tv FOX and Friends FOX News January 28, 2025 3:00am-4:00am PST
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said it was a positive experience. >> todd: as you well know and you told me repeatedly. sometimes actors can be so convincing they are mistaken real life for a role they played in a movie. legally blond star reese witherspoon was once chosen to be a jury foreman after fellow jurors thought she actually went to law school. >> you got into harvard law? >> what, like it's hard? >> todd: that's a clip from the movie. witherspoon said she admitted to the other jurors that she did not really go law school but they still voted unanimously to make her the foreman invested in two week long dog bite trial. >> carley: shape up guilty or not? >> todd: the bend and snap works every time. >> carley: every time and "fox & friends" starts right now. ♪
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>> brian: 6:00 a.m. on the east coast. it's tuesday, january 28th this is "fox & friends." let's get started. it's an alert. shots fired across the border between cartels and law enforcement. and, if you have a problem with the trump administration's hard line immigration policies, border czar tom homan has a message. >> >> we got half a million children sex trafficked in this country where is the tears for them? >> steve: meanwhile after a humdinger of a stock market sell off, all after a chinese ai company turned wall street upside down. >> release of deepseek a.i. from a chinese company should be a wake-up call for our industries that we need to be laser focused on competing to win. >> ainsley: plus, doge is already at work. we will tell you how is cutting spending. >> lawrence: "fox & friends"
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starts right now. >> lawrence: buckle up. fox news alert. shocking drone video shows suspected mexican cartel members aiming rifles at border patrol. drone -- border patrol drone after opening up fire on agents on the u.s. side of the border. >> ainsley: that cross-border violence happening as new daily crossing numbers show the trump administration's crackdown is already working. >> steve: brooke singman has summarized it all and joins us with this report this morning. brooke? >> brooke: good morning, guys. new video being released by texas dps chris olivares on x last night. this footage taken after suspected mexican cartel members trading gunfire with u.s. border patrol agencies near fronten texas monday afternoon as a group of migrants tried internet country illegally. that's according to law enforcement sources. no injuries were reported. the new administration's border crackdown is already showing results on monday ice made 1200 arrests and launched another 853
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ice detainer. and in denver yesterday. dei agents finding and removing 134,000 fentanyl pills off the streets while also arresting two illegal immigrants suspected cartel ties. and president trump's enforcement surge at the border leading to a dramatic drop in migrant encounters. multiple sources telling our bill melugin that border patrol recorded only 582 illegal crossings at the southern border on sunday. with not a single one of the nine sectors breaking 200. that is in sharp contrast to the 1200 to 1400 daily average in biden's final week in office or 11,000 plus back in 2023. meanwhile new dhs secretary kristi noem will address her staff for the very first time this afternoon. she will deliver her vision for the agency, that will be key in delivering president trump's immigration crackdown. guys? >> steve: brooke, thank you very much. >> brian: the most telegraphed
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move 'by any nation in the country. first thing crack down on the border even donald trump mentioned yesterday. people were talking about all the things i'm going to do. the thing that people are most excited about is when he talked about crushing the border. getting it back to security. and hitting on so many different levels now. steve, yesterday, we talked about 700 people coming across. who is those 700? we're down to 500 now. this is getting -- the message being sent all over. they pride themselves on knowing americans -- american politics better than americans. that's why they flood the border with their biden t-shirts four years ago that's this is why different now. >> ainsley: crazy in december of 2023 the highest point of crossings that they were seeing 4,000 a day at the rio -- at the del rio sector. >> brian: just one sector. >> ainsley: exactly. this day that it was recorded, when was that? sunday? only 60. we went from 4,000 at the height under joe biden to 60. only 60 under donald trump.
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>> lawrence: there is a full surge at the border when it documents resources. you got the military that are there. by the way the rifles they had at one point they did not have bullets in them. they have bullets in them now. hornets are there the drones as well are there. >> brian: i don't know that about bullets what do you mean? >> lawrence: 100 percent. they are armed now. used to be a show of force meaning those national guardsmen really didn't have bullets in those rifles. it was always made fun of that this was more of a deterrence mechanism. because of this administration now, it was the same way when trump was the first time. they are armed and they are ready to go. >> steve: they are. and, you know, it's just refreshing to see okay, the cartels are going to shoot at us. we are going to return fire. that's something new. you know, there's no doubt everybody is paying attention to what is going on on our southern border. and if you are paying a cartel these days to come in, you might as well just light your money on fire because you're not going to make it. selena gomez, the famous actress
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who was in only murders in the building, recording star and stuff like that, she has deep roots to texas. she put out on her instagram story yesterday her emotions. and she is very emotional about what is going on on our southern border. it has made a lot of headlines. she has since deleted her. >> brian: of course. embarrassment. >> steve: her reel. ice's top guy. tom homan saw it and responded. so he put them together so you see celina and then tom talk about what is going on down south. >> my people are getting attacked. the children. i don't understand. i'm so sorry. i wish i could do something but i can't. i don't know what to do. i will try and be there. >> a quarter million americans
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dead from fentanyl across the border. where is the tears from them. i met with hundreds of angel moms and dads separated from their children because they buried them because they were killed by illegal american. sex trafficked in this country. put in the hands of criminal cartels, to be smuggled in the country. this administration can't find over 300,000. where is the courage for them? >> i just commend tom homan for staying out front because he knows part of the reason part of the things they got to do is not only do what they are supposed to do secrets military plane. there is the roundup. who is doing it? ice, atf. where are they doing it? we will tell you any time you want to bring a reporter with you, you can do it. bill melugin is on the scene, dr. phil the next day. is he coming to new york today. in force multifaceted. you want to talk to me about it. collins last night on cnn. people talking about how
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expensive it is. oh, the military planes are more expensive than private jets. really? now you are worried about money? you are worried about this is security? but if you are really that concerned maybe you could do some more price comparisons? i think it's a nonissue. i just commend them for an understanding that optics farther matter. guatemala and columbia to see what about when they get on the ground. on the ground is they're out. some of them said they are coming right back. >> j.d. vance had the same defense when he was interviewed on the sunday shows. stop focusing on these children. focus on the crime that they are bringing in to america. brooke was talking about our borders, and in the denver area, 130,000 fentanyl pills were seized along with other drugs like cocaine and me meth and heroin. how many lives did that save? i feel sorry for celina when she has been crying because she has been very public about bipolar
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disorder. i bet her publicist or parents called and said you need to take this down. she needs to focus and hear the stories about the people we interview. the angel moms and dads as tom was saying had lost their kids, had to bury their kids because someone came across the country illegally. how many car accidents reported on where illegal driver kills a baby. kills a family. whose are the stories that donald trump is hearing and wants to focus on. there is two parts to this and i'm glad ainsley you mentioned. i did not know struggled with a disorder. >> steve: it was special. >> ainsley: documentary. >> lawrence: that's not normal to post a phone and start crying in want from of the people people don't do that on a day-to-day basis. i'm praying for her when it comes to the mental, you know, aspect that she going through. the second part of this is that she is being fed like many americans a lot of propaganda about what's going on. ice is not going out there just
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going to every community asking every immigrant, illegal migrant for their paper. that's not what is happening, these are targeted operations, these are people that are v. overstayed their visas. these are people that have final deportation orders. and i also think about the nungaray family who are mexican-americans i interviewed. they are imgreants. they love their people. they love america as well. illegal came over the border and raped their daughter and tried to drown her to hide the evidence. what about a video crying about that family? >> steve: you know, maybe selena gomez doesn't know the other side of the story. >> lawrence: of course. >> steve: a lot of people don't know the other side. that's one of the reasons why you need to look around and get all your news from various things so can you put together a big picture for her to put that out. 422 million followers. >> brian: absolutely. >> steve: half a billion people saw that message before she took it down.
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>> brian: that's why it was so good for tom homan to go out. big story happening yesterday with china. came out with deepseek 3 the day after christmas. people in the a.i. community said wait a second. i think they caught us. what happened yesterday shows they are ahead of us. >> ainsley: so what happened yesterday? this chinese a.i. company called deepseek it launched a week ago. it it's now the number one downloaded on the app. store because they are hailing it as better. cheaper, more efficient than chatgpt, and it's owned by the chinese. and the chinese company only spent, they say $5.6 million because they are using chips that are less expensive. >> steve: the company says it is 20 to 50 times cheaper than open a.i. that's why the cover of the "new york post" says red alert. and it talks a little bit, it mentioned this is china's -- chinese a.i.'s sputnik moment. essentially what they put out in the last week when they announced it is hey, united
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states, you have been doing a.i. with the really expensive, the nvidia chips. we can do it so much cheaper. and that's why there was a gigantic sell off. nvidia lost something like three quarters of a trillion dollars. they're still worth $3 trillion. nonetheless, this is something that president trump did talk about last night down at doral and said okay, they might be ahead of us if true, but we can catch them. watch. >> the release of deepseek a.i. from a chinese company should be a wake-up call for our industries that we need to be laylaser focused greatest scientists in the world. seattle and various places. but sim con valley they said there is nobody like those people. this is very unusual when you hear a deepseek somebody come up
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with something. we always have the ideas. we are always first. i would say that's a positive. that could be very much a positive development. instead of spending billions and billions spend less and come up with the same solution. we are going unleash our tech companies and dominate the future like ever before. >> lawrence: chinese have a reputation of stealing technology and making it better. question i think that is out there. are we going to be laser focused on beating them? and putting restrictions in place so they don't steal technology. the large market we make everything there. we are at a disadvantage. >> brian: couple of things. i the way i understand it and kurt comutsson out here shortly all our technology is open. chatgpt and google. everyone is competing this is
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what we did and this is what we have. china goes okay. can i make it better. they are not is starting from zero and we are not hiding our stuff. that's a mistake. working on our own lanes and chantd microsoft compete with the world. the fact that we are keeping it open. this is a sputnik moment says david sacks' a.i. group with the government. he said i think they are looking at this as trump is. game on. so, start competing start suppression of the biden administration who they say they were controlled about things getting out of control diabolical means. now it says go compete. when you tell america to compete we will win but now we are all moving in the same direction and now we can go, you see what i was telling you? we put the guardrails on and our rival is beating us. so get ahead of it. >> steve: i look at it a little
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more skeptically. donald trump inaugurated last monday, right? a couple days later this comes out? suddenly this comes out and makes china look fantastic? do you think that is a coincidence? keep in mind this company that is behind it is a hedge fund. what do hedge funds know about ai guy on twitter and x his name is chris carmelo. he said the likelihood the deepseek $7 billion hedge fund parent is shorting nvidia and considering this into their decision to open source their model while emphasizing $5 million trading cost. essentially there are a lot of theories out there. we don't know that that is happening. but that is one of the things people are talking about. i think the time something crazy. >> brian: i'm not seeing it. >> ainsley: i will tell you what i think. i don't think the price is $6 million. 5.6 million. there's no way. >> steve: we don't know.
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>> ainsley: oracle and open ai pledged to spend 500 billion for star gate. how are they doing it so cheaply in china? maybe they are lying about the number and not paying their workers. as we know they do with the uyghurs. it seems a little skeptical. i agree with you maybe my reason is different. 6 million versus what? 500 million? >> steve: it all comes down to the chips in the united states we use really advanced nvidia chips. that's why joe biden restricted their flow into china. for china suddenly to say we didn't need your stinkin' chips we got our own cheaper chips. that's been an earthquake if true. >> brian: you doubt the validity of it? you doubt the validity of whether that's good? >> steve: i said the time something interesting. i think part of it is to make the incoming trump administration oh, look at that hey, don't forget china. don't forget china. >> brian: i think it helps sell their story and helps david
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sacks' group and joe alonzo dale and all these guys say look. there is urgency here. take the guardrails off. let me compete. here is the thing that links with tiktok. if you put into this artificial intelligence device questions like what happened during 1989 to tiananmen square protest? nothing. sorry, that's beyond my current scope. let's talk about something else. really? i thought you were artificially intelligent. or are you using chinese intelligence in is president xi a good leader? story that's beyond my current scope, let's talk about something else. >> tell me about the uyghurs, sorry, i can't understand. see what they're saying. if they become more powerful and we let them lead and the belt and road let them go that's going to be the template what everybody believes. that's what tiktok is doing with next generation of americans through news feed anti-taiwan. anti-american. anti-israel news.
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>> steve: the fact it's been described as sputnik moment, all of our u.s. technology is focused on a.i. right now. all the money is going toward a.i. and for china to and really it is china, chinese company, hedge fund company coming out and saying hey, united states, you are spending all that money and we are kicking your butt. see, it's a competition thing. but i think it's also a messaging thing. hey, donald trump, do you think you can push china around? we are beating you at your own game. >> competition without guardrails as well. because the chinese government. i think to brian's point, we have to make a decision in america. guardrails in there or unleash them we need the best people that are in this space to create these codes for a.i. and i don't think we were focused on that enough in the
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past. >> ainsley: tiktok, a.i. and the panama canal they control the ports on both sides. >> brian: red alert moment. this is why trump was relaxed yesterday saying it. so when i bring up a.i. and i want to focus on it and bring these really smart byes together. it's not because i like hanging out with billionaires. i want to consolidate. let them compete and regulate because very few understand it and i want also want to give them something to shoot for. that's the rabbit. go get it. i'm like you. i don't trust that they actually spend $5.6 million. but the fact is that they are even equal with us, which we should have known on december 26th when they came out with deepseek v 3. that was equal to us. and we didn't pay attention to it because i don't know we are on vacation or the markets didn't react. well the markets reacted
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yesterday bounce back. shocked that nvidia had four of the biggest losses in single days come from nvidia. because they had big gains and big losses. >> steve: if this is so good. explain why yesterday, it got hacked. large scale malicious attack these said so they are limiting the number of new registrants so if it's so good. you know, the people are looking at today going i'm not so sure that it all depends on if it's real. >> lawrence: let the competition begin. >> ainsley: hand it over to carley for headlines. >> carley: good morning to you guys. got some news to get to here. three people are dead including a suspected gunman including a shooting inside an indiana grocery store. two eckhart police officers were hurt in a shootout with a suspect. one is now out of the hospital. the other remains in stable condition. police say the motive is still unknown and there is no threat to the public. and in washington, the justice department has fired more than a dozen key officials who worked
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on former special counsel jack smith's team that prosecuted president trump. the names and exact number let go is not quite clear yet. a doj official says the acting attorney general, quote: does not trust these officials to assist and faithfully implementing the president's agenda. smith was appointed special counsel by former a.g. garland in 2022. he pursued charges against trump in both the classified documents and election interference cases. the senate voting 58-29 to confirm scott bessent to trump's treasury secretary with 16 democrats voting in favor. meanwhile transportation secretary nominee sean duffy is expected to be confirmed today after advancing with unanimous support during the committee process. if confirmed, he will be the fifth of trump's cabinet picks to get the senate's seal of approval. and if you are planning on heading down to the big easy for the big game. get ready for a big dent in your
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wallet. according to ticketing company victory live, a seat at this year's super bowl will cost you an average of over $9,000. that's nearly a 20% jump from last year's game in investigation. if you needif investigation. hotel rooms will cost $1,800 per night. if you don't want to shell out that type of dough though and who would want to do that, watch the game from comfort of your own home sunday, february 9th only on fox. that's the way to watch the game because you c you can eat your n snacks. >> brian: it's going to be exciting and maybe on a selfish note to see tom brady call the super bowl that he dominated for basically 20 years. and to see him on the other side and feel that moment but not with eye black on i think is going to be fantastic. and i also think it's going to be number one new orleans got an interesting challenge. two weeks ago they are in the middle of a huge terror attack and how are they going to respond to everyone coming back
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to new orleans. >> has tom brady said anything how anticipating it's going to be? championship game. >> steve: i hope he has a room. because it's going to be very expensive. making $300 million. but, i hope he has got a room. >> brian: play by play guy. >> lawrence: i just enjoyed his development. of course calling the game. versus playing is totally different and as the season progressed, he got so much more comfortable. started to give you more color to what it was like when he was a quarterback as well. so him doing it for a super bowl because he is -- isn't he the most-i he has the most super bowls of any quarterback? >> steve: yeah. >> brian: never done three in a row. >> ainsley: did you all get the fox super bowl gift? >> steve: >> lawrence: i did a microphone? >> ainsley: grab it and play it some point during the show. push play and tom brady has a message. >> lawrence: no i did not know that.
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>> ainsley: push a button. >> brian: i thought i was getting an award. julia edleman super bowl championship with the new england patriots is going to be with us, too. julian was on also the special forces show. >> steve: this is an interesting little tid bit. i was down at an event in palm beach county a couple of weeks ago. tom rouhani used to be congressman. part of the rouhani family. part of that dynasty, the football dynasty. >> brian: pittsburgh steelers? >> steve: exactly. we were talking about super bowls. who has the most super bowl rings. he told me a member of the rooney mara family. she has 11 super bowl rings because the families involved around marriage mara family is the giants. >> ainsley: next sanctuary city where deportation efforts will
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begin as ice be cracks down in chicago.s is update from the windy city, next.ea ♪r. (♪) now this is taxes. file free in the app by 2/18 when you switch to turbotax do-it-yourself ♪ ♪ three little birds ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ tons of sweet dentists on zocdoc. dr. stafford's a real beauty. and people say he's passionate about dentistry! dr. taylor's on thirty-third street... we could practically skate there! booked it! sweet! you've got options.
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continue in chicago. this as over 1200 illegal immigrants who were charged or convicted with committing crimes on american soil are detained nationwide. ice chicago office officer sam olson has been on the ground working directly with border czar tom homan kind enough to join us now. thank you so much forking the program. >> thank you very much for having me. >> lawrence: tell us how does this process work? how do you find these people and tell us some of the folks have you been able to capture so far? >> sure. yeah. it's kind of an arduous process, right? it it's we are in a difficult situation here in chicago because a lot of of the targets that we're looking at were previously arrested by local or state authorities and we have place holds on many of them and they were released from the facility into the communities again. so we have to go through, you know, spend a lot of hours researching where they are living and then actually go out into the their environment to
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try to arrest them. >> lawrence: special agent just to put this in context for our audience these folks not only didn't just commit crimes in their home country but they came to america and committed crimes here as well. right? >> that is correct. yeah. we have had many targets here that have really kind of egregious convictions for sexual assault, for murder, for aggravated battery. drug possession. we have arrested gang members so far. so, yeah, there is just a litany of criminal convictions that the targets that we have arrested have. >> lawrence: special agent i was able to see some of the footage that you have. i saw not only ice which is probably leading this effort but i saw dea as well as atf for joint task force. but i also was told that you have a doj attorney to make sure you guys are doing this by the book. so tell us about that. why do you have someone with the doj to make sure square. >> it's really been amazing so
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far in this administration. the support that we have been getting. this is essentially like unprecedented whole of government approach that we're experiencing. yeah. because along with ice, both in enforcement removal operations and homeland security investigations, we have agents from atf, dea, u.s. marshals. and the fbi out here. and along with attorneys from doj and attorneys from our own ice offices. it's been amazing support we are getting because some things that have been difficult to coordinate before because there are so many different agencies we have been able to get everybody in the same room and get real time updates. real time intelligence and real time advice to make sure that we're doing this the right way. >> lawrence: you know, special agent task force difficult for agents on the ground very dangerous. especially people that have nothing to lose because they know they are going to be deported. i want to talk about. so criticism from some of the people in the media as well as some people that may have different political views.
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they are saying that you guys are targeting people in schools, trying to break up communities, what would you say to those folks that don't really understand how this task force works? >> right. what we're doing is we are targeting the worst first, right? that's who we are getting. we are focusing on those targets. we're not targeting people in schools. we're not targeting people in churches. we are targeting people who are the worst. you know, there is a chance they are going to go to some of those places and this administration has taken some of the handcuffs off of us. we are leaving the discretion with our officers and our officers are trained to make good decisions out there and we support them. that's the one thing we have to realize these officers now when we could have arrested somebody at a safe facility, right, a jail or core lockup with one or two officers now we have to go out into the streets. now most of our teams are at least 10 agents and officers trying to arrest one individual. >> lawrence: you know, special agent you have a tough day
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today. i don't want to tip off the criminals but what's the plan for the day? >> just like in the past going forward we will have multiple teams out in the field in multiple cities looking for the worst of the worst. >> lawrence: special agent. thank you for all that you do. see your vest on. keep it on and give my best to all the other agents that are there on the ground. >> i appreciate it. thanks for the time. i appreciate the support and just thanks for helping us tell our story. >> lawrence: you got it, brother. take care. so president trump reinstating thousands of troops who were discharged for not taking the covid jab. we hear from one of them, next. inspire? inspire is a sleep apnea treatment that works
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york and new england. quick burst of snow that can cause whiteout conditions. so that's going to be a problem. and then we have the lake-effect snow machine that's up and running bringing more snow to these areas that have seen feet and feet and feet all season long. and that's going to be ongoing and see an additional 1 feet to 2 feet especially for parts of upstate new york and michigan. zooming on in. buffalo, water town usual places that get lake-effect snow but they have seen a lot. next storm system moves out of the rockies. potential for severe storms. going to be a slow mover. not only severe weather. could see the potential for very heavy rain and of course flooding. this is the area that got the snow storm, right? additional snow melt will cause the potential for more flooding and there's the severe storm threat wednesday, thursday, again hail, damaging, winds we could see isolated tornadoes and quite a bit of rainfall that could cause flash flooding. the other big story is the temperatures. i mean we are talking about march, april reminiscent
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temperatures. highs in the 50's and 60's for some of these areas that were in to the deep freeze last week. all right. ainsley, over to you. >> ainsley: okay. thank you so much, janice. >> janice: of course. >> ainsley: president trump signing executive order to reinstate disharngd members for refusing the covid vaccine. >> finally offer full reinstatement to any service member expelled from the armed forces due to the covid vaccine mandate. and we will restore them to their former rank with full pay. i think we will have a lot of people to join. >> ainsley: our next guest resigned from the u.s. army in 2021 over that vaccine mandate after serving multiple deployments as an officer since 2002. doug hague joins us now. thank you for your service. i'm sure you feel so vindicated, validated now. what was your reaction when you heard that donald trump was going to do this? i think me like many others were
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ecstatic about it at the idea the potential to rejoin the service. active duty service. my career my entire adulthood. and you know, i lost that and now there is the potential to regain it now. so very appreciative. i'm thankful that president trump made these promises early on and following through with them. >> ainsley: why did you decide not to get the vaccine and why didn't you seek an exemption like a religious one? >> yeah. so, i didn't -- i have never been a big fan of the vaccines. i don't think they were, you know, they proved themselves, especially this one. it was new technology there is s lot of unknowns about it. i think there was plenty of reason to wait and see. see how this played out with the vaccine and the validity of it. so i didn't want to get the
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vaccine. i made it clear early on in my, you know, before the mandate actually to my leadership that i was not planning to get it once it was mandated i told them i wasn't going to and i submitted my resignation. i could have possibly submitted exemptions for medical or religious reasons but i really didn't feel like i had any valid reason for that i felt the best thing for me to do was to leave. they gave us an ultimatum. they said you can either take the vaccine or you cannot be in the army anymore. and i felt like the right path for me was to depart. that sets me apart a little bit. >> ainsley: yes. go ahead. >> i was going to say that sets me apart a little bit i think from a lot of the rest of these supposedly 8,000 service members that are likely going to be reinstated or offered the opportunity for reinstatement because i think that those are probably ones that were
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adversely separated or discharged from the military versus me, i wasn't in the same boat. i submitted a resignation. i made it very clear the have reason was i -- did i lose my job because of that of not getting the jab? absolutely. i do think that i am someone who should be reinstated? absolutely. but i don't think i'm automatically on that list. >> ainsley: if you are, will you go back in? >> i believe so. i will have to consider it. i think there will be a lot of nuances. does it come with a service obligation? what are the criteria? how do they do that? so, i will look at the options. but me personally i love the idea of going back to the service. this is what i'm passionate about. >> ainsley: well. i can't believe it that joe biden took the love the army away from you and so many others. 8,000. officer in the army. completed airborne school. ranger school. you served as infantry officer and communications officer for our country two deployments to
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iraq. one in kuwait. and then you rejoined as a drilling reservist when the mandate was dropped. you were two years away from retirement. thank you so much lt. colonel for your service. i hope you are able to be reinstated and you get that backpay. you deserve it? >> thank you very much. >> ainsley: you are welcome. god bless you. a new chinese a.i. entertaining popularity here in the united states. and it's shaking up the entire tech world. kurt the cyberguy with what you need to know, next at ameriprise financial, we know our clients are so much more than clients. they're go-getters and game-changers, legacy-leavers and visionaries, healers and confidants. the goals that matter most to you matter most to us. helping you achieve them is what we do best. with personal financial advice from an advisor you can trust, and goal-based investing and solutions. it's no wonder we have a 4.9 out of 5 client satisfaction rating.
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>> carley: welcome to "fox and trends." tom talking about decision to move from california to the canadian. the 53-year-old actor telling the "new york times" he is quote not just a hollywood guy and felt like he wasn't being true to himself while living in l.a. he is promoting new documentary aptly name this is the tom green documentary. my house. and well i sold it. i moved to the country in canada. a farm not far from my hometown. that's my dog charlie. and i'm making a documentary about my life. green started his career on
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public access in canada before rocketing to stardom on mtv in 1999. sometimes actors can be so convincing they are mistaken in real life for the roles they have played. >> you got into harvard law? >> what? like it's hard? >> carley: reese witherspoon revealing how her character in legally blonde impacted her while serving jury duty. watch. >> so at the very end they say obligor well, okay somebody in this group has tore the foreman they are all unanimously like her, me, me. and i was like why did you pick me they said you went to law school. [laughter] >> carley: she didn't actually go to law school herself but she did famously play harvard's law student elle woods in the 21 film and of course hilarious sequel. first lady melania trump striking power pose in white house portrait. seen leaning forward with a business suit with her hands
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rested on a table. the washington monument towers in the background. >> this was taken the day after president trump's inauguration. the black and white snapshot taken by the same recover from who took melania's 2017 white house portrait seen here on the right. president trump and vice president j.d. vance official portraits have also been released. those are your headlines. brian, over to you. >> brian: thanks so much for that hollywood minute or two. >> carley: or three. >> brian: a new chinese artificial intelligence app. shaking up the tech world and stock market. the u.s. is winning the tech race. deepseeks a.i. assist app. jumped to the top of the apple app. store and wiped a trillion dollars off the u.s. stock market. kurt the cyberguy joins us now. what is it about this that rocked us. >> kurt: time something number one. so have you this huge innovation where the chinese have developed essentially, which it's like a very similar product that open
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a.i.'s chatgpt. where we can prompt, asking something like who is brian kilmeade? or solve -- how do i garden in my backyard with this much space? it answers complex, reasoned questions that you ask it. so this was done the copy they did called deepseek was done with 200 people in a room without the necessary computing power that come from the world giant nvidia. >> brian: they saved 6 million bucks. >> kurt: probably what it costs. i don't know if that's true or not. it couldn't have cost that much. but here it is that they figured out how to make something that we're saying in the u.s. is going to require data farms, massive investments, and huge computing power for it. and they did it without the need for any of that. >> brian: kurt, they say deepseek needed 2,000 chips the open a.i. that we have has 16,000 chips. >> it's like somebody -- i'm
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trying to get an analogy here. they figured out how to power a train to move across the country with like one d cell battery. they just really have advanced computing power as it relates to a.i. and language models, this is a profound move forward. and the timing to me is suspicious. because at the same time, it is what it is on a consumer level. flight it's a breakthrough and on a technical level it's a breakthrough. what does it mean economically? it was -- look at the timing of this. this came out right now. just as president trump takes office. and i'm sure it didn't happen overnight. but it was introduced literally on the day of the inauguration. >> brian: what it does it s. unleash a.i. executives saying too many guardrails on us unleash us to compete. i know there is danger. >> kurt: that will be a very goodening from this. >> brian: that's what i got
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yesterday from the states from mark andreasen and others. >> that is going to be a very big effect. to put guardrails on may be smart but it's also stupid because you're not going to be able to compete with china if you're holding people back. >> brian: here's the problem. if china becomes the number one source and become leading in a.i. like they are in take. look at some of the questions you could ask this artificial intelligence. things like what is tiananmen square? who is president xi? they can't answer these questions? i'm sure anything with taiwan will be like that is part of china and russia is. >> censorship is big can w. deepseek. it is china. it is sinced. that's the roll of the government you don't talk bad about us. it's a law. they are complying with that law. ask his or her ho brian kilmeade is they gave me a pretty good answer along the lines that chatgpt. >> brian: came out one word green just.
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flattering. also same thing with take. it's a great algorithm. news feed very pro-china. i'm not comfortable with that. >> kurt: big difference with tiktok and deepseek open source, meaning they made it, here it is, you can use it any way you want, and it's not tied back to servers like tiktok. >> brian: thanks so much. kurt, great to see you. so much more to talk about. >> kurt: cyberguy.com a story. >> brian: have that in a second. all right. great more "fox & friends" in a moment.
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