tv FOX and Friends FOX News September 17, 2024 4:00am-5:00am PDT
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ask your doctor or pharmacist about shingrix today. ♪ ♪ >> brian: all right. 7:00 a.m. on the east coast. tuesday, september 17th. this is fox and friends. a fox news alert now. president trump heading back on the campaign trail after speaking out about the second assassination attempt. >> what the gunfire was, actually, interestingly, was a secret service agent had seen a barrel of an ak-47. started shooting at the barrel. those were the shots we heard. the never one never got a shot off. >> lawrence: he has to be the luckiest man. another fox news alert. we are waiting for sean "diddy" combs indictment to be unsealed this morning after he was arrested in new york overnight and remember this migrant influencer who once bragged about handouts? and encouraged illegals to come over and squat in american houses?
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a judge ordered him to be deported. but, he might not be able to leave. we'll tell you why. >> steve: we will indeed because the second hour of "fox & friends" starts right now. ♪ >> lawrence: fox news alert former president trump speaking out after being targeted by assassination attempt. >> later tonight we will see former president trump back on the campaign trail in flint, michigan. there was a chance he could address the second apparent assassination attempt against him. he did so while talking about crypto-currency on x spaces on monday. >> all of a sudden we heard shots being fired in the air and i guess probably four or five. and it sounded like bullets but what do i know about that. but secret service knew immediately it was bullets. and they grabbed me and i would have loved to have sank that
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last putt. [laughter] we decided let's get out of here. >> new body cam footage shows the suspect ryan wesley routh being arrested after evidence shows he waited nearly 12 hours near trump international golf course. known to be a vantage point for photographers looking to grab shots at the former president over the years. the agency says though routh never got a line of sight to the former president. routh is facing two federal gun charges. more charges are possible. but the government believes these are enough to keep him in custody. here is a were foreneighbor of routh's in north carolina talking about his behavior. >> >> guns they were, you know, kind of weird but, you know, they didn't bother me. i didn't bother him. >> as authorities probe his background, campaign rhetoric is coming under scrutiny, too. trump telling fox news digital the suspect, quote: believed the rhetoric of biden and hairs
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and he acted on it. their rhetoric is causing me to be shot at unquote. democrats for their part have also accused trump of raising the temperature. police have not released a motive. lawrence, ainsley, steve and brian. >> lawrence: unbelievable. >> steve: madeleine, charge him on two gun charges to hold him in place. more charges are probably coming, right? >> yeah. that's what we are hearing. that's what our correspondent david spunt says, according to the sources that he has. of course, we will have to see what other charges if any are possible. back to you. >> lawrence: thanks, made. >> brian: amazing. this guy is a bad guy. everybody knew it. he wrote a book on it. he called on president trump to say hey, iran, assassinate him you have my permission. this woman chelsea walz is fascinating. a nurse had several encounters with him in kyiv, ukraine in 2022 when she got off the plane she conveyed her concerns to customs and border patrol protection officer in an hour long interview at dulles airport saying this guy is dangerous.
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the routh was among the most dangerous americans she had met during a month and a half in the war in ukraine. can you imagine how dangerous he is? i would love to know how that intake went. what action was taken after that. because she did what she was supposed to do. and right at the port of entry in dulles. and what action was taken. >> steve: right. one thing that madeleine was talking about in her report was the fact that for years, in fact, after becoming president, the secret service and authorities tried to warn donald trump it's really problematic, mr. president, when you play golf, because there is open spaces and golf courses are near busy roads where there is, you know, people are going by all the time. do you know what they did? they showed him photographs taken by photographers at his sterling, virginia club. and they said if somebody with a long lens can take a picture of you golfing, then somebody with a long rifle could shoot you. he said, look, the clubs are safe.
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i'm going to go ahead and do it. for the most part, all the photographs we see of the former president and even when he was president, when he was golfing, essentially they shot them through the trees like it down there at trump international at west palm beach, there are gaps in the tree line where you could see him. and the photographers would just take pictures through that and ultimately, that was the security risk. >> ainsley: the shooter, you heard that neighbor say he had a horse in his house. very strange. a neighbor also described him as unusual but never expected him to be involved with something like this. said a lot of people were afraid of him back in the day. he had a lot of guns and stuff over there. and said when he moved to hawaii this neighbor has known them for 20 years. moved with his girlfriend. formerly from greensboro, north carolina. he gave her a hawaiian t-shirt. hugged her and hired her son when he moved. >> threat level against donald trump is all-time high. not just iran but people who
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don't like him in this country and trialing to take him out. is he not the first president to want to play golf. considering they are now saying that he has presidential level as if he was still the commander-in-chief, they should be able to secure him. i remember we used to have the obama golfing calendar of the many days that he spent playing golf. so they should be able to keep him safe. eric trump, i have never seen him so frustrated. his father is not running outs of lives. is he not cat. >> feeling like we are having the same exact conversations we are having today. let me be clear they are trying to kill the man. they are trying to kill my father. the 45th president of the united states. we have seen two attempts on his life in the last five weeks. i knew many of the people opt ground literally two days ago. these are the greatest people you will ever meet. these people will take a bullet for my father any side. that's their job. they love their job and
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incredibly good at their job. >> what are you learning when you saw that map. playing on the fifth hole. it looks like the shooter was down on the road in between it looks like the sixth and seventh. >> steve: down on the summit. >> ainsley: if donald trump had turned that corner and come around, would the guy have fired off a shot? thank goodness secret service officers, agents went ahead of donald trump to just survey the area. and they saw this gunman. >> brian: didn't help the case and i'm sure the secret service doesn't care when he says he didn't have him in the line of sight. trying to charge the guy has he he's the weird thing. he must have thought he was in the line of sight. why would you put your barrel through the fence -- by the way he shouldn't have had a gun -- convicted of a felony. there is a story there. >> steve: that's what they charged him with. >> and then you put the gun through a fence if you can't see him. i mean, why are you doing that? you can see that through a scope. why would you expose yourself? >> ainsley: preparing for it. maybe you know he is rounding the corner. >> steve: then again, i don't
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know that the guy had ever been there, casing the joint when the former president had been there. but, if he sees somebody walking towards him, he probably figures all right. the president is probably right behind him. >> ainsley: right. >> steve: doesn't realize he is 500 yards away. ultimately, the way they do it worked but they got lucky. had that one guy not seen the guy in the pink t-shirt, the guy wouldn't would have been able to squeeze off a shot or two. >> brian: i can't wait to find out who that guy is. >> steve: the question is do we want the best for the president and former president. tier one operators work with less and less budget. secure the secretary of defense and other agents and other diplomats. they can take the shots. they know the shot. they know how to secure. and they don't have as much authority and authority to shut down business. >> do you remember the groups who used to watch ghani and karzai in afghanistan and officials in iraq? they were americans.
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>> lawrence: 100 percent. >> brian: guys, you are out of uniform now we still need you. i don't care. you don't have to shave your beard or wear dark glasses or a suit and look like the blues brother. can you actually just do your job. >> ainsley: president trump was praising law enforcement. police officers, praising secret service there on the golf course with him and he praised witness who took a picture of the car and said it was a woman who did it. >> steve: that was the real hero. because, had that person not done it, you know, this person would have vanished. and they were in a black car. that's all they would have had. maybe if that but they had the license plate. and then they put it in the computer and the license plate reared just as they left palm beach county, clicked in martin county, next thing you know they got pulled over. >> lawrence: something has to changed real fast. i'm not sure we get a third chance. >> ainsley: nine minutes after the top of the hour. vice president kamala harris and former president donald trump are hitting the campaign trail today. >> brian: harris will be
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addressing the national association of black journalists in philadelphia: trump will be rallying in michigan in first in person event since the second assassination attempt. she will be with sarah huckabee sanders. >> lawrence: wonder if she gets the same reception trump got. >> michigan today for the trump ticket. got senator j.d. vance the vice presidential nominee. is he out west in sparta, michigan, that's kent county, a key swing county in a key swing state. former president trump hosts a town hall in flint this evening. his former press secretary and arkansas governor sarah huckabee sanders is moderating. trump is focusing on auto workers while the united auto workers union has already endorsed vice president harris, there is a group of uaw members and retirees backing the former president. called auto workers for trump. they largely object to hairs and the intrats celebration's support of electric vehicles like in 20179 when she was a senator co-sponsored a bill that all vehicle sales needed to be zero emissions by 2040 as a
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presidential candidate. 100 percent of new car sales should be evs by 2045. part of the administration announcing electric vehicle charging systems in 21 and 22. billions of dollars invested in solar, wind and electric vehicles. more standards for electric vehicle charging stations and 900 million invested in clean school buses, 2 billion to convert closed and at risk auto facilities to build for electric vehicles. earlier this year, the white house did relax some of the ev timelines as a concession to automakers and labor unions. this week harris also traveled to michigan and wisconsin, part of the upper midwest, blue wall states. she likely needs to win. this afternoon she is tout philadelphia. the national association of black journalists where shear will be interviewed by three journalists there. back to you guys. >> steve: and, rich, so that event in philadelphia with the national association of black journalists, will there be a big audience like there was last time? i know last time it was their convention, it's a little different.
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>> brian: in chicago. >> she will probably draw a crowd there, too. you will have plenty of people watching there three journalist also have their chance to ask her questions this afternoon. she has been criticized for not doing interviews. they will count this as one this afternoon. >> brian: right. thanks so much. so did a radio interview. it's going to air today at 10:00 a.m. i will look forward to seeing that friday, left a lot to be desoared. i nau never saw someone give a 10 minute interview and never answer a question. none of it made any sense. they sounded all like memorized. and she looks so nervous. you are nervous with a local reporter from the pennsylvania? i mean, i don't get it. should be easy questions if you had the ingration numbers you would be nervous. >> i would not. walch these guys. they love their explanation. they love to blame trump for that now she says i'm a middle class child which is not true by the way. not even middle class.
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the convention is gone. over. former president trump went there convention to a hostile crowd. still showed up. took the questions. she gets the special treatment. she is not showing up where all attendees are going to be there they are doing these -- she gets three new journalists or maybe some of the same i just don't understand why with the layups changes of the questions severing tailor made and she still blows it. >> ainsley: she is speaking with oprah winfrey on thursday for unite for america event. but to be honest with you i don't know if these celebrity endorsements really help her. you had taylor swift and article in the "new york post" that was citing uga did you see this only 8 percent said taylor's endorsement was somewhat or much more likely to convince them to vote for kamala. 20 percent
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said somewhat or much less likely to vote for her because of this endorsement. and 66 percent said taylor swift's endorsement didn't make a difference at all. people can't relate to these celebrities. >> steve: given the fact, ainsley it is so tight, the swing state numbers are so tight, if 8% listen to taylor swift that can actually have impact. >> brian: 20% are turned off by her. so you lose. net loss. >> steve: that event with oprah is going to be on thursday. today is national voter registration day. and the most famous community organizer in the american history, barack obama, is going on tiktok. and what they're trying to do is there are 30 million potential voters who are not registered. and so, the campaign, the harris-walz campaign and barack obama reaching out to these kids on tiktok and young americans. and trying to say okay. listen. you're not involved. heres why you should get
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involved. and then they are going to give you the website where you go to get registered and because he is a community organizer, he knows the importance of, okay, now you are registered. you need to have a plan to vote. >> lawrence: by the way young people you are not going to be able to afford a house. continue to move in with your parents because we are going to give you a terrible economy. >> steve: not going to say that part. >> lawrence: tiktok their way out of it. go to the grocery store, people. ask mommy and daddy for a loan you will not be able to afford. this by the way we copied president trump's plan with no tax on tips. i understand what they are doing. there is a new generation that consumes information in a different way. but i do think the young people -- i don't think they are dumb. i think they know their circumstance and what is happening to them on a day-to-day basis. they may not publicly go out on tiktok or tell their friends who they are going to vote for. they will vote for change. >> ainsley: kamala harris always goes back to middle class roots when she was asked were you better off now or better off
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after trump? when that local reporter you are talking about asked her how explaining how prices are so expensive. making life more affordable for young people i grew up in a middle class family where we appreciated our lawns. i'm like answer the question. >> brian: right. >> lawrence: it's a simple one, too. >> brian: middle america loves to seed and fertilize when in doubt. fantastic. >> ainsley: so worried about that? >> brian: unbelievable. when you can't afford a house you don't have a lawn. >> brian: it's all memorized. they say say something that's going to be universal. we love our lawn or you like your yard, i don't know, you like your yard? do you like your people, friends and neighbors? by the way if charlie spearing book is just right. she grew up in canada. and born in oakland in a hospital. but she lived in berserkly right there. her mom was a cancer researcher that's hardly minimum wage. so, please, there is nothing universal about her upbringing.
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>> lawrence: it shows in the way she talks to people and the way she can't relate to people and she keeps doing these things thinking like that it's going to attract different people. there is no authenticity with her. this is just average day people that notice that. really don't like her before they tried to remake her when they took joe biden out. >> ainsley: not only inflation is high, look what is happening on our border. because of her policies and joe biden's policies we have guys like this. 27-year-old lionel moreno, a migrant influencer. he went viral on tiktok holding his baby, you know, flashing all these $100 bills saying to all the illegals, come to america because you can take advantage of americans who have bought houses, can you squat in their houses and he boasted about all the handouts here in america. >> steve: here's the thing. he was ordered deported because he failed to appear and check in with ice. apparently a number of times. that's the deal. you come into the country. he came into eagle pass in 2022, and they said, okay. you can come into the country
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but you have got to go and check in with ice. he did not check in with ice. so he was ordered deported; however, because he is from venezuela, maduro turned off the return flights to venezuela in january. so, that guy, who has been flashing the wad of dough on tiktok and social media, is he going to probably get to stay here in the united states. what's interesting is, he bragged at one point that he tried to go to canada, but there weren't enough freebies so he decided to go to the united states instead. >> temporary protective status is absolutely disqualifying for any candidate. >> it's killing us. haiti, venezuela and cuba. they are sending people over here that we have to pay for. >> lawrence: that's right. >> that's the story in springfield, it's not cats and dogs. it is the haitian migrants show up. they don't know how to drive. at 18 years old, they have no driving lessons, so you just get a license without any instruction. that's how that kid got killed. that's why nobody is safe in the
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town. everyone is getting paid to live in the city in shelters, taking away the boys and girls clubs. and they are overwhelming the schools with special needs like somebody has to teach french creole speakers to speak english. this guy has to go in our society. we are paying for it. >> ainsley: can we not send the guy. i know there are no director flights from venezuela from america to mexico because maduro shut those off. any way to fly him through another country? >> steve: they won't take him at all. they won't take him back. >> lawrence: you need a president that they respect is going to be forced to take them back. that's the problem there is no relationship with venezuela. there is no fear. >> brian: do you know who has? >> ainsley: just he just go behind bars. >> steve: he stays in the united states. is he in jail right now. >> brian: i would add this congressman gonzalez said something really interesting. yeah, we don't have relations with venezuela but mexico does. i met with mexico. they have relationship with maduro. you work out something where you fly these guys maybe to columbia and walk over themselves.
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or you just drop them into an airport. listen, we got his plane. so, we can just put him on his plane and sit there. >> steve: here's the problem. he and his woman -- i think wife, had a baby in the united states. that baby is a u.s. citizen. so, are they going to send him back if the baby is in the united states? some judge is going to say okay, can you stay but you got to. >> lawrence: that's the problem right there. >> brian: president trump wants to get rid of birth right citizenship. you come over here and have your kid. next thing you know your kid is an american and gets mom and dad. >> ainsley: example of millions come across the border in this administration. >> brian: that's not the only problem in america. >> lawrence: that was great. sean "diddy" combs expected to be arraigned on federal charges following grand jury indictment. >> ainsley: right now the rap mogul is in custody after arrested lob of a manned
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justificationly are you hotel. >> park hyatt on 57th street. todd piro has the in the tuesday joe. >> the indictment against diddy will be unsealed this morning, that according to the u.s. attorney for the southern district of new york. home atlanta security valley taking the lead on this case, charges against the embattled rap mogul have not been revealed. his attorney telling the "times" he believes diddy is being charged with racketeering and sex trafficking. criminal defense attorney lexie rigden joined us earlier to react. listen. >> he did come to new york with the understanding that he was going to be arrested. not only do i think they have obviously witnesses who are couldn'ting, but they also have evidence to support these charges. homeland security is usually in charge federally of investigating human and sex trafficking cases. so that's just standard operating procedure for why they were there. it just shows how seriously it
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this has taken. >> todd: disappointed with the decision we disbelieve unjust decision by mr. colmes u.s. attorney's office. he is imperfect person but not a criminal. to his credit mr. colmes has been nothing but cooperative with this investigation recall his homes federal trafficking. cassie ventura's team releasing this statement saying in response to the numerous inquiries we have received regarding the indictment of mr. combs mr. ventura or i have any comment. we appreciate your understanding. if that changes, we will certainly let you know. the rapper also has several sexual misconducted allegations against him. all of which is denied. cassie ventura, of course, in a relationship with sean combs say broke the damn open on this case. >> steve: thank you, todd. >> lawrence: thanks, todd. i don't want one of my witnesses to be talking.
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that's why you probably see cassie releasing the statement through her attorneys. it was her complaint that really. >> brian: video too, right? >> lawrence: video as well. she did settle but this is a criminal investigation. >> ainsley: that's true. >> steve: five other cases that they would not go ahead and settle. >> lawrence: civilly they settled. but criminally. >> steve: right now the "new york post" has a headline about this story and it is cuff daddy. that was one of his names. >> steve: that was puff daddy. >> brian: stayed with diddy it wouldn't have rhymed. >> ainsley: this generation does not remember puff daddy. >> brian: some great stories. >> ainsley: secret service incident scrutiny after assassination attempt claiming the course wasn't expwent briar to the visit.: >> steve: a special agent in charge oicf trump's detail comes
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mike? >> what it means, brian, is that israel moved closer to the potential of a second front in this war. as you mentioned the security cabinet late last night outlined a third objective in this war. they had already outlined dismantling hamas and returning the hostages as two objectives in this war. that third objective is now returning israeli citizens to the northern part of the country. with near daily rocket and drone fire coming from iran-backed hezbollah in the south of lebanon. more than 60,000 israelis have been forced to abandon their homes. israel frequently responds to the rocket fire and strikes in southern lebanon as it's done for almost a year. but this decision from the security cabinet paves the way for expanded military operations. now, defense minister yoav gallant spoke days ago with lloyd austin and said time is rubbing out for a peaceful resolution with hezbollah. hezbollah leadership has stated that the rocket fire would stop it f. a cease-fire was reached with hamas in gaza. israeli leaders have said repeatedly now that a cease-fire
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deal with hamas is not close. speaking of gaza. israel says its assassinated a commander jihad in the southern gaza strip. he was said to be in charge of the islamic jihad rocket in the southern town of wrath fall. islamic jihad is separate from hamas but both backed by iran. israel says the hamas fighting force in rafah is disseminated. getting new reports from the israeli shin bet intelligence agency that they thwarted a rather sophisticated assassination attempt. this assassination attempt involved a remote detonator apparently activated by a cell phone hooked up to something very similar to a clay more antipersonnel mine mine. it was intended for a security figure here in israel. but shin bet stresses they were watching this assassination attempt for a long time. it never came to fruition. and the remote device was never activated. but it shows the attempts, particularly in this case by hezbollah, to infiltrate israel and still take out some of the
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personnel. steve? >> steve: all right, mr. tobin live from israel. thank you very much. meanwhile, 7:31 here in new york city. we have a fox news alert. prosecutors have now charges the suspect, ryan routh with two federal gun charges related to that assassination attempt on donald trump's life on sunday. veto service saying the gunman was hidden in bushes for nearly 12 hours, he sat there. a security hole that agents purportedly knew about for years but still there was no prescreening of the court. >> this was an off-the-record movement it wasn't a sight site that was -- it wasn't part of his schedule there was no posting up of it. we put together a security plan and that security plan worked. >> nicstein was the special agent in charge of donald trump's protection from 2017 to 2019, joins us right now. nic, good morning to you. >> good morning, steve. and just to correct, i was agent in charge for president carter for 17 to 19. i was the supervisor on the
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trump detail when he ran in 2016. >> steve: okay. thank you very much. i do believe you did protects the former president donald trump at that golf course though. and what did you make plaintiff roe yesterday saying well, it wasn't on the official schedule? so we didn't sweep it ahead of time? did you ever come across that when you were protecting the president? >> yeah. off the record movements with protects are pretty common. it's something that we don't have an established advance team go ahead or usually not a lot of time in advance like we would for a normal on the schedule event. off-the-record movements are common. we rely on a lot of times the fact that if we didn't know we were going and hopefully bad guys wouldn't know we were going either. >> steve: sure. >> the exception i take in case well-known he golfs at that location frequently. while it was off the record, it was not necessarily like an like stopping at a restaurant. >> right, and the problem, we are looking at video right here,
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nick, where donald trump is out on the golf course. and i don't know which golf course it is, but at a lot of his courses, there are gaps in the tree line, okay, that's west palm beach from a couple of years ago. people on the street could look in and see the president, and i know the secret service went to him and said hey, mr. president, this is not secure because, if people can take pictures of you with cameras, they could squeeze a shot off. but he insisted that he was safe. the clubs were safe. and he continued. which i'm sure gave secret service guys like you a gray hair. what needs to change going forward? so what happened on sunday doesn't happen again? >> >> i think part of it is a lot of what we do did work on sunday. so there is a specific methodology or tactics that we use for golf courses. we have within doing it for years. and that-woo create kind of a bubble around protectee and golfing parties.
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people ahead, people behind. >> and then there is additional resources that we generally have. if this had been a scheduled event. and we knew it was like a golfing event and there was going to be press and people there there probably would have been a much greater, much more time and much more planning involved. but i'm sure that day of, if they knew that he was going to potentially golf on sunday, they have a package in place that they can immediately get people out there. and get resources that they need. obviously we need golf carts if we are on a golf course things like that and coordinate with the local law enforcement there in palm beach to get their resources and assets. it wasn't like a spur of the moment thing that we had never done before. it would have been something that we were used to and had done before. >> steve: thank goodness that agent saw the guy in the pink shirt and with the gun and no shots were fired by him although the secret service agents scared him away. nick, thank you very much for joining us live. >> thank you very much.
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>> steve: 25 minutes before the top of the hour. critics slamming kamala harris saying she defied democracy on several major issues. we will lay out the facts with emily compagno. she has a new book and she is coming up next on "fox & friends." how are you ♪ meet the jennifers. jen x. jen y. and jen z. each planning their future through the chase mobile app. jen x is planning a summer in portugal with some help from j.p. morgan wealth plan. let's go whiskers. jen y is working with a banker to budget for her birthday. you only turn 30 once. and jen z? her credit's golden. hello new apartment. three jens getting ahead with chase. solutions that grow with you. one bank for now. for later. for life. chase. make more of what's yours. introducing new advil targeted relief. the only topical pain reliever with 4 powerful pain-fighting ingredients that start working on contact to target tough pain at the source.
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♪ >> ainsley: despite liberal arguments that donald trump is a threat to democracy a new "wall street journal" op-ed points out kamala harris' own past of defying the constitution. as california's attorney general, she refused to enforce a ballot measure on same sex marriage. unilaterally deeming it unconstitutionally. then under her current administration. biden and harris have continued
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to cancel billions in student loan debt despite the supreme court finding one of their plans unconstitutional. her administration is also facing a lawsuit for allowing millions of migrants to maneuver around federal law and apply for permanent residency. and the house judiciary committee found that the biden-harris white house worked with big tech to censor opposing narratives. here to react is outnumbered co-host emily compagno. we always hear them say when trump was going through all the court cases that nobody is above the law. yet, they are defying the law. >> that's right. the whole point here is that kamala harris has a long track record of doing that. defying, for example, proposition 8, which 52 to 48% passed in california. that's the will of the voters. she stood in her attorney general platform and said it's unconstitutional. i refuse to defend it. as attorney general, but the reality is that was her job. you are supposed to -- regardless of how you feel about something. represent and fulfill the duties of your role. if she did it back then. if she done it through the
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student loans and migrant in the voting. how can we trust her to fulfill the duties of the commander-in-chief lawfully without just imposing her will over the will of the american people. >> ainsley: california voted and same sex marriage did become legal even though she said it was unconstitutional. you have a new book coming out right here called "under his wings" preorder to today. incredible stories, emily. tell us about it. >> it is extraordinary book, ainsley because of the stories inside that i'm honored to serve as a messenger for. it's all about faith on the front lines, incredible stories of servicemen and women that had intimate, deep experiences with god on the battlefield in combat from the thing of a fire fight in iraq to the jungles vietnam where infran triman heard god's joyce where to go to survive. even world war ii veterans. i have members of my family in the book and we talk about how the war doesn't end in the physical battlefield. the war remains on the front
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lines woe have incredible stories of faith and again these intimate stories with god and the jesus here on the home front with pts, with gold star mothers. those dealing imagining spouses catastrophically wounded. these stories are incredible theying change your life as they changed the servicemen and women who experienced them. again, it's my honor and privilege to serve as messenger for those who proclaim their faith in jesus christ and come out with stories. >> ainsley: beautiful. one soldier who said he had a vision. he didn't know whether to go left or right. tell us his story. >> that's right. he was a vietnam veteran and at the time an infantry man in vietnam. the ambushes that he suffered were so severe. so intense and the thick of one he heard god's voice directing him to the left was heaven, to the right was hell. and he says look. i can't tell you anything more than what i experienced. i know i survived by going left. now, every time he goes to the vietnam memorial wall he has a cup of coffee with a 58,000 men that didn't make it home.
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toasts them. >> ainsley: emily, it's a beautiful book "under his wings" is the name of it. begin reordering emily's new book "under his wings" today on fox news books.com and you can watch emily on outnumbered every day at noon right here on the fox news channel. great job, emily. i'm proud of you. >> thank you so much, ainsley. >> ainsley: writing this in the name of the lord. title of the book "under his wings" comes from psalms, beautiful. god bless you. >> thank you. >> ainsley: new tool to slash concussion risk for nfl players as a major star suffers his fourth in five years. dr. marc siegel on that story, next. ♪ if you can't see what's behind all this, how do you already know, it's jeep? probably the same way you know if a t-rex is chasing a jeep wrangler... is getting away. yep! or if it takes you places that make you say, woah. and their hair looks like this. or someone says, the doors come off. then you just know what it was.
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>> janice: good morning, everyone. we are watching flooding along the coast of north carolina. lets' take a look at it. in some cases we got over 18 inches in just a matter of hours. and flash flooding is going to be a big concern. we still have the potential for flooding. looking at the radar for parts of north carolina. up towards the mid-atlantic. and this is going to be the situation not only the flooding, but we saw hurricane force winds. so there's the live radar. we haven't really seen this budge too much. and it's going to continue to bring a lot of heavy rain from the atlantic. so morehead city right there. we have flash flood warning in effect. and that's going to be ongoing throughout the day today.
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flash flood warnings as well as flood watches up towards richmond, virginia. still three to five inches of rain still to come. but, again, isolated areas we could see upwards of, you know, several inches in a short period of time. cold front moving across the high plains could bring the potential for some stronger storms. we'll continue to keep you up to date. fox weather.com for all of your latest details. brian kilmeade i just saw nut hallway and here you are right now. >> brian: you promised to toss to me and did you. you are a woman of your word. >> ainsley: by the power vested in me. >> brian: listen i'm going to talk a little football so stand by. >> brian: tua tagovailoa meeting with neurologists this week concussion, fourth in five years. this season is the first that nfl players are allowed to wear guardian caps if they choose to reduce the risk of concussions but do they work? should they wear them so far only six of the almost 1700 players have warn them in a game. we see them all the time in practice. joining us now is fox news senior medical analyst dr. marc siegel.
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dr. siegel, i don't know much about them. i see them a lot. i know you told me the theory is you have a pad, you have a helmet. you got a skull. but your brain is in water. does it absorb the hit to allow the brain to feel less reverberation? >> dr. siegel: yes, brian, it does it has some effect. in practice decreases the risk of concussion, the nfl has studied this by 50%. in games 10 to 30%. i'm for it. i'm for it. this is the first year you could actually wear it in games. and people are starting to -- but it wasn't really swept over yet. i also like the vic can you say helmet. t3-d matrix that patrick mahomes wears. uses 3-d printing unstudy of regular foam inside the helmet. that's starting to catch on. mahomes already wears that anything can you do brian, to absorb the blow and spread it
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out is key here. that's the key problem. it's that it's a blunt blow and you saw with tua that he actually was flailing his arms after ghordz a fencing position that can show a traumatic brain injury. i'm concerned about him. >> brian: i want to see the stats one more time pop them up with how effective it can be know at home. the guardian effect effectiveness 33% impact reduction. 52% reduction in concussions. why are guys not wearing them? i guess a little bit how it looks. as you look at the board this is what tua has been through over the last few years. he has emerged as one of the elite quarterbacks. certainly one of those dynamic. once you get one concussion, it seems like it's easier to get the others. correct? >> dr. siegel: that's exactly right. i have talked to several team doctors for the nfl. and they all say the same thing. and basically once you have one concussion, the brain -- the cells in the brain are ready for the next one.
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in a negative way and they accumulate over time and have you more long-term risk. i have interviewed harry carson the former pro bowl middle linebacker for the giants who went on heroically to be a sports announcer about the effects it had on him of repeated hits. brian, it isn't always the big one like you saw with tua, sometimes it's an accumulation of smaller hits over time. and you have to test these guys. and that's what is going to happen now. they do an mri. they do a ct and mri and test them over the days to come to see how they are covering, how is their attention? how is their concentration? how is their memory and how is their acuity and they see how they are recovering. >> brian: at love times you don't see the effects until after you are done playing. cte. >> dr. siegel: exactly. >> brian: personal decision when it comes to concussion protocol the league has taken over but when it comes to playing it's up to hill. >> dr. siegel: have a great day. >> brian: great to see carley
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shimkus here. >> carley: headlines to get to. brian, you can now have a qr code embedded onto your nails. a nearfield manicure like having a smart nail. it connects to your cell phone and christian triggers responses. a flat sticker and also reusable. you can link to phone apps like spotify instagram or tiktok. the smart chip can be purchased online. and if you plan on catching beetle jews in theaters. can you sip on a cocktail while doing so. amc theaters is offering up the sand worm layer is. it's a mix of raspberry and vodka topped with sour candy worms. how much is this movie cocktail going to set you back between 201 and $31. that's expensive. check out this cotton candy burrito rolled out to arizona cardinals fans at state farm stadium. a giant hunk of the cotton candy
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packed with ice cream, sugary cereal. the cotton candy burrito costs $15 at concession stands. that is what willy wonka's dreams are made of, brian. >> brian: only thing willy wonka not real. >> carley: there is also that you are real and you are sweet. >> brian: i'm pinching myself now. it hurts. more "fox & friends" in a moment. ♪ a perfect day for a family outing! shingles doesn't care. but shingrix protects. only shingrix is proven over 90% effective.
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