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tv   Outnumbered  FOX News  January 27, 2025 9:00am-10:00am PST

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>> president trump's illegal immigration crackdown, taking shape here at home and abroad. right now, i.c.e. agents are continuing their apprehension of criminal illegal aliens. nearly 1,000 were taken into custody sunday when ice patrols were in chicago. now, a homeland security official is telling fox news that new york city is "the next target." the president also overcame the first major push back against his mass deportation policy from columbia, all in the first week of his new administration. hello, this is "outnumbered." i'm emily compagno with my cohosts harris faulkner and kayleigh mcenany. also joining us today, lisa boothe, fox news contributor, and jason chaffetz, fox news contributor and former utah congressmen. the president's mass deportation policy appeared to spark a trade war with columbia yesterday, for them to quickly cave after
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initially rejecting two flights of illegal immigrants. president trump's threats included a travel ban, immediate visa revocations, and ordering 25% tariffs on all goods coming into the u.s. from columbia. that would jump to 50% after one week if they did not comply. so they did. colombian officials put up this statement. "columbia, under the direction of president gustavo petro, has the presidential plane ready to facilitate the return of the compatriots who were to arrin te morning on deportation flights." meanwhile, the first of 1500 u.s. marines and army personnel began arriving at our southern border. their mission: make good on president trump's campaign promise to bring back his effective policy. the coast guard getting involved, intercepting about carrying illegal migrants that was sinking in u.s. waters. the coast guard's alien
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expulsion flight operations stand between california and texas, and it's all part of the president's illegal immigration crackdown that border czar tom homan says is only getting started. >> is this what we will see every single day, ending and what the president has promised us: millions and millions being deported? >> yes. you can see the number increased. as we open up the aperture. >> the estimates of perhaps those who have been convicted or arrested in the past 700,000 to over 1 million. so after you do that, then you go after everybody who is there illegally. >> if you're in the country illegally, you are on the table. it's not okay to violate laws of this country. every time you enter this country illegally, he violated a crime, title a united states code -- it's a crime. if you are in the country illegally, you've got a problem. that's why i hope those in the country illegally who have not
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been ordered removed by the judge should leave. >> vice president j.d. vance also defended the president's executive order, revoking birthright citizenship. >> this is a country founded o on -- >> this is a very unique country. it was founded by some immigrants and some settlers. just because we were founded by immigrants doesn't mean that 240 years later, we have to have the dumbest immigration policy in the world. no country says that temporary visitors, their children will be given complete access to the benefits and blessings of american citizenship. america should actually look out for the interests of our citizens first. that means again, if you are here permanently and lawfully, your kid becomes an american citizen. if you are not here permanently, if you are not subject to the jurisdiction of the united states and don't plan to be, why would he make those people's children american citizens permanently?
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because so much to unpack. i saw your reacting off-camera to a lot of what we just saw. tell us your thoughts. >> i love it. [laughter] this is america first. this is what america voted for. >> usa. >> i had a chance to visit with the president after he was elected but before he was sworn in. i said "mr. president, thank you for the clarity." that's what the world needs: clarity. tom homan and vice president vance and donald trump are leading that clarity. if you are here illegally, you are going to have to provide that restitution and go home. if we need to arrest you and deport you, we are going to. columbia, they were use to obama, biden, harris. they could roll over the united states all day every day and nobody would say a peep to them. those days are over. it's america first. where the world's economic and military superpower. you are not going to push us around. you want to come to this country mba illegal migrant? --
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and be a legal migrant? we will welcome you. but if you are committing crimes, raping people. i'm tired of politicians making excuses. "what about these rapists? what about flowers? what about the cost of coffee?" it is america first. i love it. it was when we could go to the minute that donald trump was sworn in. >> talk to me about through the lens of having worked for number 45 during the prior administration. talk to me specifically about this relationship with columbia. jason portends that the countries will fall in line. they are used to dealing with a different kind of president. here, a commander in chief that is prioritized american interests. what do you see different from -- >> we are simpatico. that's where my mind is at. there is this twitter feed. he laid out methodically how things traditionally work.
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it's good that the vice president just sent it out. he lays out the traditional approach of dealing with -- let's say columbia when they want to take a migrant flight. you get a task force together. it is the department of defense. it's ice. it's the secretary of state. it's the state department. the task force comes up with a position paper. that is then rejected by the secretary of state in the name of equity. days later, the president is briefed on it, and by the way, the details are leads to "the washington post" along the way. we get a worse deal with columbia, they take fewer migrants than intended, and it happens in a month's time. then, trim comes on board and we get the art of the deal. while he is playing golf on various holes, he is threatening columbia with tariffs and not backing down. by the end mike of his golf game in about an hour, the colombian president backs down, agrees to accept all migrants. it's called the art of the deal. what does he do in solving this in an hour's time rather than a month's time? he sends a message to the e.u.: "tariffs are coming your way
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unless you take our agricultural products to mexico, canada. they are coming away february 1st unless you rectify your trade imbalance." message to put in. "i threaten tariffs against you because if you don't get a deal, you are next." and denmark: "give us -- greenland or you are under the threat of tariffs too" appear shaking the brew because they mean he -- -- they know that he means business. the art of the deal gone into the deep state of washington. >> talk about it happening internally. the benefit of congressmen on the couch. a lot of politicians are extending an olive branch, seeing the forest through the trees, and that there is a global whipping coming to fruition, meaning that in, as he is on the floor, those that are coming on board -- the reality is when you prioritize american interests, how can a politician not be on board? >> this is also the first republican to get the popular vote in 20 years. according to "the new york times," 55% of americans want to deport all
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illegal aliens. he has a lot of juice entering this next term of his pres presidency. i love that he shared a photo on truth social, a iphoto of f around and find out. that's the new mantra of the next four years. gone are the days of saying don't and everyone does. when he says don't, you don't. he gets knocked a lot for his use of tariffs, but you look how smartly, how intelligent he was to use this and how effective it is in making these threats. part of the challenge in these deportations is getting some of these countries to accept criminals, rapists, pedophiles. you need leverage points for them to accept. there been reports in countries like venezuela emptying their prisons and sending violent offenders to the united states. we got have leverage points to get them to take back these bad people. woodford president trump inc. smart, using tariffs, and f around and you find out.
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>> a lot of pushback seems to be singular and concepts that frankly reduces our allies and neighbors to one thing. coffee from columbia. we make our own coffee here too in hawaii. there are things coming out of our neighboring countries that aren't reducible to one thing. i think that is part of what the media has been articulating this entire time, arguing that the g.o.p. reduces humans to an identity, when really it's them shoving these countries into boxes. president trump sees them as partners. >> what's interesting is that trump is trying to bring about a world where he will drop the rate for companies that come here and make some of that stuff to this tax rate. we may not have to miss coffee or whatever we think -- because, maybe some of the countries will come here and package their stuff, distribute it from here. he is trying to make that happen.
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i want to know who columbia -- called. who did he call? somebody had to say -- i'm sure he called a friend. which one did he call, among those who are also one of the 160 countries that have people here illegally that are committing violent crimes? is there a group of them? i'm guessing there might be, and if that's the case, everybody get your planes ready, your presidential planes ready, because we have some bulk you need to take back. here's the other thing. we scroll this list last hour. it was so long that we needed to scroll it several times. he wants to begin reviewing the u.s./mexico/canada agreement. that's a discussion about wider protection of borders and that whole thing. this goes beyond the deportations. what are they going to do? canada can probably answer questions about what he's capable of doing and what he means when he says "if you don't do what i say you could be the 51st state, canada." we are now in that group.
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by now you know what the f stands for. [laughter] we are also the place where everybody in the world happens to be talking to each other. i think that's a good thing. they are talking about us in a way of strength, not what can you get from the biden administration if you promise you might help them a little? >> speaking from experience, resisting parking tickets. the whole thing is it just gets more expensive. [laughter] >> strong, emily. >> you've got to pay it. which columbia learned. president trump is reinstating service members discharged for not getting the covid vaccine under biden's administration. as the cia now says covid was most likely indeed caused by a lab. were many americans that were labeled as conspiracy theorists actually write about the lab leaks the whole time? (vo) veteran homeowners, did you know your credit card
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♪ ♪ >> today, president trump is following through on another campaign promise to the military. he is signing an executive order reinstating the 8,000 service members who were discharged for not getting the covid vaccine. he has given them full back pay and benefits. the white house says when the mandate was repealed two years ago, only 43 of those discharged troops volunteered to return to service. maybe they didn't like the commander-in-chief at the time. this prompts the cia to change its assessment on how covid 19 began. it's agreeing with the fbi and the energy department that the most likely started from a lab
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leak in will hohn china. alexandria hoff has more. >> some might look at this and think that the caa's position has been influenced by the new administration, but this assessment was ordered and completed under president biden. the newly confirmed the caa director says all he did was declassify and release the findings on his first day on the job, agreeing with president trump that americans deserve transparency. >> the purpose of the cia is to protect americans, keep us safe from foreign threats and adversaries. we also need to be truthful with americans. he has stressed to me and others that these aren't mutually exclusive missions. >> for years, the cia said it didn't have enough evidence to make a determination on covid's origin. during a bulk of that time, those who flow to the lab leak theory were cast off by the mainstream as conspiracy pedaling. the caa joins the fbi and energy department in favoring the
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theory, but according to the agency, the assessment could change again if there is no evidence, stating in part "caa assesses with low confidence that a research-related origin of the covid-19 pandemic is more likely than a neutral origin, based on the available body of reporting." senator tom cotton was one of the first big political names to support the lab origin theory. he reacted to the update on "fox news sunday." >> i didn't have access to classified intelligence or special scientific knowledge. i use common sense, looked at the facts, understood what chinese communists do. >> this didn't determine whether a leak was accidental or intentional. there is scientific communities continue to argue against the lab leak theory. the cdc's website still notes that the website originated in -- >> thank you. i love accountability. i want to start here with the original conspiracy theorist. his name was president donald trump.
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i guess coconspiracy theorist. my first briefing was dominated by questions about how this man could possibly think that a lab working on that virus may politi origin of coronavirus. watch. >> the president said yesterday with a high degree of confidence that they coronavirus originated in the lab in will hohn china, yet his own intelligence agencies say they're still investigating. does the president have information, and has hedonic community that the intelligence community has not? >> the present statement is consistent with the other intelligence assessments. i would note that the statement made two points. one, that the virus originated in china. two, that it began through contact with infected animals, or was the result of an accident in a laboratory in will hohn that is consistent with what the president said, that he has seen intelligence suggesting that it could be in the wuhan laboratory.
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>> and it was five years ago. >> your articulate and informed answer at the time dovetails perfectly with what's senator tom cotton said, which is essentially "i looked at the facts and this is common sense." you talk about this at the time. to the multiple cables that were not classified, that came from u.s. state department actors who had visited the lab in will hohn, drawing the administration's tension to the violations of safety protocol and health regulations and multiple other things they deemed quite alarming. all of this proceeded the outbreak, and it also dovetails in with a cia referencing open source -- in addition to classified information, that anyone can get, meaning the cables that weren't classified, meaning information everyone can look at. the cloak and dagger, the narrative being pushed with anything but, listening to the facts and truth. final point if i may. as we get into the soldiers that
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will be reinstated in their back pay, in february of 2021, they noted that one-third of service members who had been offered the vaccine refused to take it, meaning that while 8,000 held out, so many more thousands capitulated and that you can never get back. >> the media at the time, it is amazing that the gut reaction was to resist a guy getting the classified briefings. npr scientists debunk -- they use the word debunk. fact-checker, released from a lab. doubtful. anthony fauci just crushed donald trump's theory on the origins of coronavirus, and a cell phone. "the washington post," how the lab leak theory suddenly became credible. it was not sudden. should have listened to the guy getting classified presidential briefs every morning. >> i had this doctor during the last hour. he had been saying from the beginning that we needed
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american scientists on the ground at t -- wuhan lab. you mentioned that much of this is out in the open, but at the time, there were military numbers from the communist government of china outside of that lab. he said that you can see surveillance footage that showed some of the people that worked there going to the hospital as early as summer of 2019. said it was clear things were going on there. and you fast-forward to the beginning of joe biden's presidency. more people died under joe biden than under the previous presidency. that was at the height of the pandemic under term. what was going on while we weren't still getting the research and therapeutics? we needed to know the origin, because it would've helped us not only locate and find and come up with a vaccine that work for some people, but better therapeutics. name one that biden came up with, not personally but under
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his direction of the administration. he did not press for that. the final note of what we learned under him: he was not a person i could push china. feel like the liberal media was in complicit -- with him in terms of keeping us in the dark about things. that would stop accountability on his part. nobody was asking the tough questions, lab leak theory or anything else. >> and service members, the vaccine and broader public. than you think about all the times that we were lied to. no human to human transmission with covid, kids cannot go back to school. that was not scientific. then, you go back to fauci who said you don't need masks and they aren't effective. weight, was saying that for the health care providers and misleading the american public. >> i'm glad that they are making it to the surface numbers. rand paul is the chairman of the homeland security committee. dave primitive immunity
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essentially to dr. fauci. does not excuse him from coming before congress. if they give you a duly issued subpoena which i think rand paul will do -- testify. it is now donald trump's administration. he has got to come clean to that. i think there will be civil suits. i think dr. fauci's time in the sun is not done away. he will have to answer the questions. in my personal opinion, he lied to congress, and rand paul will call him up there, and this will continue on until we get there. >> the treatment of the unvaccinated was evil and wrong. i did not get the vaccine and i'm proud to have not gotten it. we look back in history and wonder how atrocities are committed. we saw it during covid to. the unvaccinated were segregated against, discriminated against, barred from entry in restaurants, denied medical care, denied the ability to travel, in some instances fired from their jobs. november of 2001 in "newsweek," at the time looking at data, had
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a 99.97% chance of survival against covid. why would i get a vaccine for a virus that's not a threat to my life when we don't know what the vaccine is going to eventually do to you down the road? the biden administration knew this as well. july of 2021, there was an outbreak in provincetown, massachusetts. 75% of the cases were vaccinated. there was also a study published that the vaccine was not stopping the tran transmission f that delta virus at the time. joe biden went out -- lying to the american people telling them you would not get covid if you got vaccinated, and to force the vaccine into the arms of americans. the people who -- didn't need the vaccine in the first place and covid was never a threat to their life. it was a shameful, evil period of time, and the need to become ability. >> next, sin city becoming trump town. the president getting a hero's welcome in las vegas -- making good on another.
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it's no wonder we have a 4.9 out 5 client satisfaction rating. ameriprise financial. advice worth talking about. ♪ ♪ >> president trump stopped in las vegas over the weekend to remind voters about one of his most memorable campaign promises: no tax on tips. >> we will get it for you. no tax on tips. no tax on tips. [cheers and applause] if you are a restaurant worker, a server, a valet, a bellhop, a bartender or one of my caddies -- i go through caddies like candy. if i play badly i always blame my caddie.
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[laughter] or any other worker who relies on tips income, your tips will be 100% yours. [cheers and applause] >> it was not all business. it was during this hour that she was sworn in and became our president last week. it has been a very busy two days for the trump administration. the president took some time to walk onto the casino. was met with a rather thunderous applause. [cheers and applause] [cheers and applause] can you imagine going to gamble and then shouting "my pronouns, usa?" >> even looking at this past
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week in office, he loves the american people. you can see why working americans voted for him. could you ever see george w. bush or mitt romney talk about no tax on tips? what i think is so significant about the no tax on tips and winning nevada for the first time since 2004 is that nevada has long been the harry reid turnout machine, the regard of -- the democrat operation. we were concerned in the last election cycle that trampled win on the issues, might be more popular than joe biden, kamala harris, but when it comes to turnout -- i think winning in nevada shows the defeat of the democrat machine. there is a lot of significance to that and celebration of him coming back to nevada, and promises made, promises kept was something he told americans he would do. >> jason, you could say with some of the decisions and the fire is, what's going on in other areas of the country, we are finding so many more violent criminals among most, as well
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illegal -- and the borders are booting them out of the country. i would say it will change the political parties of the democrats all over the place, not just in swing states, not just pockets like las vegas. it's given people this idea of you have more than one choice. >> not only is donald trump the most dynamic political leader we've ever seen, full, but he brings with him this wave of patriotism that i think is so good for the country. let's understand that donald trump is full of policy ideas that resonate with the american people. he understands blue-collar workers. he comes to southern california and says "we have --" the void that the democrats have, not only do they not have a personality, they don't have people to truly love their country and their flag, but they are void of ideas. that is the problem with the democratic party. what is their idea to make life
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in america better? they don't have them. or member kamala harris, what did she try to do? copy that idea. they try to say no tax on tips. "we came up with it." no, that was all donald trump. >> she couldn't explain it. it's the come as you are party. from a donald trump perspective, i will bring the common sense. >> and let me postulate this. if trump is able to submit the trump tax cuts. at this institute immense about a 15-25% tax break for those making between $15,100,000. cementing that legacy, adding no tax on tips, no tax on overtime, adding with security benefits. if he is able to do that, i think the trump movement is cemented for a decade or more. i believe he will be one of the most consequential presidents of our time, abraham pick his successor, and change the g.o.p. forever to be the workingman's party. >> that is an interesting concept. emily, i just wonder, will
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republicans stick together cohesively? jason, if you shake your head any harder, it's going to roll on the floor. [laughter] >> i'm saying there is a chance, y'all. [laughter] >> we talked about this prior to the election, that they g.o.p. essentially has less than a year and a half to demonstrate the efficacy of terms programs, in that they are to a united front that cannot be dismantled. it's incumbent upon them to get in gear. and just to echo, remember what trump said when he went to nevada which is "i'm here to say thank you." you can trust it with hillary clinton, biden, who never bothered going to certain states because they didn't need to, who consider themselves above the fray and some new concepts. here, trump is waiting on tips. as a former waitress, thank you. especially in the ninth circuit territory which -- back at house house tip issue. the reality is $90 billion
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hospitality industry is crippled by this. the fact that he sees them and talked about it and makes it a priority is refreshing at a minimum, but quite extraordinary for our presidents. >> democrats are searching for a new leader during the trump presidency, but kamala harris has not ruled out running again. just let it go. we will be right back.
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>> former vice president kamala harris could be planning another white house run for the presidency in 2028. she has not ruled out yet.
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she may not have stephen a. smith's vote this time around. the sportscaster and podcast host has said he feels like a fool for voting for her, and he thinks the democratic party doesn't have anyone fighting for voters. >> here's the deal. the man was impeached twice. he was convicted on 34 felony counts, and the american people still said he is closer to normal than what we see on the left. that's what they are saying. he is closer to normal. why? when you talk about the transgender community, for example. when you talk about the issues that pertain to less than 1% of the population, the democratic party came across as if it was a priority more so than any other issues. what voter can look at the democratic party at this moment and say "there is a voice for us, somebody that speaks for us. they go on capitol hill and fights the fights we want them fighting on our behalf." they didn't do that. and that is why there behind our home and that man is back in the white house. the networks are talking about
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"this is the latest." you know what that means? he's doing what he said he was going to do. >> he nailed it. the democratic party at this moment is listless. >> we shouldn't focus on them. they didn't have the us to win, and what little idea they had they could not message it. stephen a. smith is talking about the duplicity with which they were collecting money and swindling the american donors, the voters who gave to them out of that cash to do nothing but flaunt celebrities until the very last day before election. i got a whole network of -- to bend the rules and put her on s and all not extend the same invitation to donald trump. this is not just of the democratic party can bounce back. need to go someplace and talk among themselves. stephen a. smith just gave the
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answers. they aren't going to do that. the answers were clear before the election. they don't care about the american people's dollar. they don't. they will spend it for themselves in terms of donations, and they will ignore it when it's not working for you, me, or anybody else at the grocery store. they showed us who they are. i believe them. >> kamala harris according to "new york magazine" -- feels she has three options. number one is run for presidency again. please do. number two, run for governor of california, which might feel like a demotion. number three, leave electoral politics forever. >> i kind of help as a republican you would think go ahead and run, you didn't flip a single county in this country, so go ahead and try to run again. i think it will be c. i think she's out of gas. look, they lied to the american people. the democratic posters said she has a fighting chance, look how close it is. that wasn't true. it was never true. then, they had the duplicitous national media doing her
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bidding. they spent what, $1 billion and did not get it done? you get one chance at that ring and she blew it. >> there is this new budding friendship according to "new york magazine" between the kamala harris and hillary clinton, both of whom lost. i find it interesting. i don't know that that is the person that you consult. killers hillary clinton -- here is hillary clinton in the woods after her election loss. hears all the entities that hillary clinton blamed for her loss: sexism, bernie sanders, wikileaks. the list goes on. i'm not sure this is who you want to emulate. >> i think it's the best place for both of them: the woods. [laughter] with respect to stephen a. smith, i'm kind of tired of all these johnny-come-lately's. why did you vote for kamala harris in the first place? it's not like she made a compelling case for her candidacy. it's great to come to the right conclusion when it's no longer relevant for attention and purposes. i'm over that kind of thing. beyond that, the democrats don't
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have this problem. they have ideas, but their ideas are crazy, and they can't govern. i think that is the conclusion a lot of americans are coming to. you look at how mismanaged, and the terrible governing and state of california from the mayor and governor. compared to a state like florida and how governor desantis responds to the hurricanes we had there. it is night and day. even this past week, one week of the trump administration compared to the past four years of joe biden. i think we have an opportunity as republicans, particularly with donald trump in these next four years, is to show america to never go back to the democrats. they have terrible ideas, are crazy, and can't govern. >> politico had a really good piece about the 2028 democratic contenders. they noted that you are all silent except for -- on the january 6th pardon. they were silent with the elon musk hand gesture. he thought it was conspiracy theory by the media. normally, they lean into that, but they did not do that. >> which is interesting.
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i personally feel that with the democratic party suffered from was a lack of courage. a lack of any kind of integrity, people stepping out and saying "this is ridiculous. you are joking, right?" if they have learned anything, i think it would be to not be quite. as a californian and american, i sincerely hope kamala harris doesn't run for governor of california, and gets out of politics. to me, it is like tamarcus russell and the raiders, $67 million guaranteed. cut your loss. that's a sunk cost. it does not work out, goodbye. we have lost too much. there was too much collateral damage. to many american lives lost to mr. them of the boxes being checked and keep someone in the spotlight who does not deserve to be there. there's plenty of intelligent, thoughtful, and experienced people in the democratic party like schapiro, whose policies i don't agree with, but at least i wouldn't be terrified that the person who is occupying the white house is patently
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unqualified to be there. >> i think the g.o.p. is channeling forrest gump. run, kamala, run. their new calls to add president trump to an iconic american monuments. which one? next♪. eowera little something. a little something, dad? oh, umm. hi. walt rolled his 401k accounts into an empower ira and it's grown nicely. so i say, let a gramps be a gramps. okay, just promise me it doesn't make a lot of noise. (engine roars) (♪) go, baby! go! (♪) thanks, grandpa! get good at money. so you can be a little bad. empower. as your host, i have some rules. two flush maximum per bathroom visit. no games. no fun. there's a great barbeque outside. but don't touch that. meanwhile, at a vrbo... when other vacation rentals make you share your turf with a host, try one that's all yours. (♪) ♪ (slow down) ♪
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(♪) cut!!!! i get it! slow motion. slow down geographic atrophy. but we don't need gimmicks. stick to the facts. ga, the advanced form of dry amd, can irreversibly damage your vision. but syfovre is an fda-approved eye injection that gives you the power to slow ga. syfovre was proven to slow ga lesion growth over 2 years with increasing effect over time. it's the only treatment to slow ga in as few as 6 doses per year. don't take syfovre if you have an infection, or active swelling in or around your eye that may include pain and redness or are allergic to it. syfovre can cause severe allergic reactions. other serious side effects are eye infection and retinal detachments, severe inflammation of vessels in the retina which may result in severe vision loss, wet amd, eye inflammation, and an increase in eye pressure. most common side effects are eye discomfort, wet amd, small specks floating in vision, and blood in the white of the eye.
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tell your doctor right away if you have any side effects. act on facts to slow ga. ask your retina specialist about syfovre. nope! just the facts. (♪) (ominous music) (bubbles rising) (diver exhaling) (music intensifies) (diver yells) (shark roars) - whoa. (driver gasps) (car tires screech) (pedestrian gasps) (both panting) (gentle breeze) - [announcer] eyes forward. dad: donhey boss. you okay?. son: i said i'm fine.
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♪ dad: you can talk to me. son: it's been really, really hard for me.
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>> immigration crackdown underway in chicago and other major u.s. cities. criminals among illegal migrants. we will ask border czar tom homan who is here. plus, tensions between the u.s. in columbia rose when the white house faced pushback over deportation flights, columbia. what's behind the resistance? and boy have things changed. aai chinese start-up -- we are watching market points midday through trading. live as america reports. top of the hour. >> exactly a week ago this hour, we got a brand-new president, number 47 for his second term. there already calls to put his face on mount rushmore. a growing number of conservatives are pushing to add trauma to the legendary monument. they claim he's already done enough to be immortalized among the other presidents on the monument. this person says she's already filing the legislation to make
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it happen. make mount rushmore great again? >> if there is room blair, i think it would be great. i think what donald trump has done and is in the process of doing is transforming the united states of america and putting america first. >> that would be great irony after president biden stopped the fireworks display -- mount rushmore. the 250th anniversary of the country out mount rushmore with president trump's face. there is also a petition in congress to change this airports name to donald trump international airport. you have trump and reagan in d.c. that could be something special for the swamp. >> emily. >> my opinion might not be popular, but with all due respect to the dakotas, i despise mount rushmore. i hate to hold human faces into the mountains. i would be all for putting
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president trump's face on currency, which obviously, there is cryptocurrency, but put it on a quarter or whatever. the d.c. airport that i would please like to -- >> can we boo on this show? >> and you cannot -- [laughter] >> apparently you can't pick the physical structure cannot support it. the national guard service studied it. they said it's not suitable. it's no longer suitable for additional carving. i don't even know if it would be feasible at that point, but i do fully support changing the airport after president trump. they make sense because you have reagan in d.c. with dca. there's a lot of parallels between the presidents: inheriting terrible economies, instability around the world, and then building off of that, fixing those problems and going on to tons of success.
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>> i would have to dig deeper. but i have emily on a loop in my head. human faces on a mountain. >> leave the mountains alone. >> i love it. we will be right back. i had the worst dream last night. you were in a car crash and the kids and i were on our own. that's awful, hon. my brother was saying he got life insurance from ethos. and he got $2 million in coverage, all online. life insurance made easy. check your price today at ethos.com.
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i try to put my arm around any vet that i can. absolutely. at newday usa, that's what we're doing. we put our arm around the veterans. when i think of the veteran out there that needs to refi his home,
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he may want to purchase and we can help them and provide that financial solution for them and their families. it's a great, rewarding feeling. everybody in the company, they have that deference and that respect and that love for the veteran that makes this company so unique. here's an important benefit for veteran homeowners who need cash. you can take out $70,000 or more with the newday 100 va cash out loan. with home values still close to all-time highs, now's the time to turn your home equity into cash. rates on credit cards and car loans have skyrocketed. pay off those high rate cards and costly car and truck loans and save hundreds of dollars a month, thounda year. and costly car and truck loans need cash? call newday usa.
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>> happening right now, you are looking at j.d. vance in damascus, virginia, with the virginia governor. he is fulfilling a campaign promise to revisit areas hit by hurt helene, and j.d. vance promised the people of the town of damascus he would return if he became vice president. he is fulfilling that pledge. we'll monitor his movements. and before we go, i have a special event coming up this week, for my number 1 best selling book "under his wings: how faith on the front lines have protected troops," and we will be talking about the book at 2:30 at point pleasant beach high school in new jersey, and you can buy tickets to join out at thelittlepointbookshop.com. >> it's unacceptable

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