to her parents and involve them in reviewing curriculum or teaching curriculum, he will take and fine the school district and punish them. every single measurement shows that parents are being marginalized in california and as a result the kids actually are suffering. they will not see the improvements. >> trace: it was talked about earlier, the polling went to 11%. he had this back-and-forth at the iowa state fair. watch. >> i'm wondering your views on same-sex couples. >> i don't have a negative view on same-sex couples. i think free adults should be able to behave how they want. that is fine. but you don't become -- and that
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includes kids because kids are not the same as adults. >> trace: he went over the th theme. >> i thought that answer was spot on. it was exceptional. but let me just say that the lgbt community spent decades saying that all they wanted was equal rights and they were not coming for children and they do not want any special status. and all of that has been achieved. they got marriage equality. we have a society that has embraced the lgbt community. now there's a militant faction that has taken over the community. and i will tell you as a gay republicans, i hear gays upset, lsebians -- lesbians being upset about the agenda. it does not reflect the basic. i think we should go back, the golden rule. treat others as you would like
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to be treated and that is what ramaswamy is suggesting that there. and i think 80% of the american people are right there. >> trace: health and human services wrote this memo to employees. in light of conditions at the federal building, we recommend employees maximize the use of telework for the foreseeable future. that is from the secretary. the biden administration telling people in san francisco, watch out. >> that federal building bears the name of nancy pelosi. her district office is in that building. now they have got nancy pelosi federal building. it has a homeless camp. and maybe next, it will have an abortion clinic. this is the sign of a decay in san francisco that even the federal building is not safe anymore for people to come and work. >> trace: carl demaio, great to have you on as always. a top medical journalist says doctors may have to double check their grasp of the facts when it comes to covid misinformation.
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it turns out with the calls misinformation has been proven to be true. dr. houman hemmati makes a house call necks and still to come, a windy day in germany causing all sorts of problems and wild animals showing up in places they may be should not be. the dayton's best viral videos are next. but first, a live look tonight at the philadelphia skyline. the city of brotherly love. and we are coming right back. ♪ ♪ it's nothing... sounds like something. ♪when you have nausea, heartburn, indigestion♪ ♪upset stomach, diarrhea♪ pepto bismol coats and soothes for fast relief when you need it most. mlb chooses t-mobile for business for 5g solutions... ...to not only enhance the fan experience, but to advance how the game is played. now's the time to see what america's largest 5g network can do for your business.
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for others, a study from the university of massachusetts will frankly confirm what many have suspected, that doctors from across the country representing a wide range of medical specialties did dole out covid-19 misinformation. about vaccines and treatments and mask worn on large social media platforms. so much so in fact a study suggests that it may have cost hundreds of thousands of deaths in the u.s. into covid. here is the thing, trace. according to the study, some the things that they label as misinformation, well, guess what. they turned out to be absolutely true. state -- take for example the so-called lab leak theory. many doctors were panned even band on social media sites for daring to suggest the virus had its origins in a lab in wuhan, china. some were even called racist. it turns out most experts now believe that was true all along. this study was posted online at
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jama network, the journal of the american medical association. i should point that this underscores the danger of taking it at face value what some people label as this or misinformation because sometimes it is not. trace? >> trace: exactly right. kevin corke, thank you. let's bring in phd research scientist dr. houman hemmati. he makes a good putt because the concept is that even other networks, cnn say, fox, fox, they are talking about this lab leak thing. when will they get over the conspiracy things? it was hurtful, and it was detrimental. >> and the major way, they took the voices that were just simply questioning, right? the people in this jama article were not saying that people were pushing false things. many of the things they are claiming as misinformation were simply people who said, wait a
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minute, why don't we take a step back and examine the data we are seeing. maybe we should question the covid death rates? maybe we should ask more information about vaccine safety. and that they label as misinformation. shot those people down. shut down those discussions and as a result, people believed that there was no debate and as a result, i think that is when people, -- caught on. >> trace: and you have said that dissent is needed in science. you have to constantly question things. speaking of hypocrisy, the l.a. times writes the following quoting here, it is about 60 kids going back to school. got a cold, runny nose? no worries. comes to school. for parents and employees, the reversal is sort of a cognitive whiplash in a school system that took pride in having among the strictest safety protocols in the nation. the schools are hemorrhaging money. but it is unbelievable to hear
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this. >> it is a problem that caused themselves. they told kids that school is basically optional or dangerous for so long that kids lost the momentum to show up, kids from inner cities, kids from low-income families stopped showing up. guess what happened. those kids got harmed. the schools got harmed, and now they want the kids back. the first rule of kids and safety in school, is if you are very sick, don't go to school. now because of what they did during the pandemic which is to discourage kids from coming, now they are forced to ask them to come when they are sick which is going to cause more sickness. >> trace: cleminson's website said the bottom line is it is said to balance your budget on the backs of sick kids. how about dr. gpt, a.i. doctors. chatgpt is probably nicer than your doctor, for more compassionate care, maybe time
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to bring in the robots. the new study found that the artificial intelligence chatgpt gave not only more thorough but also more empathetic responses than those provided by an actual doctor. no offense to doctor presently with us. is this dr. gpt staff, is it going to be useful to you in a certain category or now? >> i think it is very useful for certain things and it is detrimental in other ways. it comes as a tool to help doctors make decisions, to actually look at all the lab tests, read all the history, look at all the past records of a patient and maybe might think that a doctor rushing through will never detect or miss. right? that is where the usefulness comes in. where i think it is going to harm is when patients rely on it exclusively because you need a doctor who says, something is wrong, what is going on? that is the problem. it does not show true compassion. it just has a script.
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>> trace: it is fascinating. dr. who man muhammadi -- dr. houman hemmati, thank you. ♪ ♪ first up, wind turbine in germany malfunctioned and snapped on a windy day. local residents say the turbine was making loud noises for about a week. some think it was weakened by a lightning strike or scattered across the surrounding field. pacific tree frog in california got caught in an earthbound farm farm's organic spinach container and made it all the way to michigan. the frog has been relocated to live in peace and away from spinach. if you thought that surprised was bad, a snake took up cincy in an arizona women's toilet. the guy who took it out, no hesitation, he just grabs it with his bare hand. he is either really brave or
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really something. if you have a viral video to share, shared with us @tracegallagher or @foxnewsnight on social media. if someone gave you a thousand acres of land, you would not need to pay a dime in taxes but you also cannot sell the property, what would you do? what is your land bearing dream? way in on x and instagram. some great responses coming in. and a live look from earth cam at dublin, ireland. the temple bar almost 5:00 a.m. the day is young. have a wee drab and don't forget the nightcap is next. ♪ chevy silverado has what it takes to do it all. with up to 13 camera views. and the z71 off-road package. ♪ you ok?
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and i thought, "oh, no, that can't happen." i've never had that problem. after starting golo and taking release, i immediately saw an improvement in my waistline. a lot of people expect to fall apart as they age, but since taking release, i've never felt better. thanks to golo, i'm 66 but i feel like i'm 36. (soft music)
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>> trace: iare back with the nightcap crew. topic, creative space. if you were given 1,000 acres of land and did not have to pay taxes, what would you do with it, carl demaio? >> in california, the number one question i being asked is how where we put the homeless. i would put the home was on a thousand acres. for all the other 49 states, make it a park, a zoo, something fun for kids. >> trace: marianne rafferty? >> reporter: if it was in texas,
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i would [indistinct] >> trace: you would be a rancher? >> reporter: yes. >> trace: nicely done. kevin corke, your thoughts on the thousand acres. >> kevin: i would hope it is in the high country of colorado and i would make it a ski village. >> trace: really? nicely done, kevin. ashley strohmier, i want to know what you would do with a thousand acres. >> reporter: i'm with marianne. maybe some chickens. grow my own food. maybe sell it if i could. >> trace: yyou can sell it. you can sell food. i guess you can sell the food. >> reporter: i'm selling the food. >> trace: something in mind you want to build on x? andrew bills a golf course. debbie built a house in the middle of it. maybe bring my brother, who is really handy, to lift 50 acres. sylvester, probably create a
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massive nature reserve and make space for the community. maybe some community gardens and a sanctuary for animals, a little oasis for everyone to enjoy, houman hemmati. >> if you have a piece of land and you can get a conservation easement on it, which basically prevents the person holding it from building on it, so what you do is you can donate the conservation easement and take a massive tax write off and keep the land and then build a golf course and that is how you avoid paying taxes. >> trace: really? you are reading trump's playbook. that is exactly what he did. mike, if we still have him, i would create the largest lazy river in the world. and erica says, set up a dog sanctuary. i would take that land and you just build this big athletic facility for all these kids and keep them busy. when mom comes home and i'm
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telling you, that would take care of a lot of stuff. that is when kids get in the most trouble. we got everybody? everyone has their thousand acres. best of luck, farmers and ranchers and pot growers. thank you for joining. from los angeles, we will see you right back here tomorrow. made it smell like dave was in his happy place... ...the massage chair at the mall. but...he wasn't. gain flings with oxi boost and febreze.
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