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tv   FOX and Friends  FOX News  January 22, 2025 3:00am-4:00am PST

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offshore wind leases. is this the beginning of the end of offshore wind turbines. you only have about 20 seconds ready to hand it off to friends. the floor is yours. >> good day for me. i have been fighting this fight for six years. i was a lone voice out in the wilderness for a while. yes, it will. because they are going to review all of the existing leases and also stop any new leases. when they review all of this, i think they will find that offshore wind does not make sense that some of it was done illegally. it was pushed through and that will the end of all of this which has been a w horror for oceans and coastal communities. >> carley: difficult to talk about something you are so positive about in 20 seconds. but you nailed it. we appreciate it. "fox & friends" starts right now. >> todd: bye-bye.
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stove steve we are so happy to be on a warm couch in new york city where it currently is 8 degrees. >> brian: that window is closed in the back. >> ainsley: window is closed no wind in here. >> steve: that's not a window it's just a picture. >> brian: i thought it was a window. >> steve: doesn't seem like a wednesday but it is. it is wednesday, january 22nd, and this is "fox & friends." transparency back in the white house. president trump already taking questions over and over and over. whatever people ask him, he gives them an answer. >> listen to me for a second. stop interrupting. we won this election in a landslide because the american public is tired of people like you that are just one sided that is 100 percent true. massive infrastructure investment in america.
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it can't come quick enough. we will tell you how ai is going to power the economy and the future. >> carley: and a fox weather alert. a deep freeze in the south has tens of thousands of people in texas and florida and georgia without power a panged hour of "fox & friends" starts right now. >> now to a fox news alert. this is a live look at snow covered atlanta right now in georgia. 40,000 people are without power after deadly once in a generation winter storm. >> brian: it brought heavy snow and sleet to several southern states including louisiana. you got to see these shots of new orleans. some areas getting a record 5 to 12 inches of snow fall and the south is still under extreme cold and freeze warnings. >> lawrence: although the worst of the storm is over.
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still causing travel headaches and major disruptions at airports with over 1200 flights canceled and hundreds of delays. >> steve: that's right. a lot of towns don't have snowplows. a total of over 85,000 across the south are without power on this wednesday morning. look at that right there. about seven inches of snow in a place where that could be one of the locations they don't have snow plows. >> steve: florida they don't have snowplows. >> ainsley: check check in with janice dean. did you see the pictures on social media. people are excited about this. it will be days before we get some help. people are asked to hunker inside. the folks without power, i'm really concerned about, because we have got temperatures well below freezing. this is the wind chill by the way. so feels like zero in new york. feels like 18 in flowers. 20 in houston. all of these gulf cities
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received snow and the snow is going to remain in place for days. some people are waiting for it to melt. and that's the problem if we see more power outages and people are urged to not get on the roadways. we are not going to have flights in these areas. it is really, the next couple of days are going to be really interesting in terms of how the infrastructure with stands this and how local officials deal with it. but here's the live radar. so you see that snow storm now moving across coastal georgia in towards the carolinas. but to see this amount of snow across the gulf, never seen it in my lifetime, obviously many people along the gulf have never seen it in their lifetime. there is the live radar. almost done with it, but, look at the storm totals, a foot of snow south of new orleans. we don't even have like 5 inches here in new york city. this is so impressive. so unprecedented. and, you know, the snowfall totals if he number one spot for
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how much snow we received ever in some of these areas in alabama close to a foot of snow. florida panhandle as well over . pensacola, all time snowiest day ever. matches the previous 81 years compared. add all the snow fall totals in the last 81 years have you surpassed that travel delays, of course, it's going to impact all sorts of travel along the gulf and the southeast and the temperatures remain very frigid, not only today but friday, even into the weekend. then things start to ramp up a little bit. also, quickly want to make mention, we have a high weather fire danger for southern california. a couple new fires in and around the san diego area. that's something we are going to have to cover. fox weather.com has been on this story. the historic snow and also the potential for wildfires spreading today. back to you. >> steve: janice, i saw something yesterday. and it's brand new. the state of florida put out a winter storm watch advisory about weather along the gulf. they referred to the gulf as the
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gulf of america. donald trump wanted people to start doing it. state of florida first to are start doing it. >> janice: first snow system as well. >> steve: who would ever put storm of a century of a generation with florida. >> ainsley: or texas. >> janice: first ever blizzard warning for the lake charles area, ever. >> steve: taking a lot of pictures. >> brian: how about this story that took place yesterday. caught almost everybody by surprise. when we had our -- the press secretary make her day brew on our show. she said look for a major announcement around 4:00 eastern time about ai. we know in the ai community they felt really as though the biden administration put major constraints on them. really clamping down, going to basically decide who is going to be the one company that is going to have the american ai success or failure while they took on china. well, it was impossible to do it. they felt as though the biden administration didn't know
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anything really about ai and its potential. so they put in executive order to contain it. yesterday, donald trump revoked the 2023 executive order signed by joe biden that sought to reduce the risk of ai that poses to consumers. man, are they out of the woods now? they are in the clear and building a major power center for it. >> lawrence: here is the plan. open ai and softbank and oracle plan to launch star gate infrastructure project. they are expected to invest $500 billion in investment to create 100,000 american jobs. many in my home state of texas. first 1 million square foot data center will now be under construction in texas. and i just got to say, why did we ever have to have this, you know, adversarial relationship between the ai and business community? >> brian: lack of trust. >> lawrence: why can't you work with the people?
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that's what we saw yesterday. i don't know their political leanings, whatever. i really don't care about it. but i care about the country being number one, being innovative, investing in jobs and they were able to do that in a transparent way with the president of the united states. >> ainsley: trump rescinded the executive order that joe biden put on this industry, which means more regulations. he wanted more regulations. and so trump said no, no, no. we are taking this away. sam altman was asked about the safety of this. he said we do have to put rails on this but the benefits tremendously outweigh the downside. how does this effect you at home? it's going to personalize medicine meaning like your doctor and you come up with the best strategy. the result will be vaccines that prevent cancer. how great is that? >> steve: that's going to change everything. so they have -- we talked about this a couple of weeks ago how softbank was going to be investing $100 billion. so far that group of 9 three people you saw right there have
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committed up to $100 billion. but over the next four years it could be 4568 a trillion dollars. and what's interesting about this is i was listening to the radio this morning, getting ready for the big show, and they were talking about how wall street is very optimistic about, you know, this next year under donald trump because, among other things, ai is going to just make every american company that uses it so much more efficient. so, if you missed it yesterday, it happened at 4:00. we got the preview yesterday by caroline as brian said. here is donald trump right there in the roosevelt room. and he is talking to these guys who are going to try to change america and make the world better through artificial intelligence. >> we will immediately start deploying $100 billion with the goal of making $500 billion within the next four years.
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with your talent, because of your success. so we are very, very excited to do this. >> i don't have too much to add but i do want to say i'm thrilled we get to do this in the united states of america. i think it this will be the most important project of this area and as ai create hundreds of thousands of jobs new industry centered here. we wouldn't be able to do this without you, mr. president. >> imagine early cancer detection. the development of a cancer vaccine for your particular cancer aimed at you, and have that vaccine available in 48 hours. this is the promise of ai and the promise of the future. >> brian: want to have the innovation at home you need the power to do it. we don't have the power capacity. we keep hearing how outdated our grid is this is going to have the private sector combining to build this together, rivals coming together, because they want the power to be able to innovate and we don't know where this lead. they keeps telling us ai is
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scary and it is. a man up there describing the future of disease. how they are going to be able to solve cancer. and then when they open it up to the press all the questions are about the january 6th and just some nebulous things and thinking to myself these people just show up with one thing in mind. they don't go to a press conference wanting to understand what the news is. >> lawrence: did they even absorb the content? you got inknow vaforts talking about being able to detect the cancer in the blood before, you know, there was an aneurysm or tumor or anything. none of the questions revolved around that they went after the president. he has been kind enough to do a press conference. you had a president on hiatus for years. did not answer questions. and all of a sudden they have found their conscience and now they want to ask tough questions. >> ainsley: they also said we would never again have a covid-19 pandemic because a few patients would get it and ai would recognize that and put out warnings and prevent it. instead of waiting so long. until everyone has it. charles payne said that china
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just put out their ai product two weeks ago. so we don't want them to beat us. >> steve: listen mikesell doctor, who is watching right now, dr. kent uses ai all the time for different things and to research things. and i'm glad he does because it's just -- you know, it's another set of eyes. but to the point about the press corps being -- there in the roosevelt room with him. it was wide ranging. obviously it was about infrastructure and the data center being build by oracle down in texas. think about if you are a reporter at the white house and for the last four years, they have frozen you out. nobody is going to answer my questions. suddenly you have got a guy who will answer every single question. he might think some of them are stupid. but he is going to answer them. and the thing about it is, you know, and they are talking to him about stuff that he's doing. he ran on all this stuff. he said on day one i'm going to do it and he did it. so, they asked him a lot about things like that. if you missed it, it was here on
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the channel. and here are some of the highlights and low lights. >> mr. president, is it also true in your conversation with republicans today that you asked them to consider recess appointments for cabinet officials? >> i think, yeah. if it's needed. i don't think it's going to be needed. >> are you open to elon buying tiktok. >> if he wanted to buy it. >> if you committed violence on january 6th, obviously you should not be pardoned. why is your vice president wrong? >> well, only for one reason. they have served years in jail. they should not have served -- excuse me, listen to me for a second. stop interrupting. we won this elections in a landslide because the american public is tired of people like you that are just one sided. >> do you think that the war should be. >> the war should have never started. >> continue selling products that benefit yourself personally while you are president? >> well, i don't know if it benefited. i don't know where it is. where is it today? >> several billion dollars, it seems like in the last several
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days. >> several billion? that's peanuts for these guys. [laughter] >> were security concerns at all a factor when you decided to move your inauguration indoors? >> no, not at all. no. not at all. it was just cold. >> and do you have tiktok on your phone? >> no, but i think i might put it there. i think i will get it right now. >> steve: hilarious. >> brian: you can't stay on the one note. there is 25 different venues now. there is 25 significant things taking place. every single day. and it's amazing they just show up and just talk about those pardons when not one question how do you view joe biden's pardons preemptive pardons first time in history for his family? you turned that down. what with a do you say to him who said something that is unethical? >> ainsley: do you know what i thought about too when you are watching this? when we got home yesterday, i went straight to bed. threw down my bags and i had to go to bed. because we were getting, you know, two or three hours of sleep. >> steve: i made it to 7:00 p.m.
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that's when i fell asleep. >> ainsley: i was on sean's show several times but i just -- i was staying up so late. and i thought he stayed up longer than i did and he woke up before did i probably or the same time we did to do the morning show, and he had to speak. he had all the balls. he had the parties. he had all these press conferences. and he just keeps on going. i don't know how he does it. >> lawrence: i don't understand how day one why the hostility. he's there. you don't have to badger him to answer questions. just pose the question. leave all the fluff and anger and why are you interrupting him like that? i thought that was so rude? who was that peter alexander for nbc who had no questions about the mental fitness of the president. white house press corps. you see the president every day shuffling around in bed by 4:00 p.m. and you had no questions from him or the cabinet about the 25th amendment? and then you have so much anger on day one? let it ride a little bit.
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>> steve: yeah, they are lucky they have a chief executive who is actually answering their questions. you know, donald trump is donald trump's best messenger. we have talked about that in the past. he is a genius when it comes to marketing set. marketing what he is doing. look at all this stuff i did on day one. kjp not a good spokesperson for the then president of the united states. there is a -- you know, we have seen shock and yo awe over the t 36 hours since he became 39 of the united states. the lead story in the "wall street journal" is fascinating how america's ceos have launched war rooms and hotlines to cope with the, you know, this blitz of orders to figure out how is it going to effect america's taxes for corporations, immigration and trade policies and stuff like that. the interesting thing is one company set up a hotline so that if there has been a workplace raid at your place, how to handle that. and so, it's like okay, we knew
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he was going to do all this stuff, and now america's corporations and whatnot and leaders as we saw yesterday at the white house are figuring out how do i fit into this new trump america? >> lawrence: they need to understand if there's a workplace raid, why are they hiring the people? it's illegal in this country to do that. >> steve: people have looked the other way for years. >> lawrence: 100 percent. they brought it on themselves. the president campaigned on it. they never should have hired them. they should have hired american workers. they tried to usurp the system and not pay a fair rage to the american people. now the roopsers are coming to roost. just be prepared. i'm going to ask tom homan about that too when he is on the program. >> brian: fox news alert. four people hurt in stabbing spree moroccan national who had a u.s. green card. >> steve: what is that about? trey yingst standing by with details on this terror attack. trey, good afternoon. >> trey: yeah, hey, guys, good morning. overnight four israelis were wounded during a stabbing attack on a busy street in tel aviv.
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the attacker approached a wine bar before he started the stabbing. he was then chased by bystanders and killed. we're learning more about the man's identity. he is al zeez a u.s. green card holder from morocco. he came to israel three days ago and briefly detained for questioning at the airport in tel aviv. he was living in the united states before then. this is the second stabbing attack n city in three days and comes amid a shaky cease-fire along with the news that israel's staff her signature halevi resigning over failures to led to the october 7th attack israel's thanked him for his service and look for replacement in the days ahead. we do know israeli forces are still operating in the west bank city of jeanine. they are going after hamas and islamic jihad cells there briefing earlier today we learned more information this raid may last for a number of days and certainly could
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effected the ongoing cease-fire that is supposed to lead to the release of more hostages this weekend. guys? >> so, trey. the problem is there is no one there to distributed the aid except hamas. that's troublesome for the israelis it. looks like hamas is giving out the aid and that fortifies maybe the public opinion that they are still in charge. >> trey: yeah. absolutely. these images coming out of gaza are not good for the israelis. you see hamas gunmen on top of aid trucks that are driving into the strip as part of this cease-fire agreement. and it raises real questions about what we have been told by israeli officials that hamas is destroyed. that they are not able to govern inside gaza. they have control of the aid. and at this point in the conflict. that's the most important thing for palestinian civilians there. as we look forward, that is why you are hearing so much pessimism about the possibility of phase 2 of this agreement actually being implemented. and you even heard president trump himself saying he is not confident this cease-fire is
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going to hold. >> brian: thanks so much trey yingst. a very fluid situation as usual. >> ainsley: hand it over to carley for headlines. >> carley: good morning. more news to get to here. starting with this tragic story. the border patrol agent shot and killed in northern vermont on monday has been identified. officials say david chris may land was gunned down during a traffic stop not far from the u.s.-canadian border. the fbi saying one suspect identified as a german national in the u.s. on a current visa was shot and killed at the scene. the other suspect whose identity has not yet been released was hurt and is now being treated at a hospital. maland was a u.s. air force veteran he was just 44 years old. may god rest his soul. on house expected to vote on the laken riley act as soon as toted. the bill mandate the detention of illegal immigrants charged with crimes passed the senate on monday.
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with 12 democrats joining republicans. republicans have been pushing for this since 22-year-old georgia nursing student laken riley was murdered last year by an illegal from venezuela. the law could make it -- could make it to president trump's desk by the end of the week which would lead to his first legislative win. also today in washington, republicans are ramping up efforts to confirm the rest of trump's cabinet nominees. in just hours russell vought the president's pick to lead omb. the confirmation committee meeting pick kash patel happen next wednesday. the same day of the scheduled committee vote on pam bondi. trump's pick for attorney general. and new york is the latest state to consider a school cell phone ban. governor kathy hochul announcing a statewide proposal during yesterday's statewide budget address. california, ohio and california currently have policies banning
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smart phone use at schools. total of 9 considering. the idea has gained national attention as a method of improving the concentration and mental health of students. some say it's important to be able to keep in touch with their kids in case of an emergency. those your headlines, guys, interesting stuff there bipartisan in terms of the states that are considering this. >> brian: there is a way to get in touch with your schools they did it in the 70s and 80's. >> ainsley: we all did it. >> steve: you could use a flip phone or dumb phone. that's what we gave our kids. we didn't give them smart phones. if all they had to do was call to get a ride or something went haywire, just flip it open. >> lawrence: it's social media that's the problem. >> carley: no more pay phones. lawrence let them text and call. >> ainsley: all the parents need to be on the same page. my daughter have the flip phone and all of herr her best friends have a smart phone. >> steve: peer pressure.
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>> ainsley: all parents talk and flip phone make it easier. >> brian: how do the amish do it disciplined. no electricity and you have a wagon. we just talking about being accepted. >> lawrence: back to our top story. trump announcing a $500 billion investment into ai we are going to break it down, next. ♪ at patriot mobile, we take the word service to new heights. serving customers with top tier mobile service is our business,
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>> president trump announcing a $500 billion investment to build artificial intelligence infrastructure in the u.s. listen to this. >> together these world leading technology giants are announcing the formation of star gate, a new american company that will invest $500 billion, at least in ai infrastructure in the united states and very quickly, moving very rapidly. creating over 100,000 american jobs. almost immediately. >> ainsley: here to break it all down for us at the wall the co-host of "the big money show" on fox business brian brenberg. good morning. so these three guys, open ai, softbank and oh are launching ai infrastructure project they are the top in the industry.
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>> they are. they have the knowledge. that's really important because that's how you want taking the lead. you have the guy understands ai better than anybody. the guy who knows how to finance it. this is the banker and guy who knows how to build the engine for the car to get the thing moving. so if you want to get ai accelerating, these are the three folks you want to have involved with this. >> ainsley: first plant is going to be in texas. up to 500 billion in investments which is going to help our economy and estimated to create 100,000 jobs, brian. >> brian: they are talking about doing this first in texas but around the country. so you are going to need a lot of the people to build, to run these places. $500 billion in investment. can we just stop for a second? half a trillion dollars. we talk about a lot of money in ai. but this is a huge acceleration. and it's more than just those three guys you have got nvidia, arm holding. everybody who wants to be in game is going to be in this game called star gate. >> ainsley: we have to be in this game? >> brian: we have to.
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not just for the u.s. it's a global player right now. i can tell you china is putting a lot of money into their ai development as well. they have got big companies. so you can't be complacent about this. you want your a team on the field. that's what trump is trying to do here. >> ainsley: first 1 million square foot data center in texas. now under construction. and larry ellison said it's the largest computer ever built, which will enable ai. so we have never seen anything like this. >> brian: to do ai, you got to have a huge engine as we talked about. that's what this investment is. you need a lot of power for that, ainsley these things suck you will all sorts of energy. they are doing it in texas. that's not a surprise. it's a power center for the united states. and it's a place with lower regulation. so you don't have to through the environmental regulations all the bureaucracy and red tape. you go to texas and get it done. other states are going to get the message and probably make a similar pitch like texas. >> ainsley: larry ellison is saying they will come up with vaccines through ai to prevent cancer.
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is it ai reads all the information around the world about this, puts it together and comes up with a plan? >> brian: you know corn mazes in the fall? it's like navigating a corn maze on the ground where we are now trying to look around every corner versus a drone that goes above and sees where all the pathways are that's what ai can do because it can take in so much data and make connections that no one individual mind or even a computer right now can do. >> ainsley: we need to keep one china. china is two weeks ahead of us already. >> brian: that's the point. >> ainsley: donald trump repealed biden's ai oversight. biden put more regulations on ai. trump walks into office and says forget. this. >> brian: that's why the guys at the other end of the wall said we couldn't do this without you. biden had an approach every stage of the government czech in with the government, get our approval and make sure we are okay with it. no, let's put the guys who understand this in charge. let them drive. you know, the government can get in the way where it needs to. let's not do too much of that. that's not what china is doing
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right now. if they get out ahead, they set the standard and then we are playing from behind. trump wants to play from the front of the pack. not the back of the pack. that's why he has them involved. >> ainsley: those three guys know more about ai than this guy. >> brian: i can tell you it wasn't joe biden and kamala harris and whoever they had in government. >> ainsley: great job. thank you so much, brian. >> ainsley: starting monday "the big money show" will expand for two hours. that means you're very successful. they are giving you more time. >> getting bigger. >> ainsley: noon to 2:00 on fox business. >> brian: thanks, ainsley. >> ainsley: trump's team getting down to business not without resistance. 22 attorneys general coming part of immigration plan and we will tell you why. ♪
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>> carley: age in league baseball hall of fame class for this year outfielder and pitcher
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cc sabathia each getting the nod. seattle mariners legend first japanese player ever chosen for the hall falling one voted shy of the selection. formally inducted into the hall in coopers town defeating notre dame college championship on monday. celebration will be held in columbus, ohio this sunday followed by a victory rally at the team stadium. fortunately for buckeye fans early forecast for the area show it is supposed to warm unjust a little by the weekend. did you see this? oh, boy. philadelphia's mayor is going viral for this fluke while cheering on the eagles over the weekend. >> let me hear you all say eagles eagles. >> yeah. mayor focused mistake yesterday.
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>> we don't promise perfection. i'm so happy that i never have. especially after i couldn't spell eagles right. >> democrat still has some time to work on chant before the birds take on the washington commanders in sunday for the nfc championship that game is going to be on fox. those are your headlines, steve over to you. >> steve: thank you very much, carley. >> carley: you are welcome. >> steve: 22 attorneys general from democratic states filed two lawsuits to stop president trump's executive order ending birthright citizenship here in the u.s. of a. >> here is the rule in the 14th amendment. everyone born here is a citizen, period, full stop. the idea that a president would seek to undermine the constitution with an executive order is an assault on the basic idea that we live under the rule of law. >> the plain language of the constitution is clear and this
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order is plainly unconstitutional. >> steve: hold your horses. let's talk to constitutional law attorney and former federal prosecutor katie cherkasky. she joins us now. katie, good morning to you. >> good morning. >> let's start at the very beginning. 14th amendment ratified after the civil war had to do with people who were enslaved. what does it say? >> well, essentially the 14th amendment says that anyone born or naturalized in the united states and who is subject to the jurisdiction thereof is a citizen. >> steve: right. >> interestingly, the supreme court has never specifically ruled on whether the children of illegal or unlawful residents in the united states are automatically entitled to citizenship. now, that's how the government has interpreted that for many years. but the one supreme court case that everybody relied upon over 120 years ago actually dealt with a child of lawful, permanent residents which trump's order still allows for birthright citizenship.
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>> steve: so the constitution says people born here. but, over the years, you know, it's been okay, a baby was born here because the mother of the parents came into the country to have the baby and that would essentially establish citizenship for the whole family. and then we have heard stories about how okay if there is one kid born there and they can bring in whole family. i think that is at the core of what is he trying to stop. >> i think that's exactly right. i think at the time of the 14th amendment being ratified obviously that was in light of ensuring that thiessen dents of slaves were entitled to citizenship and there wasn't this idea of this mass immigration coming over here automatically being entitled to citizenship. to be clear, birthright citizenship still exists in this country has it always has. however, the limitations on the stalls of the parent if not at least one of them is not a lawful permanent resident or a citizen, then, under this order, they do not automatically get citizenship does not mean that
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they are not able to get that eventually. that's what this order suggests is that the 14th amendment does not automatically entitle all those people to that. >> steve: the whole family. this is going to wind up before the supreme court. i get you a dollar at the end they will say anybody born here, they still have, unless they changed the constitution, which is doubtful, they are a citizen. but the family probably not. it's interesting. i'm sure you are paying attention to what is happening in arizona. you know, now deportation raids are going to start where they pick up people who are committed felonies and broken the law and violent crime and stuff like that. the governor and the attorney general not on the same page; however, the republican legislature in arizona has been. and they passed what is referred to as -- they are considering the arizona ice act. what that would do is we have got a graphic. it would require sheriff's department and arizona department of corrections to enter into deals and cooperate with ice. also would require law enforcement to comply with ice
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detainers. would detain and direct additional funding to local law enforcement. that's the kind of help the feds actually need. >> yeah. absolutely. i mean, obviously at this point we have this unprecedented immigration crisis. there is going to have to be a hierarchy of essentially targeting people who are here unlawfully who have already broken the laws. i think that's vital for the cooperation from these states, absolutely. ains. >> steve: it's interesting. we r. were talking about this 20 minutes ago, katie. the "wall street journal" has a piece, lead story on their opening page. and it talks about how ceos are trying to figure out after this blizzard of executive orders how they need to react as companies and go forward, for instance, ceos have started their own war rooms to look at how these different tax policies and tariff policies would impact them. but, also, there is one company that has a 24-hour hotline if, for instance, somebody, a client or one of their businesses is
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involved in a workplace raid. it's smart that corporations are finally getting on board saying, okay, if this is the way it's going to be, how do we operate legally within the confines of these new executive orders? >> well, i think that the message has been sent and received that there is going to be enforcement. there is going to be law and order here. after four years of essential chaos. and so certainly, president trump has been in office for a couple of days now. and he has hit the ground running. >> steve: right. >> there has been so many changes which he has promised and followed through on. is he taking action significantly every day. in that direction. >> steve: see, now you just hit on something that is so important. these are things that he promised. you know, if somebody has not been watching, didn't watch him during the campaign and they said oh, joe biden is going to win. oh, kamala harris is going to win. and they weren't paying attention, these are things he has been talking about for a very long time. and he said on day one i'm going to do it. and on day one, he did a lot. >> absolutely.
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they say talk is cheap. is he taking action there. and it really goes to show that this is going to be a new era. and i think that's what a lot of people were hoping for. this is motivating. >> steve: he promised it, exit question. the democrats are going to sue him on everything they can. >> absolutely. there is going to be challenges and as with the birth right citizenship, very unique, unprecedented order. but, again, scotus has never officially weighed in on that so people can determine what they want because it's a practice. there are certainly open legal questions that need to be looked at. >> steve: if chief justice john roberts is watching right now. give us a call triple 8 tell fox. tell us what is going to happen. he won't. he doesn't get up for another 15 minutes. meanwhile, a quarter before the top of the hour. donald trump's new $500 billion investment to ai infrastructure from the private sector doing more than just boosting the tech sector. what it means for healthcare coming up next.
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♪ >> brian: all right after president trump announced a $500 billion investment into america's ai infrastructure the tech titans together behind the funding say ai will have a major role in advancing healthcare.
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>> i believe that as this technology progresses we will see diseases get cured in unprecedented rate. >> one of the most exciting things we are working on, again, using the tools that providing is a cancer vaccine. once we gene sequence that cancer tumor, you can then vaccinate the person. >> brian: we went from an ai conversation so within that a great medical conversation. joining us now to talk about that moving forward fox news senior medical analyst dr. marc siegel. i was fascinated a nondoctor larry ellison talk about this. does it sound valid to you? are we heading that direction? are we in that direction? >> dr. siegel: he is totally on target where we are. we have entered a world of personalized precision medicine years ago but we didn't have the tools. ai is look putting everything in hyper speed. he talks about treating cancer. it's a personalized idea.
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ai can look over your genes and say what the likelihood you will develop cancer is. what kind of cancer you'll develop. how do we prevent it before you develop it? that's what ai is. it's nothing to be afraid of. it's machine learning where it puts together data that helps the doctor solve problems. >> brian: you are talking to the audience out there but also talking to the medical profession. a lot sitting there in lab coats now saying thank you, i got. this i have been doing this for 20 years. i don't know need ai's help. >> ai is not big brother. here's where the confusion comes. in ai is already being used in radiology to make diagnoses that doctors don't yet see. mass general came up with one where lung cancer is going to develop before this even develops cardiology way in advance of the cardiologist. doctors learn to take the information that ai brings them and use it. not be shy, not be defensive. it's like any other piece of equipment. and it learns from its mistakes and does more and more. >> do you want ai in the room as
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we speak patient-doctor? do you want ai in there overseeing you almost if i can make a sports analogy, like instant replay? >> the referee makes the call but upstairs they are going to look back at the video. are you okay with that? >> now you pushed it too far. you and i discussed this before we came on. i love the sports analogy. i don't really like ai as a legal document. i don't want big brother looking over my shoulder. i like the sanctity of the doctor-patient relationship. there is something private and special about that. i don't want ai telling me i got it wrong. but i want ai informing me hun how to get it right. >> brian: how soon until this is commonplace? >> it's now. >> brian: right now? >> do you know what is exciting what the president said yesterday. is he talking about building big databases that gives ai the power we need right now to be in the doctor's office and in the research lab. >> brian: energy is the issue. now let's talk about what donald trump did through an executive order. who, world health organization, we are out. we are -- he says he would are being ripped off. he doesn't like their conclusions.
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he feels like they're anti-american. if you look at how much china has put in compared to how much we have put in, we have almost doubled it. yet, they seem to listen to china all the time. >> dr. siegel: they definitely did that with the pandemic. china bought the world time he said. i pointed that out in early 2020. >> brian: look how much we put in. almost a billion dollars they are putting 203. >> dr. siegel: we put in 15% of w.h.o.'s budget so they can hide along with china what is happening. >> brian: do we need this broad organization? do we need it. >> dr. siegel: down at the scientist level they are doing great work on hiv, polio and measles up where the tedros is the head of the w.h.o. he was accused of genocide in he ethiopia. trump is right to give them the stick and say you got a year. we are thought a year. you got a year to fix this mess if we're going to continue to give money to you. why should we give money to them so they cannot help us? >> brian: listen, i hear you. it's rocking the science world.
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and when anthony fauci comes out and what is he going to say? thank you so much, dr. siegel, exciting. >> dr. siegel: great to see you. >> brian: quick announcement, fox nation will be vietnameseing my show on stage at the florida theater february 15th in jacksonville, go to brian kill meet.com. st. louis march 22nd. meanwhile this story we have two more house of "fox & friends." next hour we lead with this bishop who seems she wants to get a message to the president of the united states. also will cain, brandon carr and tom homan. don't move ♪ a bientot let's work on that french, shall we? (♪) au revoir mon amour. a bientot (in perfect french) au revoir mon amour. a bientot (♪)
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with fast signs. see the visual possibility in your business. with signs and graphics, you can save anything. transforming your space begins at our place. fast signs make your statement. >> ainsley: it is 7:00 a.m. on the east coast. it is wednesday, january 22nd, and this is "fox & friends." bye-bye to dei. president trump giving the federal government until 5:00 p.m. today to close all diversity, equity and inclusion offices. >> brian: who wrote that, greg gutfeld? that sounds like his tease. >> ainsley: i can't take credit for it. >> brian: trump's border agenda is already facing legal challenges. could did delay deportation efforts? >> lawrence: so we will ask president trump's border czar tom homan this hour. >> steve: and a fo

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