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tv   Fox News Live  FOX News  September 2, 2024 11:00am-12:00pm PDT

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which may be permanent. high blood sugar, which can lead to coma or death, weight gain, and high cholesterol may occur. movement dysfunction and restlessness are common side effects. stomach and sleep issues, dizziness, increased appetite, and fatigue are also common. side effects may not appear for several weeks. i didn't have to change my treatment. i just gave it a lift. ask about vraylar and learn how abbvie could help you save. >> molly: it is full speed ahead on the campaign trail. moments ago vice president harris wrapping remarks and battleground michigan courting union workers in detroit this labor day. hello i am molly line in new york. good to be with you. >> bryan: i am bryan llenas. this is a special and very busy labor day addition of fox news life. with less than 65 days to go, the harris walz campaign is wasting no time crisscrossing key battleground state governor tim at walz hosting a meet and greet in his home state
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of minnesota before jetting off to wisconsin. meanwhile vice president harris is gearing up for her second campaign speech of the day. this time and pittsburgh alongside president biden. it marks the president's first appearance since the dnc last month. our panel of doug collins and jug showing on where the race stands. our coverage starts now live in pittsburgh ahead of their marks. live in detroit where vice president harris just wrapped up her first stop of the day. garrett. >> in michigan, the union vote is going to be critical for democrats to win in november. the harris campaign was here to build up the union vote and show support for organized labor but also to highlight the support that it has among leaders of the organized labor. the heads of the uaw, the two largest teachers unions joined vice president kamala harris
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onstage or as she played to the crowd of union workers, praising organized labor and the work it has done for all american workers. >> everywhere i go i tell people look, you may not be a union member, you better think a union member. for the five-day workweek, you better think a union member for sick leave, you better think a union member for paid leave, you better think a union member and for vacation time. >> the harris campaign is taking aim at former president donald trump for taking the day off the campaign trail saying donald trump is ditching workers on labor day because he is an antiworker antiunion extremist who will sell out working families for his billionaire donors if he takes power peered vice president harris is the only candidate for president who stands firmly on the side of labor and working families. and her speech harris touted her economic policies again without sharing many specifics.
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>> when i am president we will continue to build what i call an opportunity economy. so that every american has an opportunity to own a home, to start a business, to build intergenerational wealth for their families. we fight for a future where every senior can retire with dignity. >> the challenge for harris is that while the economy is the top issue for voters, the latest fox news poll shows and battleground sun belt states, voters trust former president trump more than harris on that very issue. >> bryan: live in detroit, thank you. >> molly: and now we head onto david spunt who is live in pittsburgh. that is where president biden is set to join vice president harris on the campaign trail for the very first time in since the dnc convention. to you. >> should be a big moment for
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these two. the president and vice president here in pittsburgh. the steel town. pittsburgh is a union city, there is no doubt about it. i'm coming to you and all of our viewers right now watching and listening from the international brotherhood of electrical workers lodge number five here, union hall number five in pittsburgh. the president and vice president expected to take the stage a little bit before 5:00 this afternoon. as i said, the vice president is going to sell her agenda to this union here. someone with a campaign reach out to fox news and said she specifically will mention that american made steel should not only be owned and operated but continue to be manufactured in the united states. resident biden is fresh off of a two week vacation in california and delaware. he is no stranger to unions. he has been speaking to them since the early 1970s since he went in the us senate. harris is newer to the union world trying to court them here,
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hear is the teamsters resident yesterday who said an endorsement of kamala harris is not quite in the bag yet. watch. >> we want the opportunity to sit down, vice president harris. i said to someone the other day you don't hire someone unless you give them an interview. this is our opportunity to ask her about teamster specific issues and also labor issues. until we have that meeting, obviously we will wait to make that determination. >> time is ticking for the vice president. another huge issue for pennsylvanians it's fracking. in 2019 then a candidate harris wanted to ban it and now she said she has been in favor of fracking since 2020. here she was last week in the interview on cnn. >> i would not ban fracking as a vice president i did not ban fracking. as president i will not than fracking.
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>> kamala harris expecting to continue to get the union vote but certainly a lot of questions about the teamsters and how the teamsters will end up endorsing peered in 1996 they did not endorse anybody. perhaps we will have a second year of that this year. >> molly: great points there. i have covered president biden as well speaking to union workers just outside and the pittsburgh area appeared he is very comfortable there. perhaps it's a little bit about handing off a legacy but maybe getting the votes and handing off those votes as well. david spunt on the campaign trail. i hope they turn on the lights for you at some point today. thank you. >> it's a little dark. >> bryan: a little dark for short. doug collins is a former georgia republican congressman and doug shown as a former clinton advisor and democratic strategist and pollster. thank you both for being here. the panel of the dogs. let's start off. president biden said he was the most prounion resident ever. doug schoen, let's start with you. they say that biden plans a
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robust campaign schedule. is that a good idea for vice president harris to continue to share the stage with president biden? >> it is most assuredly not a good idea. as it robust as the president may think or want his schedule to be, i suspect strongly that the harris campaign will want to trim that back and limit him strictly to two or three streets like pennsylvania, like michigan and wisconsin. but the one thing emily harris wants to do is move herself and run away from the biden-harris economic record for practical political reasons and the last thing she will want is for her campaign to be tethered to that of joe biden and his record. >> congressman collins, that seems to be a softball for the
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trump campaign because if harris keeps saying she will be the candidate of change, it makes it harder if you continue to share the same stage with president biden. what do you expect the trump campaign on how they will handle this? >> i agree. this is a dog agreement here. this is an interesting issue and there is no doubt. they keep saying a new way forward and a new direction. what's new about this? she is the vice president of the united states and she is joe biden's vice president. she agreed with everyone of these bad decisions that the administration has made peer she has been a cheerleader for those decisions. the idea that this is new, it is a softball for the trump administration and the trump campaign because he compares his administration to what is happening now. but they need to keep focused on this because the media has been giving them a pass. it's as if this is a new candidacy and there is a lot of less informed voters who may not see this and they may by the
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rhetoric that she had nothing to do with what's going on right now. this one is something that the people are seeing it and they are voting. you are seeing it in the polls. they will be moved by the pocketbooks and that's what's happening out there you can't get away from the fact that the price of gas and the things they were having to do every single day. >> you should stay focused or that's the key for president trump to say discipline here. we wanted to talk about the situation in israel. we saw at israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu. the effect of this on the harris campaign for you already saw protests in manhattan. college has started. it could be campus focused. how does the harris campaign handle this? >> with difficulty. as we saw at the convention, she spoke in support of israel but also said the suffering in gaza was unacceptable but given the
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brutality of hamas, shooting six is rarely innocent hostages at close range with israel he is close on their trail emphasizes how horrific hamas is as a terror organization and how difficult if not impossible it is to do any kind of a deal with them. this creates a problem for president biden and certainly for vice president harris as we go forward. i just hope that they stand foursquare with israel and put the protests aside and stand on the side of right, justice, democracy, and freedom. >> bryan: quickly congressman how does president trump respond to this. does he go and support netanyahu? that seems like a complicated thing to do given the situation. >> it's not as complicated as doug said. you support israel. the pro-hamas wing of the
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democratic party has the ear of vice president harris and they have struggled with this for a while. they say the right things in public so to speak but you are not seeing it backed up by a lot of things that are being done and that is where president trump looks back and says of strong foreign policy where they will not be killing the hostages right before israel got there, this is the kind of thing that can be frustrating for the harris campaign and her ties to joe biden because it is all mixed together and you see protest kickoff and it will be worse. >> bryan: october surprise very well could be these protests being that october surprise and the reaction to it. thank you so much for being here today. >> molly: protests are erupting across israel as demonstrators demand a cease-fire deal. it comes on the heels of the murder of those six hostages in gaza. jeff paul is live in tel aviv, israel, with the latest. jeff. >> a very somber day here in israel as funerals begin for the
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six hostages who were recovered in gaza. why that sadness is now turning into anger for many israelis after the break. allergy spray going to kick in? -you need astepro. -astepro? it's faster, bro. 8x faster than flonase. it's faster, bro! it's faster, bro! it's faster, bro! it's mom to you. astepro starts working in 30 minutes. astepro and go! the tempur-pedic breeze makes sleep feel cool. so, no more sweating all night or blasting the air conditioning. because the tempur-breeze feels up to 10° cooler, all night long. don't miss our biggest sale of the year, with savings up to $700 on select adjustable mattress sets. ♪ mom genes. she passed them down to you. but who passed them to her? those mom genes are a big part of you. ancestrydna can you show the people and places they came from. ♪ discover the traits you inherited,
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nation is broken into segments peered into fragments. hamas will pay a very heavy price for this. >> bryan: protests are erupting across israel as demonstrators demand a cease-fire deal on the heels of officials recovering the bodies of six hamas hostages in the gaza strip. fox team coverage starts now. griff jenkins has a hostage negotiations in the situation room with president biden and vice president harris but first jeff paul is live in tel aviv, israel, with the latest. jeff. >> a real tough day here in israel as the country begins at saying goodbye to the six hostages whose bodies were recovered in gaza. one of those people killed is israeli american herschel goldberg pulled wen and his funeral was earlier today in jerusalem for that is where thousands upon thousands of people lined the streets as well as attending that memorial service to pay their respects to the 23-year-old.
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he was killed after being kidnapped by hamas back on october 7th and spent more than 300 days in captivity. his mother rachel said she prays her son's death is a turning point for this horrible situation. >> i will love you and i will miss you every single day for the rest of my life. but you are right here. i know you are right here. i just have to teach myself how to feel you in a different way. >> the israeli government set all six hostages were murdered by hamas in a number of gunshots at very close range. their deaths have sparked anger and outrage among many israelis directed mainly at prime minister benjamin netanyahu over the lack of a cease-fire and hostage deal on top of the general strike that impacted air travel and closed many businesses today. tens of thousands packed into the streets of tel aviv last night and tonight taking apart in these massive protest.
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they feel an agreement would've prevented the recent that's of those six hostages. we spoke with the brother of hostage who is still being held in gaza. he says time for his sister and the remaining 100 other hostages is clearly running out. >> i think about her, i hope and pray that she is able to survive and i think it shows the whole world what happens if we don't release them. if we don't get a deal soon enough because they are dying there. >> as a war in gaza nears the 11th month, localized pauses in the fighting continued for a second date to allow the u.n. to start vaccinating 640,000 kids for polio peered both israel and hamas made the agreement after the first case of the disease was discovered in gaza for the first time in 25 years. a short time ago israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu spoke to some journalists a little while ago. it was in hebrew but one of the things he had to say was he said i apologize that we were not
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able to bring them back. he said we were close but israel will not act as if nothing has happened during this massacre ending with hamas will pay a heavy price. >> bryan: jeff paul live from tel aviv. jeff, thank you for that. >> molly: all eyes are in president biden as his administration continues negotiations to drive home a deal that will secure the release of the remaining hostages including americans. griff jenkins is live with more on where those negotiations stand. what do we know? >> we know that marine one just landed again on the south lawn. we expect president biden to depart any moment now and head to pittsburgh where he will join or that campaign stop. we hope president biden may have more to share about what transpired in that meeting in the situation room after the white house released to the photo from inside today. you see bite and meeting with harris. secretary of state blinken, ci
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birds, national security advisor jake sullivan and middle east coordinator brett mcgirt. they said biden expressed how devastated and outraged he is over the murder of the hostages. it's updated continuing efforts to free the remaining hostages. when biden landed here, he had tough words for benjamin netanyahu. listen here. >> are you planning to present a final hostage deal for both sides this week? >> we are very close to that. >> mr. president, do you think it is time for prime minister netanyahu to do more on this issue? do you think he is doing enough? >> no. >> in those remarks with netanyahu, he did not have harsh words for biden but he did push back a bit on the notion that he needs to do more however reporter for reuters has reported that senior israeli officials are not happy and found biden's comments remarkable that he would
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pressure netanyahu and not hamas' leader. it's unclear if biden and netanyahu have spoken directly in the last 48-24 hours. meanwhile vice president harris has yet to speak out publicly on the meeting but released these photos of her own in that meeting and released a statement yesterday where she said that's. i strongly condemn hamas' continued brutality and so must the entire world. as vice president i have no higher priority than the safety of american citizens where they are in the world. all of this comes as biden returned to the white house today for the first time since august 19th. he has been vacationing in southern california and then in delaware. finally, there have been some questions as to the flags here at the white house might be lowered after virginia's governor glenn youngkin did so in richmond but at this time those flags have not been lowered. >> molly: griff jenkins covering an incredible amount of ground for us in the
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white house. thank you. >> bryan: there are those protest and israel but there are protests here in the united states. a live look from union square in new york city. protesters demanding a cease-fire deal on the heels of israeli officials recovering the bodies of six hamas hostages in the gaza strip. let's get right to alexis mcadams in new york city. how many protesters are you seeing right now and what is the situation? >> you know from covering these protests in new york they go pretty quickly. started with 300 or 400 people about an hour ago. now it is into the thousands. we are right near grand central station and i'm just going to show you what we are seeing here. i'm going to step out of the shot. you can see the crowded gathering here. this comes on the heels of everything that is happening right now with six hostages including an american citizen found dead at gaza israel morning those hostages and the mom also had to say goodbye to her young son who was only in his 20s who lost his life had
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kidnapped at a music festival. they kept hope that he would come home and he did not. this is the response here from the pro-palestinian protesters in new york peered we will flip around here and show. i wanted to talk to some people because something that is interesting is we know from being on the trail is how will this impact the election? we are talking to a guy who came here from boston. i wanted to ask you. your son talks about kamala harris and biden and how they handled or did not handle this whole conflict peered how are you feeling about how that will impact the election? >> i mean i would hate to see donald trump win. i hate to say i know you guys are from fox, but on the other hand, genocide is worse than anything donald trump has done. so i definitely cannot support the democrats in this. the whole democratic party is complicit in genocide and at this point i would say not just
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complicit, but responsible for and basically committing the genocide because it wouldn't be happening without all of the weapons that biden is sending. >> you don't feel that biden handled it well and you don't think kamala harris will handle it any better. show me the other side. you won't vote for genocide. were you thinking of voting for kamala and you won't now? >> if it wasn't for the genocide, we would be psyched. maybe not kamala, but tim walz is decent. speak out that's how it's impacting on the trail. it's interesting when you see what's happening in tel aviv and you see the response in new york, it's much different. >> alexis mcadams, it's fascinating. this uncommitted movement can have a big impact on this. >> molly: and she found one of those potential voters or nonvoters we should say. let's bring in leo terrell fox news contributor and civil rights attorney. thank you for coming in on labor day for us and bringing us your insights. a enormous amount of ground to cover. we have this young american
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executed along with five others as american negotiators are at the table working to bring him and all of the hostages home to get to a cease-fire. what do you make of where we stand now as the president, the vice president put out this picture of them working in the situation room. theoretically to address the problem and get something done. what do you think. >> i don't see any action whatsoever. i see words, i see pictures, but it has been since october 7th 2023. what has the harris biden administration done to protect jewish americans here and jews in israel. absolutely nothing. you look at what's going on now. you saw the photo ops where biden said he is upset with netanyahu. where is the pressure on hamas? where is the pressure on them? if i am correct, they massacred hundreds of people but yet it is
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the michigan strategy. they want to win michigan. they do not want to alienate the muslim and arab community in michigan. if they do not win michigan, they can't win the election so that's the game plan. it is purely political and guess who is being sacrificed? guess who is being thrown under the bus? jewish americans here and the state of israel. >> molly: there's a big question spared what does that mean for the jewish-american vote and this uncommitted vote. finding and uncommitted voter, someone who may have been a harris voter but not anymore. how do you think this will ultimately play in the election? >> i will tell you right now, i think the jews in america are very upset. there was a report from columbia university, anti-semitism exists at columbia university. i submit to you the federal government could step in and stop this. where is the department of justice? where is the fbi? where are the federal arrests of all of the hatred toward jewish
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americans? it doesn't exist. i think that the jewish-american community will lead the democrat party in droves. i honestly believe that no matter what kamala harris does, she will never be able to appease those extremists in michigan. and i honestly believe that the trump policy will prevail in the long run regarding what is in the best interest of israel. news flash. israel is our strongest ally and the harris biden administration has abandoned them. >> molly: i want your thoughts on how vice president harris has community did on the issue. she spoke in her first interview that she did that israel has a right to defend itself but she said how it does so matters. she has consistently talked defense when it comes to israel but do you feel like they are leaving things to open beyond that? >> let me think about that. yes molly appeared let me be very clear as a lawyer appeared she is playing a word game. israel has a right to defend itself, two-state solution.
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her conduct shows otherwise beard she said in march israel did not have a right to go into rafah. i've seen the maps. i would be curious to see what those maps are. she insulted the state of israel when she ignored and did not attend benjamin netanyahu's appearance before the joint session of congress. she is signaling that she is not going to lift a finger for israel. you look at the words. the words are soft. have no power, no effect, but her conduct speaks volumes. she has not demonstrated any support for israel based on her words and her conduct. >> molly: leo terrell, great points about the signals. those potentially being picked up by voters as well as fellow negotiators trying to get to the cease-fire. leo terrell, thank you for your insights today. >> bryan: let's be clear what they want, they want an arms embargo. they don't want any weapons being sent to israel. a new russian attack on ukraine after key was massive drone attack in russia. dan hoffman will join us to
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>> bryan: yesterday a far right political party in germany became the first of its kind to an estate election and more than half a century. the alternative for germany took home almost one-third of the vote in one of the country's eastern state and placed well in front of germany's three current governing parties. senior foreign affairs correspondent is on the story. greg appeared. >> it is a political earthquake in germany and shock waves are being felt all over europe. yes, the right wing party won a state election for the first time in post world war ii german history. and ran a close second in another state. the regions are thuringia and saxony. they are part of the old east germany. they also go by by afd.
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it is tough on immigration, it is skeptical of helping ukraine in the war with russia as well as hitting hard on economic problems like inflation. a recent deadly stabbing in a western german city by assyrian asylum-seekers highlighting the national concern about the afd's issues. if not yet, the national strength. other parties refused to work with the right wing group. that hit the centrist parties, olaf scholz, that spells trouble for him in next year's national elections. the afd is expected to do well in another state poll later this month. all of this part of a trend in many countries in europe lately of the popularity of populist parties and a rejection of traditional political solutions to new and growing problems. back to you. >> bryan: a trend we will keep an eye on here. thank you so much for that report.
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>> molly: russia attacking ukraine again today with its third of large scale bombardment in a week. the latest assault coinciding with the first day of the school year. alex hogan has the latest. >> ukrainians in that country's capital woke up to the sounds of explosions this morning after russia launched a barrage of drones and cruise missiles overnight. debris from dozens of intercepted missiles and drones fell in every district of the city. the attack damaged to kindergartens. it was a violent start to the day which is the first day back at school for kids. three people are wounded according to the country's interior ministry. russia said its air defenses intercepted more than 150 ukrainian drums overnight from saturday into sunday including two over moscow. fires broke out at several facilities that targeted russia's energy infrastructure. it's one of ukraine's largest drone attacks yet. both sides continues to push forward and ground defenses with ukrainians in russia kursk
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reason. the ukrainian president volodymyr zelenskyy says that operation is moving forward according to plan. and vladimir putin says the attack on to kursk will not stop russian forces from pressing forward advancing in ukraine's donetsk region. kursk is where ukraine is hoping to set up a buffer zone to deter future attacks by russia. over the weekend, ukraine and russia each exchanged more than 100 prisoners of war. russia said these troops were captured during ukraine's offensive and kursk and ukraine says its service members released were those who were taken in the very first months of russia's invasion. in london, alex hogan fox news. >> bryan: let's bring in dan hoffman. he is a fox news contributor and former cia station chief and moscow, russia. so good to see you. thank you for being here. i want to start off with what is the significance of a drone attack that was launched over
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the weekend hereby ukraine. it was among its largest over 150 drones launched into russian territory attacking its energy infrastructure. what you make of that attack appeared russia counterattacking but they are specifically going after energy infrastructure for reason here. >> they are. ukraine has built out and indigenous drone capability that has allowed them to strike targets deep inside of russia. what they are trying to do is disrupt fuel supplies to the front and degrade russia's military capability that way. they also know that russia relies on the export of natural gas and oil to china and india among other nations and they're trying to disrupt russia's ability to export oil and gas and enjoyed the revenues that they need to carry on this brutal war against ukraine. >> volodymyr zelenskyy, ukraine's president says that they desperately need permissiog
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ranged missiles to attack further into russia. in fact, the defense minister of ukraine has given the u.s. a very specific target list in russia and yet that permission from the united states has not been granted. should it be granted and why? >> i have a hard time understanding why the united states, why the biden administration is putting them selves in a position where we are tactically managing ukraine's war of self-defense against russia. far better for us would've been to give ukraine the attack and long-range artillery. give them high mars, the british will give them long range and let the ukrainians figure out how they want to use those weapons themselves. of course they will strike military targets. that's what they been doing. the russians and contrast are launching attacks against kindergartens and we know they have hit maternity wards and neighborhoods and hospitals. the idea that we would be approving target lists, i don't think that makes sense
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militarily for sure nor does it make sense politically peer now the russians believe that the united states is really behind this proxy war is the way that putin likes to frame it and i don't think that is a good look for the united states of america. >> bryan: all really good points. let's talk about the stage of the war that has happened over the last month. ukraine making the surprise invasion of russian territory taking control of 500 miles about of territory in russia and you have the russians responding to trying to take over a very key city and the donetsk region at the same time. where do you see this land were at this stage and its significance? >> we are 900 days into this war that put in by the way he could end immediately chose to. he was the one that launched it in the first place. they have their sights set on the donetsk region and the ukrainians took kursk and a large swath of territory they hope to use is not just a buffer zone and to launch attacks on
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russian military bases but also potentially to negotiate that territory in return for the russians departing ukrainian territory. what i would emphasize is that the stakes obviously could not be higher for ukraine. it is an existential fight for them, for there for viable. but russia is trying to demonstrate that a nuclear armed state can forcibly attack a nonnuclear neighbor to create a sphere of influence. that's why the allies are iran, north korea, and china, china would like to do the same thing and that's why we need to give ukraine what they need to win this fight. otherwise russia will have proven that these nuclear states can exercise their own well in their own sphere of influence and that has major ramifications. not only for those countries without nuclear weapons, but they might choose now to acquire nuclear weapons appeared we might see countries like south korea seek a nuclear program or japan and that has a real serious implications for
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nuclear proliferation. >> bryan: this war has not made the headlines as it should have over the past few months. in this election there's a lot going on but hopefully it will get front and center and maybe even at the debate between both candidates. dan hoffman, thank you so much for your expertise as always. >> molly: mark zuckerberg makes a stunning admission to congress raising concerns about the lack of free speech on the internet. now xs as elon musk is leading the fight against online censorship. jonathan turley is here to react next. e... ...and itchy eyes, the truth may be even more uncomfortable. people with graves' could also get thyroid eye disease, or t-e-d, which may need a different doctor. find a t-e-d eye specialist at isitted.com. ok limu! you set it, and as i spike it, i'll tell them how liberty mutual customizes car insurance, so they only pay for what they need. got it? [squawks] did you get that? only pay for what you need.
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>> bryan: this is a live look from los angeles international airport as millions of americans basic flight disruptions over the labor day holiday. extreme weather causing hundreds of flights to be delayed or canceled at airports across the u.s. and what is expected to be one of the most busy travel days of the year. you've heard that before. domestic travel is expected to be up 9% from last labor day weekend. >> molly: after meta ceo mark zuckerberg made the stunning admission to house judiciary committee on censoring stories, the struggle for freedom of speech online continues with elon musk's asks at the forefront to stop censorship online. let's bring a jonathan terry a constitutional law attorney and a fox news contributor.
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thank you for laboring with us and giving your insights. free speech particularly in these online platforms is really under attack all over the globe. we saw the recent arrest of the ceo of telegram across the pond and just south and brazil. x taken off line and the courts are involved in that. your thoughts on what's happening globally? >> i discussed this in my new book. the indispensable right which looks at what i believe is the most dangerous anti-free speech movement in history. the book looks historically at all of these movements but we have never seen anything like this one because of the alliance of corporate epidemics, media and governmental interests. when you have this recent statement from zuckerberg, it was more contrived and contrite because he had spent years resisting and revealing what are now the facebook files.
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that was long after the release of the twitter files by elon musk. it was in fact the release of those files and mosque taking down much of the censorship system that made him the target of this anti-free speech movement. zuckerberg and facebook were a very important part of that movement in censoring people with the coordination of the government. these files confirm what many of us have said in testimony to congress. we have a system that a federal judge called orwellian which is restricting what people can speak, targeting groups not just in terms of censorship but even targeting the revenue. >> molly: when you talk about free speech, there's a difference of what's hate speech and what's misinformation and who controls and what the government allows and does not allow peered one of the things that you were highlighting right now is what we don't know about what's going on behind-the-scenes on these very
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powerful platforms until elon musk threw open the doors, reinstated a lot of conservative voices back onto x. that thing. in your book you talk about the figures on the pharaohs that have shaped us but that shows the dangers of the current moment. one of the unique dangers right now? >> those dangers could not have been more significant for americans. free speech is the right that all other rights depend upon. you cannot have freedom of religion and association without the freedom of speech. it's under attack and the attack is sophisticated. it is a dangerous conceit to believe just because we made it through earlier crackdowns on free speech we will do so now. we have never seen anything like this. there is an anti-free speech movement that has swept over europe. places like germany, england, france peered a recent poll showed that only 70% of germans now feel
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comfortable speaking their mind on the internet. 19% -- only 19% feel comfortable speaking in public. that is the result of this wave. it is now reaching our shores. our own anti-free speech movement began and higher education and it is metastasized throughout academia and the media and the government. mosque has proven a critical fi. this is a case of the irresistible force meeting the immovable object. he is the immovable object. he is the one person that the anti-free speech movement was not able to coerce or silence. zuckerberg collapsed like a house of cards. elon musk did not and he is still in this fight. >> molly: and he has a lot of money to fight with as well. jonathan turley, delightful to have you with us. thank you so much, we appreciate it.
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>> bryan: the faa still investigating the spacex landing mishap last week but giving the green light to resume the falcon nine launches good what this means for the two astronauts currently stuck in space and waiting for it to come get them. next. we handcraft every stearns & foster® using the finest materials, like indulgent memory foam, and ultra-conforming inner-springs, for a beautiful mattress, and indescribable comfort. save up to $900 on select adjustable mattress sets, at stearnsandfoster.com (♪) you know, you only get one body. it might be the perfect size to do this. your body may take up a lot of space. or have to speak with its hands.
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speech of breaking a few moments ago, several press vans following governor tim walz is crashed on route to his wisconsin event today. brand-new video shows the aftermath of the accident. the campaign confirms that the governor and the first lady were not involved in this accident. they were ahead of the motorcade that got into the accident but security says there are two people that are being taken to the hospital. >> bryan: the faa giving spacex the go-ahead to launch the falcon nine fleet despite the agency still investigating last week's issue that caused a booster to topple over and explode during landing. jonathan serrie live in atlanta with these details per jonathan. >> space s officials say that wednesday's incident was purely a recovery issue and did not pose a threat to the mission itself or public safety. the booster was attempting to land on a drone ship when it
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tipped over but the second stage went on to successfully deploy 21 star link satellites in earth's lower orbit and at the faa cleared falcon nine to return to flight which it did with back-to-back satellite launches satellite launches from florida and california. in both missions of the boosters made perfectly and expert falcon's nine return is welcome news for the privately funded polaris don mission which will attempt the first commercial spacewalk. the form of a crew has been waiting on the weather forecast to improve so they can launch. a falcon nine is scheduled to watch the dragon spacecraft which will bring home boeing starliner astronauts sonny williams and butch will mark from international space station. nasa decided to fly star liner without astronauts on board. undocking will be on friday. on the weekend butch restarted stanch pulsing noises coming
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from a speaker inside of star liner. it was feedback from a communications link with the space station. nasa explained in a social media post that the space station audio system is complex allowing multiple spacecraft and modules to be interconnected and it is common to experience noise and feedback. mystery solved. back to you. >> bryan: pulsing sound in space and scary. thank you jonathan. appreciate it. >> molly: soon president biden is set to take the campaign stayed with vice president kamala harris. the pittsburgh events also comes as pressure in the white house to get a hostage deal done between israel and her boss ramps up. stay with us for all of the raking developments on all of y labor day and when you can breathe better, what isn't better? this is better. this is better. that's better. and that. even this. dupixent is an add-on treatment for specific types of moderate-to-severe asthma.
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