tv Americas Newsroom FOX News September 7, 2023 7:00am-8:00am PDT
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have to try it at least twice. >> the judge held off on setting a date for the other 17 co-defendants. six of them have asked to be tried separately and it could take months to resolve requests by former white house chief of staff mark meadows and others to move their cases to federal court and bill, the judge raised the question what happens if the georgia trial gets underway, testimony begins against some of these co-defendants, and then midway through some of the co-defendants are granted a federal trial? back to you. >> bill: got it. thank you, jonathan live in atlanta. good to see you. >> you, too. >> dana: a stark warning that president biden's border policies are causing harm to america's largest city. more than 100,000 migrants have arrived and sleeping on sidewalks as the mayor blasts the white house for ignoring his calls for help. welcome to a new hour of "america's newsroom," i'm dana perino. good morning.
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>> bill: we'll find out if he was that specific. good morning. i'm bill hemmer. the mounting migrant mess overwhelming sanctuary cities as a new school year gets under way today. new york city folks are rallying and local leaders sounding the alarm causing the situation out of control. the mayor is calling on state and federal officials to come up with more solutions before the city he believes will be ruined. >> i don't see an end to this. this issue will destroy new york city, destroy new york city. we are getting 10,000 migrants a month. every community in this city is going to be impacted. the city we knew we're about to lose. >> bill: as children head back to class, city schools and teachers struggling to handle the arrival of more than 20,000 migrant students. the "new york post" putting it simply kick in the ed.
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madison, good morning, with more. >> the first day of school for families normally such an exciting day. this school year off to a rocky start because thousands of migrants are enrolled in new york's already very crowded public schools. some teachers finding out just today on the first day of school whether or not he will have migrant students in their classrooms. we're learning in queens a middle school that will accept two migrant students and just down the way an elementary school that will be taking in 45 migrant students. those numbers just released today on the first day of school to local officials there. according to the department of education, there are 30,000 migrants that are of school age. we're hearing around 21,000 could be showing up for the first day of class today. that's thousands more than what they anticipated just a couple weeks ago. the department of education leaving it up to teachers to figure it out. in a letter obtained by the "new york post" called guidance on
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project open arms, that was sent to school two days ago. it tells schools they cannot turn away students based on immigration status and that it is up to teachers to figure oust a language solution if they do not speak a student's native tongue. all not just coming at an educational cost but fiscal. when you look at the cost of education in new york city, a student costs $38,000 per year according to the new york department of education. now of course as residents we pay into that. when you look at 30,000, take that cost, we're talking $1 billion over the course of this year. kids in schools are paying a price that local officials say is just too high. >> classrooms and schools need all the resources they can get. they are finite. it is too little most of the time. they are being stretched more thin. $12 billion cost. every park that doesn't open. every new school that gets delayed. all the investments in community
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and that could be happening with that money aren't happening. we are spending it on this. so much of what we have is going towards folks who just got here. >> another huge issue for parents is that of vaccination. to attend new york city public school you have to be vaccinated against certain things like polio, chicken pox before day one. migrant students have 30 days to comply. a lot of parents that are concerned about the health risk that poses. bill and dana. >> bill: here we go, madison, staten island, new york. >> dana: hunter biden special counsel david weiss telling a judge he plans to seek a grand jury indictment of the president's son on a felony gun charge before the end of the month. andy mccarthy is former assistant u.s. attorney and fox news contributor. great to have you here. okay. can you set this -- some of this is hard to keep up with and hard to follow. what is your best explanation to
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viewers at home as to what's happening right now and will hunter biden be indicted? >> i still wonder myself, dana. first of all, people should understand weiss made that announcement yesterday not because he wanted to but because the judge held his feet to the fire. she said that she wanted -- he could have just silently let this case evaporate like he has been doing and when october rolled around the statute of limitations would run and the gun count would be gone. the judge said she wanted an update on the case on september 6th. so she made him make a disclosure. he wasn't prepared to go in there and say he would fold. he said he was planning to indict. what do you need to plan? this is like the easiest most straight forward federal case of all time. it has been well-known for five years. it would take about 10 or 15 minutes to present it to the grand jury. it is a one paragraph indictment if you wrote it on the charge we know about an the gun.
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there was no reason for him if he really wanted to indict the case to go in and give a status report to the judge. he should just go to the grand jury and indict the case. which he should have done five years ago. >> bill: you have been writing since yesterday afternoon when this headline alert came out. i read a lot of your stuff this morning. some of which you write you say hunter biden expected indictment, never forget. they think we're idiots. unless you think weiss has grown a prosecutorial spine. he made the announcement because he had no choice. you are not buying it. see what we get by the end of september. abby lowe was on msnbc last night. the attorney for biden and said this. >> they know everything there is to know about the gun possession. hunter had a gun for 11 days. it was never loaded. it was never used. there has never been a stand alone gun charge brought by this office ever and shouldn't be. they decided it made sense to do
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a diversion because of hunter's condition at the time. now they are talking about changing that. what's changed? not the facts. >> bill: what do you think of that, andy? >> it's nonsense. first of all, it is a little known fact that there are two guns at least. he keeps talking about the gun. if you look at the statement that hunter, the form that hunter filled out where he made the false statement about his drug abuse, that refers to a revolver. if you look at the photographs that we've seen the "new york post" published some of these, he doesn't have a revolver in his hand. a different gun and a few days after. there is more than one gun more than likely involved. he is brandishing it in one of those photos. he wasn't eligible for diversion under the federal rules. weiss knew that. i understand that the attorney is unhappy. i would be unhappy, too.
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weiss has tried to mislead the court. the intention was to make the gun case go away and lowe thinks he has an enforceable agreement. the agreement required the probation department sign off on it. that's the court's department. they are not signing off on it. so i don't think he is right about the idea that this wouldn't be prosecuted. this is not a lie and try case where somebody lies on a form and doesn't get the gun. in is a guy who lied on the form, got the gun. handled it irresponsibly and lost it. >> dana: we were talking earlier, how do they -- who found the gun in the trash can? >> what i understand, dana, is that i think it was hallie biden who tried to dispose of the gun and they looked at some surveillance tape and they found it in a trash bin. the store was near, i think across the street from a high school if i remember correctly.
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that's how they found it. >> bill: we have more questions, andy, but we don't have more time. come on back soon, all right? thank you. >> dana: great to have you, thank you. >> bill: go to california where a court has temporarily blocked a school district's policy to notify parents if their kid i dent files as transgender. now that district is calling the order government overreach. william la jeunesse has that story. we had a story in new jersey last hour. this time in california. what's happening? >> this is a shot across the bow from governor newsom warning districts they are not going to let this parents' movement catch fire as chino valley and san diego districts and other one required schools to inform parents within three days if their child identifies as transgender, changes pronouns, uses a bathroom or joins a sports program that doesn't align with their biological sex. >> it is my child. not the states, not the city or
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school district. it is my child. i'm the one that has ultimate power over those decisions. i raise them, not the government. >> we're here to stand up against a board policy or proposed amendment that will violate state law. that will risk students' safety and erode any trust we have the students in the classroom. >> the state says children as young as five have the right to be whoever they choose without parental interference. a judge approved that injunction yesterday suspending the policy in chino valley. >> it is children who would be the losers from this policy and that's why i'm moving to protect children from being hurt and harmed and abused. >> they said we don't want you as the parents involved. i think this is the inflection point. parents need to wake up and realize the state wants control of their children. >> in granting this injunction, the judge, a democrat, said while most parents may be tolerant of the transitioning
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child. others present a danger to their own kids. not having fully read the district's argument against the retaining order. >> bill: young kids. william, thank you. we'll see what's decided. thanks. >> get out of the truck. >> dana: dramatic body cam video showing a police lieutenant pulling an unconscious driver from a burning truck. the close call here. >> bill: countless students are back in class and we've seen cases of violence in different parts of the country that are stunning. at least two brutal attacks on campus already. we'll talk about what the word is on campus across america with that. >> dana: that's a topic we've covered here. the first gop debate has come and gone and candidates are raring to go for round two on fox business. >> i won't play with kid gloves the next time around. >> we have a country to safe. >> people who know me well know
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i'm a fighter. >> dana: what you can expect september 27th, meet the moderators, us. we'll do that next. ♪ ♪ veteran homeowners. have you tried getting a home improvement loan at a bank lately? good luck. some of those rates can be 12 to 15% or higher. our rates are a fraction of what some of those banks charge. veterans across the country are using the newday 100 va loan to get cash to update and improve their homes. whether you need to replace your roof windows or hvac or want to upgrade to your dream kitchen, call newday. ♪ chevy silverado has what it takes to do it all.
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>> i think we need to hear a lot more about our foreign policy, the immigration, the economy. >> i want to hear more concrete proposals about the economy and what the candidates propose to do to change the current situation. and i would like particularly from a foreign policy perspective. >> i want more practical answers what they will do about the economy. >> absolutely. we need to not count anyone out just yet. >> dana: voters sounding off on what they want to hear heading
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into the second republican debate. it is set for september 27th on fox business. stuart varney and i will be moderating along with ilia calderon. you might remember her from this exchange with vice president kamala harris. >> i have i said i am going to the border. >> when? >> i'm not finished. i've said i am going to the border. >> dana: joining me now is stuart varney and ilia calderon. great to have you on the show at the same time. stuart and i would love to welcome you to the team, ilia. you are more the veteran than we are. you have done this before. how do you approach getting ready for the debate? >> thank you so much, dana and stuart for the warm welcome. very excited to be working among the experts and the great teams supporting us. i've done it once before but
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guess what? it was without audience so it was going to be one of the things that is challenging for the three of us. but we will be a team and we are going to go through all this together. >> dana: what's on your mind? >> i'm with fox business and everyone thinks i will talk about the economy. i'm determined to make the economy interesting to everyone. for example, i get the impression that the economy in america has become class divided. 25% of the population is doing well. the rest paycheck to paycheck. i want to investigate that. what would the candidates do to make it less of a class-based economy? what about tiktok that's available to everybody at the moment? some people want to ban it outright. i'm wondering about that. what kind of a business move is that banning that kind of communication device for everybody in the country? i don't think it flies but we'll get into it. >> dana: ilia, how do you -- you
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live in miami. you have an amazing background. your career is quite fabulous and we'll learn more about that and everybody here watching can check out her instagram page. sounds like you are a good cook as well. ilia, when you are talking to people either in your community or around, what are the big broad buckets of topics that you want to get into at the debate. >> first of all, we will wish for all politicians and public servants to look at the hispanic community not as a monolith. we are a mosaic. we are completely different and different backgrounds and come from different countries, different cultures and different use of our own language. we hope for the candidates to look at us to really understand the hispanic community and the issues that affect us. not only immigration. everybody for decades know that's a topic that affects our
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community but also housing, jobs and economy for the hispanic community. >> dana: i just read -- subscribe to a sub stack call the liberal patriot. someone wrote the headline the official, the democrats have a non-white voter problem. ilia, republicans have made some inroads in trying to earn the hispanic vote and i understand it's not a monolith but mosaic. do republicans have an opportunity in 2024 to take some votes away from the democrats? >> yes, they do. they do have a great chance to speak directly and understand the hispanic community. as i told you, we come from different backgrounds. a lot of hispanic immigrants are conservative or republicans when it comes to the united states and not all are democrats. it is a great chance for both parties to analyze and
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understand our community and do the best to solve the problems that affect us. >> dana: stuart, last word here. >> i want to say it's a great honor and frankly a surprise for someone like me. i have lived in america for 50 years. who would have thought that a guy with a voice like this, the background like this would end up as one of the moderators in the second gop debate? it is a great honor. i have think it speaks volumes about the warm embrace that america can give people like me. i'm very thankful for it. >> dana: it will be wonderful. thank you so much for joining me today and i will catch you in the zooms when we prepare. >> brush up on your spanish, dana? >> dana: i will keep working on it. thank you so much. >> bill: good luck, guys. >> dana: september 27th, wednesday night. i hope that lots of students watch, right? it is a great opportunity to really start to understand a lot about america.
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>> bill: it will be a great experience for you and for stuart and ilia and i think it's a great experience for all viewers to tune in. we had 13 million watch debate one. you can learn a lot from watching them. coming up at 11:00 a.m. harris faulkner has done a tour across america and talking to families involved in the current campaign. today francis scott, tim scott's mom and maybe you could argue his biggest influence. you will hear that story. >> dana: that photograph is special. i love that. >> bill: check it out with harris at 11:00 a.m. eastern time. more women are working post pandemic and the gender gap is hitting an all-time low. bureau of labor statistics reports last month 57.7% of women are employed. which is about ten points shy of the men, 68.2% employed. but with covid-era childcare funding nearing an end could the
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numbers change? gillian turner drills down on that today. good morning. >> good morning. the answer is that these numbers can and will continue to change as women keep closing in on the workforce. it will change for the better the data experts tell us. analysts say women are now crushing the gender gap in employment and pay that has dominated for decades. women's earnings have improved dramatically just over the past year reaching 83% of their male counterparts. that's the narrowest the pay gap has ever been in history. a lot of that progress is thanks to working moms jumping back into the workforce in droves surpassing now pre-pandemic levels by 3%. >> there are more women than ever with young children that are in the labor force and so that's really fascinating finding there. it looks like one big factor is remote work which has allowed women to stay attached to the workforce. >> behind each data point of
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progress are tens of millions of working women hustling day in and day out. right now there are more women than men on u.s. college campuses and more women than ever before pursuing degrees in male-dominated fields. as of 2019, the latest year there is data from the u.s. census. 27% of stem workers are women compared to just 8% back in 1970. >> i think a lot of people maybe thought that we would already be there now or that the progress would have been faster at this point. it is important to acknowledge that there has been tremendous progress over the last few decades. >> the biden administration is focused on unionization as upon primary tool they believe will narrow the gender gap even further. take a listen. >> unions reduce race and gender wage gaps by encouraging explicit anti-discrimination measures.
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>> the big picture that i've gleaned from interviewing experts, bill, is that over the last two decades, progress by women in workforce numbers as well as increasing pay has been slow and uneven but over the last 2 to 3 years, they have entered a different trajectory and surging ahead faster than most people anticipated would even be possible. it's a moment to celebrate. >> bill: a big shift. gillian, nice to see you in washington. >> dana: campus safety a growing concern as students return to college and the ominous warnings as violent crime threatens the start of another school year. a medical condition forcing bruce springsteen to cancel his concerts for the rest of the month as he receives treatment for his illness. ♪
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>> bill: an officer in north carolina making a heroic rescue saving a truck driver from inside a burning tractor trailer on the incident. thank god he was there. salisbury, the newly released video shows the moment the cop pulled the unconscious driver from inside that truck. a crash had occurred and another truck driver helped the officer get both to safety moments before that truck exploded. job well done. wow. >> dana: incredible way. your profession, you choose to try to help people every single day. incredible. job well done indeed. glad everyone is all right. presidential candidate nikki haley revealing her education agenda last night at a moms for liberty town hall in manchester, new hampshire. she says it is all about parents getting control of their children again. mike emanuel has more in
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washington. hi, mike. >> good morning. nikki haley making a strong push on education in battleground new hampshire. she argues parents don't want to give custody of their children to the teachers unions. >> truly, this is a fight that you are fighting every mom's fight. every mom's fight because it is that important. parents need to know that they have support with that. so as we do this, what my hope and prayer is, is that every parent realizes use the power of your voice. >> the group is praising haley for standing up as a mom and fighting for kids. she signed the organization's pledge. securing parental rights at all level of government. >> we're seeing parental rights being usurped over the country. we'll shine a flashlight. this story is not unique. parental rights are under attack
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across america. >> biden campaign is taking aim at hailing saying nikki haley's education platform is a retreed of the same extreme policy points the other republican candidates are echoing reminding americans just how out of touch 2024 republicans are. haley campaign spokesperson says the president knows he is in a world of hurt if nikki haley is his opponent and quote, a bold conservative who stands up for parents, children and taxpayers is biden and harris's worst nightmare. a topic for the debate at the end of the month. >> dana: education is certainly on our mind. tune into "fox news sunday" when glenn youngkin is shannon bream's guest as the state of education special. i can't wait to see this one. 2:00 p.m. eastern here or check local listing for the broadcast. >> bill: recent violence
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targeting college students sparking concern across the country. just this week an ohio state university student robbed at gun point outside a dorm coming after a student at the university of wisconsin was brutally attacked off campus. the u.s. department of education reports a rise in crimes on college campuses, big jump between 2020 and 2021. a lot can be the result of covid classes returning after 2020. fox news contributor leo terrell joins me now. as kids go back to school you think about what happened in columbus, ohio and madison, wisconsin. what is your take on that at the moment? >> bill, this is just an expansion of what happened after the summer of 2020 riots. crime is on the rise everywhere. every place is a possible crime target. college campuses are soft targets. you can have these young people, the situation in ohio where 19-year-olds drove and dropped someone. they blend in on these college campuses. so what you have here is a situation that is expanding
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because you have soft on crime prosecutors who do not prosecute these crimes. these campuses are subject to the same type of fear as any big democratic city. >> bill: the incident in wisconsin apparently a suspect was arrested yesterday. but this young lady had a broken jaw, had been strangled, beaten and sexually assaulted. that has to be a shocker on a campus like that. >> well bill, she was walking. she was just walking home. that sounds familiar. people are attacked and assaulted. this is why i'm saying these college campuses are like large cities and they are basically open to any type of criminal who wants to attack them. these criminals can walk on campus, follow them home. it is crime that has exploded throughout the entire country. college campuses are no exception. >> bill: yale university are
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giving students pamphlets with a picture of the grim reaper. they say to students. don't stay out at 8:00 at night. don't walk alone and avoid public transportation. how is that for a message? >> because these police officers are telling the truth. this is the lack of information that's being given not only to these college campuses but what about the parents who send their kids to school there and schools throughout the entire country? it is a lack of -- an assumption that crime is normalized. i applaud the police officers for telling the students the truth about the rise in crime near yale and other colleges campuses. >> bill: apparently there was a campaign in new york city that used the same image in 1975. they would give the pamphlet to people who arrived at the airports in new york city. the message was stay away from the city. that's how bad things were in manhattan in the mid 1970s.
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>> bill: let me leave the last point. a year ago the lapd union said the same thing. it is not safe to live or travel to los angeles. they are just being honest. it is dangerous in this country because of a rise in crime and soft on crime prosecutors. >> we'll heed the warning. thank you for coming on today. cancellations on e-street today's hemmer's news. bruce springsteen is dealing with a pep tick ulcer. he has been touring steadily around the world since last february. he is 73, 74 later in the month of september. he has canceled all his concerts in september. he has a condition that needs to be dealt with. we wish him the best of law.
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>> dana: he was in chicago and amazing. >> bill: it was a good show. >> dana: it's good to be in hemmer world. you loved it. >> bill: great show. you can tell nothing was wrong with him. >> dana: you came back and said can you believe how much energy? wish him well and hope he feels better soon. president biden called out appearing to breach cdc guidelines. should he mask up or is he above the rules? plus a close encounter of the stinky kind. how one woman's plane trip was ruined by someone's foot faux pas. (ella) fashion moves fast. setting trends is our business. we need to scale with customer demand... ...in real time. (jen) so we partner with verizon to take our operations to the next level. (marquis) with a custom private 5g network. (ella) with verizon business, we get more control of production, efficiencies, and greater agility. (marquis) so our customers get what they want,
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the white house still facing a barrage of questions over its covid protocols and more specifically when and where the president will or will not wear a mask. just yesterday he appeared to tease reporters about all this. take a listen. >> president biden: explain to the press i've been tested again today and i'm clear across the board but they keep telling me because it has to be ten days or something, i have to keep wearing it. don't tell them i didn't have it on when i walked in. >> the white house says it is following cdc guidance since the first lady tested positive over the weekend. today the president is scheduled to leave for the g-20 summit in india. the white house has yet to say if he has taken a covid test today. >> but we've been very clear all travelers who are going to india will be tested, including the president, as i mentioned. the president was tested today and tested negative. we are oh he happy to hear that. >> that was karine jean-pierre yesterday. the president is expected to campaign to move the country out
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of the pandemic. this is far from certain. a new cnn poll showed 61% of americans disapproving. 39% of people aproving of the president's job performance. the white house has been asked whether it would like to see more things impose mandates if the covid numbers were to rise. they say people should have the cdc guidance and let local leaders decide it. the florida governor ron desantis mentioned he will make it an issue going forward. he said the federal government should not impose any mandate whatsoever. >> dana: mark mer defunct at the white house. thank you. >> bill: first amendment watchdog has dubbed harvard university as the worst school in america for free speech. the foundation for individual rights and expression released its yearly college rankings putting the ivy league heavy hitter dead last out of 248 schools. the rankings come opinions and
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allowing students and faculty to express themselves. joe devito is a writer and comedian. good morning, joe. dead last is bringing up the rear. >> it's impressive. they are cheering at yale. take that, harvard. harvard changed since i was there visiting. >> bill: did you pick up something nice? >> a nice sweatshirt. this reveals that the ivy league has become some four year mixer event for elites to get together and network with each other. the fact that college is afraid of free speech. you need free speech to learn and to teach. >> dana: brad was on gutfeld's show last week guest hosting and he wrote this in the "new york post." free speech is losing on campus. the fight to keep america's culture of free speech alive on life support is doomed unless we can reclaim our country's
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college campuses. what's interesting you have lori lightfoot, the former mayor of chicago, who got a sweet deal to go and be a guest lecturer at harvard and going the talk about dealing with the press. >> yeah. well, she certainly can't talk about good governance. oh, harvard, your murder rate on campus has quadrupled will lori lightfoot there. the idea that people are afraid of free speech because it might cause offense. dumb people are easily offended and we can't look out for what their feelings are. if the truth hurts your feelings the truth doesn't need to change your feelings do. >> dana: you are a comedian and do shows. do you notice people getting more offended or people coming because they want the release? >> i feel like it's starting to tip back in the favor of free speech. it just doesn't work for comedy. you have to say things silly
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obnoxious and student. if you can't get through it without getting your feelings hurt you shouldn't be there. >> bill: bottom five are harvard, penn, university of south carolina, georgetown and fordham university in new york. the best were auburn, university of new hampshire, oregon state and florida state university. shout out to them. >> michigan tech university that i never heard of. makes sense. engineers are worried about correct and true. i don't want someone nervous about their feelings will build a bridge. it will probably collapse. >> dana: this airline passenger. this does happen. people take their shoes off and this passenger got the video of the barefoot on her armrest. she was using a nasal inhaler to deal with the smell. i would have said something and poked him with a pen or something. >> we saw recently with the flight someone saying a person
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in back wasn't real. this person was too real. too much reality. this is why should be allowed. forget the tsa. cigarette lighter on the feet there. >> bill: probably would have got her in trouble, though. it's better than the other report from the delta flight about the bad -- >> that's -- >> bill: have you seen the pictures? >> it's the only time would make me say i wish i had flown spirit instead. >> dana: what would have happened if gutfeld was sitting where she is and the guy put his foot there? >> i know greg would never do that to somebody. his leg wound reach far enough. greg would have politely handle it. >> bill: great to see you. good work and come back any time. >> dana: great to have you. as you spoke keep an eye on the skies. flurry of asteroids heading our way. one of them as big as a house. details on that plus the cost of car insurance is on the rise. what is driving it?
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>> harris: democratic leaders angry over illegal immigrants flowing across our southern border and into their sanctuary cities. political danger for president biden as america's kids go back to school alongside migrant children. plus families in focus. i sit down with francis scott, the mother of tim scott. her candid talk about their journey from poverty to scott as a gop presidential candidate. senator ted cruz and steve hilton. "the faulkner focus" top of the hour. >> dana: nasa is tracking five asteroids as they zoom by earth this week. one of them is as big as a house. another is the size of an airplane. the biggest is 170 feet long. this is the good news. none of them are considered hazardous. the closest one will pass by nearly a million miles away. i won't worry about that. crossing it off my worry list.
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i have plenty of things on that list. >> bill: we barely knew you. good traveling out there. the meantime you are likely now to shell out more and more money for car insurance. last month alone, car insurance is up 16% compared to a year ago. jeff flock, what is happening in pennsylvania? why the cost? >> they are blaming it, bill, on the cost of repairing cars. that's why we're at tom's automotive. you hear repairs going on here and yeah, car insurance has jumped up in the last ten years, take a look at the top states. florida has almost doubled the cost of car insurance. colorado is up more than 50%. nevada, new york, south carolina, nationwide we're talking about 17% up overall. and the most expensive auto insurance now is in florida. over $2500 annual premium. louisiana very similar. delaware and michigan also well
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over $2 thousand, the premium. we come to find an honest auto mechanic. tom over here. i better leave him alone. he is on the phone. he tells us -- i love it. you like talking to a politician. always on the phone with somebody. the cost of everything is going up. >> that's true. >> parts, your salary for your guys. >> yep. the past couple of years parts have increased, salaries have increased, auto repair costs have increased. >> you said also some of these vehicles have a lot of chips in them. the cost of those. >> when we had that micro chip shortage, that kind of set everything haywire, too, in this business. parts weren't readily available. demand was there, people that did have the parts jacked it up. >> i hate to bring you another one of those stories, bill. by the way, i wanted to end on a
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positive note. cheapest auto insurance, ohio, maine and idaho. >> bill: let's go. open road, jeff. thank you, nice to see you, jeff flock nearby philadelphia there. >> dana: a big story about it in the "new york times" or "washington post" everytoday. nickel and dimeed to death. car insurance, if you don't have it, you could end up going the jail. that's not an option. a lot of people foregoing home insurance cause of cost. lots going on. >> bill: add that to your list, okay? . >> dana: it's on my list. >> bill: before we go. take it away. >> dana: something i have to worry about? >> bill: we'll find out. >> dana: on a bike ride getting more than he bargained for. let's see what happened. what am i supposed to do?
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>> dana: okay. the cows listened. the biker was out of his comfort zone. the farmer was grateful for the help. they are saying what kind of an outfit is that? strange looking farmer. never seen a farmer look like that. all right. are you tired of me? harris faulkner is up next. here she the. >> bill: bye-bye. >> harris: we begin with a fox news alert. it takes a lot of money and massive planning to truly be a sanctuary city to illegal immigrants. democrats just found out the hard way and now they are angry over all those people flowing across the southern border putting the squeeze on those democrat-led cities. so were they lying about the part of being a sanctuary? do they really believe those democratic leaders that the president will help them? i'm harris faulkner. you are in "the faulkner focus." a border patrol official shared some shocking
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