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tv   FOX and Friends Saturday  FOX News  June 16, 2012 6:00am-10:00am EDT

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>> good morning, everybody. we start with a resounding oy although thanks for joining us so early. we have a lot to talk about. when the president comes out and drops a bombshell on friday and makes a lot of news. you know we're going to have a important show on saturday. >> kind of gold for us on saturday morning. talking about the immigration policy of course which some people say is a completed about face for this administration things the president has said in the past. what is it? it's going to basically allow over 800,000 individuals living in the united states a two-year sort of pass that they won't be deported in that two year window. >> stop the deportation, start issuing work permits. the real key is who needs congress? we're not going to try to get
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legislation on this issue. this is the president making a political play a couple months out from an election and saying i don't need congress and he says the right thing to do. >> it makes no sense to expel talented young people who for all intents and purposes are americans have have been raised as americans, they want to expel supreme that want to start labs, defend our country simply because of the actions of their parents or because of the inaction of politicians. >> all right. so who are these young people that the president is talking about? well, they are illegal immigrants who were brought to this country before the age of 16 by their parents. they are currently under 30 years old and they have continuously lived in the u.s. for five years prior to today. basically. >> they also have been in school continuously. they have a high school
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graduation, a g.e.d., or they have served in the military, which is also a key component of this. and they have a clean record. no criminal history. bill o'reilly last night saying he thinks this policy is humane and fair. listen. >> vote. he he desperately needs. as for the policy, how you can blame kids when they're dragged to the u.s.a. from wherever? if you are a fair person, you can't. not the child's fault immigration laws are broken. it's the parents who did it thus the new policy is humane. >> did the question set a bear trap for governor romney? >> no question about it. it was to go to those swing states, florida, nevada, colorado, that have high hispanic voter turnout. and also to put the republics in a corner to your point. what do you do? how do you oppose this if you mitt romney? you know marco rubio has at least some form of a dream act in the making that would do something close to this.
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>> romney said he would come out against t. >> he already has terrible numbers with the latino numbers. >> they supported governor brewer. >> not just to put romney in a corner but to preempt marco rubio. he was going to be announcing his plan. he didn't want the president, people pundits say didn't want marco rubio to steal his thunder. he come out and got a jump before marco rubio was able to. rush limbaugh has otherwise own take on what motivated the president which he believes is pure politics. >> i have a name for this new obama immigration policy. no. in case you haven't heard from very quickly, the regime today told the border agents if you catch young illegals, let them go and grant them work permits. in more deportation of illegal immigrants. they are to be given work
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permits and they can stay in the country. so, what this is is catch, release, vote. you know what advises me about this? is he using up his political ammo pretty early here. i know he is going to go talk to -- i don't know, la raza or some latino group next week. but i'm telling you what, if you had any doubt that people are paying attention forget it they obviously are. the president is in full panic mode. he is not keeping his powder dry until the fall. is he not -- because people are paying attention. and we don't like what we're seeing or what we're getting from obama. >> we're back from the break. how duo pose this procedurally? the president had two years.
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he had the numbers in the house and the senate. he promised to make immigration a priority in his first term and he did not. he did nothing about it and now a couple months out, clearly a political play. >> politics. >> he had the numbers to do this with congress the proper way. >> actually now, you are right. but now many of those same people who did support the dream act aren't in congress anymore. is he going it alone. congress is not going to do anything up until election time. now it does put republicans in an interesting position. puts mitt romney in an interesting position as rush limbaugh was talking about. they are about to meet with a large group of latino voters and latino leaders next week it was all politically timed. >> both romney and obama same group contrast their positions. romney we will get to his reaction later he said in part it makes it difficult to reach a long term solution. >> by the way that's exactly what president obama said a year ago when he met with univision. he said i can't just do this
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by executive order. it would make it ultimately harder long term. what has changed. >> he became a president. >> he was president. that was in 2011. >> it was during debate, right. >> a year ago he also spoke to a univision audience i can't just do this by executive order. >> that changed the election is close mitt romney is neck and neck that's what that is all about. >> more troubling allegations this morning of secret service misconduct over the past 8 years. the department of homeland security releasing a 229 page report. the new shocking claims include an alleged sexual assault, a complaint that an agent was involved with a prostitution ring and a bizarre claim that an agent implanted a chip in a victim's brain. well, the report comes after the secret service prosecution scandal of colombia the agency says the report, quote, simply reflects an intake log. house oversight committee
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chairman darrell issa now considering postponing contempt of congress vote against embattled attorney general. he will halt the vote if the justin department submits for records about the botched fast and furious gun smuggling operation. he says the number of documents may not be enough to end the congressional probe. he will meet with holder and senator chuck grassley as soon as tuesday and needs the documents before then. holder said he would meet with issa and turn over emails in extraordinary. the contempt vote scheduled for wednesday. there is brand new video this morning out in colorado where waging wildfire has now destroyed 112 homes and scorched more than 52,000 acres. firefighters traveling were all over the country to help put the blaze out. right now they have only managed to maintain 20% of it could be weeks before the flames are completely extinguished and let back into their homes. he called it a dream come true. nic with a linda first person
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in history to walk a tight rope across the entire spans of the niagara falls. praying outloud as he walked across the 2-inch wide cable battling whipping winds and water along the way. about 35 minutes and 1800 feet later, he was on the other side in canada where officials jokingly asked to see his passport. people are really getting across the border in unusual ways nowadays. wallenda comes from a long way circus performers called the flying wallendas grand canyon. >> no wind there either. >> father passed away 30 years ago trying to attempt to do the very same thing. >> great grandfather. he comes from a long line of dare devils in his family. >> it's in his blood. >> meanwhile, your tax dollars hard at work. as always, senator tomko burn likes to comb through the
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budget and figure out where billions of your tanks pair dollars are being wasted he found a couple of winners this year says the senator. >> these are sort of jaw-dropping when you think that our taxpayer dollars are going to things like this. blue diamond growers. in 2009, they had $709 million of taxpayer money received was $28 million. >> here is what is shocking about this. almond growers. they made a big profit as clayton just said. they made something like $700 million in 2009. yet, they still were eligible for the federal government subsidy that helps them promote and advertise their product. why are the taxpayers paying for something when they have their own money to spend on this. >> intrants to new narcotics. that helps us explore markets and trade balance and their milk is delicious. >> almond milk.
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>> harry potter harry potter cause can you see the cotton council was next on the map here. international taxpayer money received. look at this. and then $20 million in 2011 for let's design. >> even though they have made again 169 million over the past decade. i mean, dave, to your point, so you think that they could not open up over overseas marks with just their own profits, with their own money? taxpayers have to help them? tomko burn have to disagree with that. >> to keep mentioning the few we are seeing here sunkist sales $1.2 billion a year. money received 3 to 4 million annually. 34.1 million since 1999. do you think our money should be spent to promote products in overseas markets? >> cheese. >> one argument i would add in their favor is we get a lot of that money back in tax revenue
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if those production are successful in overseas markets then we get a little money back. >> the other argument isn't that just the cost of doing business you? are trying to pedal a product around the world, spend your own money on the advertising. i mean, why are tax payrolls. >> just being devil's advocate. >> i know you devil. >> chees. >> cheese. >> cheese. in any conversation. >> makes everything. >> consummate dot bubble above clayton's head. >> it makes everything better. president's policy to allow young illegals to stay in the united states. is this move just an election year ploy? we're going to ask arizona congressman david schweikart next about that. >> small businesses are hurting so badly some owners are going without pay. just how well is the private sector doing? we'll explore that coming up. ♪ s
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>> welcome back, everybody. president obama says the administration will stop deporting hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants who came to the u.s. as young children and give them work permits. >> it's not a permanent fix. this is a temporary stop gap measure that let's us focus our resources wisely while giving a degree of relief and hope to talented, driven, patriotic young people. >> so that plan would offer up to 800,000 illegal immigrants immunity and now some lawmakers are outraged over the president's congressional bypass. is this an election ploy joining us now to weigh in is arizona congressman david schweikart. thanks for getting up so early
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with us. >> no, it's my idea of fun,. >> you are still up. >> yeah. i have just given up that thing called sleep. >> right, overrated. let's get to the point. okay. so let's assume that this is political what bothers you most about what the president did yesterday? >> yeah, assuming this is political is the easy part. this is cynical and political. but if you even take one step backwards to the mechanics, the bypassing of congress do you realize this isn't executive order. the president sprinkles magic fairy dust on homeland security and they just reinterpreted the law or at least their willingness not to enforce it this is incredibly cynical. >> i understand the attack of the process because in fact the president had two years where he had the majority of in house and the senate he could have done it through legislation. there are some concerns voiced
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by jan brewer the governor of arizona that it could hurt the economy. it could cost local jobs because there is 800,000 people now competing with 14 million out-of-work americans. how concerned are you about that aspect? >> the economic side is absolutely one of the things we are fixated on. but it's even beyond that okay. did you just add 800,000 more job seekers into the first tier of employment? you know, young people. but also did you create a cascade of unintended consequences? what if you are 31 years old and now are you running around trying to find documents? are you trying to find stolen documents? how about if you were dropped out of high school but you're talented, you aren't eligible. the unintended consequences here. this just isn't well thought out and it's just so blatantly political. and for those of us -- go ahead.
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>> on the flip side. this is a thorny issue that has bedeviled presidents from ronald reagan to george w. bush now president obama. didn't somebody have to do something? is this not a start? >> no. this isn't the way you start something. because think about what they have done. they have created sort of this loophole we are going to look the other way. if you make an application, we will give you a job, you know, visa. a work visa. but two years later, it all blows up again. so, one more time this administration did something very cynical, very political and kicked the can down the road for two years. >> there are some concerns, congressman, that it could at least in the short-term lead to enormous wave of illegals coming over the border that see an opportunity here. how concerned are you about the impact down the road the next couple of years? >> well, and this is not hyperbole, look, i'm in arizona, every year we lose
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lives of people coming across the desert in our summer. did the president just scream out run for the border? that's a legitimate concern. i have actually spoken to law enforcement who are very worried that we have just created an incentive for more people to try to cross our desert in the middle of this summer. >> congressman david schweikart from arizona you certainly know immigration issues there. thanks so much for joining us this morning. >> thank you, all. >> thank you. we should add the supreme court expected to add soon on the supreme court immigration plan. coming up, no work and no pay. some forced to go without a paycheck just to stay afloat. up next, we will will see just how fine the private sector is. >> is this really the example parents want to be setting for preschoolers? a bunch of moms getting into a brawl at graduation?
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>> welcome back, all work and no pay for small business owners across the country. new survey by citigroup gone for a year without a paycheck. 69% have used their personal funds to keep their businesses running. and a 4% have gone at least without one paycheck. how fine is the private sector doing. joining me is amilya antonetti. what do you make of this study which shows that individuals who are running small businesses simply aren't taking any money out of the till to leave the business running? >> it's very normal. absolutely statistically it's correct. it's probably higher than that they don't take the money because they are trying to keep afloat. they are trying to do some type of proof of concept.
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every dollar needs to be maximized. i will extend it out of myself. they take pay cuts to get that company through the first year. almost 60% of them will fail in that first year. >> here is another startling statistic put this up. employees working year time without compensation. so, whose fault is that? i mean, is that the business who is not paying them or is that employees not asking for more compensation? what do you make of that number? >> usually what happens is you have that core championship team when you start a small business and you rally the people around you to believe in the concept and they are all putting in that sweat equity for the big payday that will come down. that usually is what happens. the entrepreneur once they do hit the tipping point will go back and compensate that core. it's a risk not only for the small business owner or immediate team. working for a small business is high risk. >> isn't this though something that small business owners have done for a long time or indicative of a new era to say the small business owners for years it seems wouldn't take money? they wouldn't take a paycheck.
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i don't take any money from the business. and i put it all back in the company. and occasionally i will take a little money out to go to dinner or something like that. essentially all the money is in the company. is this new. >> not that it's new it is different. serial entrepreneurs people like myself who has done it a couple of times. what happens is we didn't have to put our cash in because we already proved our success. we can go and not have to cosign lines of credit and not put up our house and everything else we have worked for after raising a couple of businesses. now what happens because the economic. we are still a way out. i have employed how many people and i can't get a, wog line of credit? that's where it comes now we are back to game one. >> you bring up the interesting point of credit. it used to be in years past you could borrow against that. you got some equity in your commercial real estate property. you have got some other form of assets. you have got machines that you could borrow against. >> absolutely? in a machine plant. not so much anymore. >> not even close basically this is the funny part. they want you to have 60% of the loan already.
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if i had 60% of the loan i wouldn't need it. it doesn't make any sense. what businesses used to have in order to be able to say okay i have got this all this heavy equipment i'm going to borrow against that so i can hire more staff or go into new market or brand extension you can't do that anymore. small businesses are real little handcuffed not only the brand new one that hasn't been proven. seasoned. entrepreneur who has done it over and over and over again they are also not getting the break. they are not getting paychecks and every dollar is going into the company. and every dollar right now is not coming back out of company. >> tough new era. amilya antonetti, good to he sue morning. >> good morning. >> rick is headed into the desdestruction zone. is he live at the monster jam. we will check in live with him next. towns now looking to fine you if your yard isn't up to par. you know, overgrown grass, this kind of stuff. should homeowners be the ones paying the price? we report, you decide. if your home looks like a mud
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catch. that's why. [ laughter ] >> you run down a 20-year-old, it's exhausting. >> that's funny. what do you think about -- new legislation that is being proposed in brian kilmeade's hometown of massapequa, new york, which is if you have a cruddy front yard that you have not cleaned up your lawn, you have some broken windows that you could be fined $10,000 or 15 days in jail. >> i love it. >> do you? >> i think it's the height of laziness, i feel like i hear bill o'reilly in my head right now lazy lazy lazy. it drives me nuts. i grew up my dad forced me out in the yard a couple times a week. you take pride in your property and it helps the neighborhood. even in this area of foreclosures and all of the blight on neighborhoods. it ruins neighborhoods when someone just let's their house go foul.
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>> bill: lazy lazy lazy. >> exactly, bill. >> it does ruin your property value. this is to force the banks, rather, to clean up their foreclosed properties. they foreclose on a couple of properties. they know they are never going to sell them. they let them go to clayton's point your property value is ruined. jail time for not cleaning up your yard and fixing up? here is the massapequa park mayor says. it was out of frustration in trying to get banks to maintain as i mentioned foreclosed properties. so we wanted to craft a law that would be significant enough to get the attention of the banks. we're willing to work with anyone who will respond to us and maintain their property. these fines are only for the most egregious. well, in mount pleasant, south carolina, one woman was sent to 10 days in jail after failing to pay a 48 will $0 fine. >> right. because this is also happening in massapequa is just the latest town. it's been happening in alabama. people have done with to jail as you said this woman in south carolina. now, the flip side, clayton, i like your argument, the flip
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side is that occasionally you have to do some yard work. this just happened to me. we had to dig out a tree on our street in front of our apartment. we had dirt and overflowing garbage pails there we looked like sanford and sons. and hub cabs had rolled off of the street. i don't want to go to jail for that i need some time. >> right. but therein is an exception. these are the individuals. >> maybe. >> we get fined for litter throwing things out of a window. >> right. >> so if you are littering in your front yard and it looks like a garbage pit, complete it up. >> it's your property. shouldn't you be allowed to have a messy yard and mess were -- messy home? don't you? >> i guess. you are ruining the neighborhood. you also have a responsibility to the neighborhood. >> what if that's your style sphncht you are not a one man island. you don't just move into a
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neighborhood. >> what next? my room has to be cleaned up? going to go to jail. >> ted kaczynski. >> he is likening you to the euna bomber. >> thank you. >> let us know what you think if people should go to jail if their yards are messy? >> lazy lazy lazy. ff weekend on twitter. >> russia is standing another strong warning to the u.s. and other countries as the violence in syria shows no signs of stopping. >> my gosh. the head of russia's state controlled arms exporter announcing he will send missiles to syria. the weapons could be used to shoot down planes or sink ships. they are not considered cutting edge. the warning comes as the u.s. and other countries intervening. sending attack helicopters to damascus and not approving a
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stronger u.n. response. a major brawl breaking out in a preschool graduation? this video is out of los angeles. only had enough money for one cap and gown. made picture time apparently difficult. that's when some of the parents started throwing punches. at least one woman got a bruised lip. fortunately none of the children were hurt. >> taxpayers putting a 2.1 billion-dollar bill this year to give free phones to people on food stamps. phone stamp program called lifeline gives phones and monthly minutes to anyone on food stamps, aid and other programs. participation has soared from 6.9 million people in 2005 to 8.6 million in 2009. the fcc said it had discovered rampant fraud. significant number of participants getting more than one phone.
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some of music's biggest acts taking the stage for a good cause. >> i want to have fun. good time. ♪ ♪ >> that's alan jackson one of the many super stars heading the bama jam festival. it originally started to raise money for the town after it was demolished by tornadoes back in 2007. this year the goal is to help nurture local economies in the region. kid rock and uncle cracker set to take the stage today. >> where is courtney friel when you need her. those are the good old -- courtney loved bama jam. >> los angeles, courtney, get to alabama. >> let's talk a little sports now. it is u.s. open weekend. it was a reminder of the enormous shadow cast over the entire sport of golf by tiger woods. because who is not playing this weekend? number one luke donald.
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number two rorey mcilroy and masters champ bubba watson missed the cut. you wouldn't know it because tiger woods is on top. almost three years after the last major. tiger looking for his fourth u.s. open title. he had it going on round 2 as did he on round 1. enters the third rund one under par tied leader board with two other major winners. 2003 u.s. open champion furyk. did he have the flat stick going on friday. look at that from deep. also on top for a three-way tie with david toms who won the pga in 2001. how about this 17-year-old amateur bo holy spirit ler. he has host ler. he went 11 holes without making a boeing and made
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fantastic shots. what about harrington. the ball resting on the cup. you can't believe it's not going to go in. >> i can't either. >> watch it. waited for a wind gust. a lucky gust of wind blowing the ball, in clayton. >> not pictured. >> come on gust of wind. come on, whoa. cheers. >> wow. just a little body language i think is what did it. i don't know. >> he willed it in. remember it was a few years ago when tiger woods hit that ball and the ball rolled right up to the cup. and the stopped and then it fell in the cup. nike must have been flipping out about that. >> as though they didn't plan that. >> man u.s. qualifier stopped on the edgy turned around and buried his head it dropped in and he never saw it go in check it out on youtube. >> the golf club ghost out
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there. destruction when you are talking about monster trucks and rick reichmuth. metal crushing action in east rutherford, nowj, hey, man. >> guys, it's hard to believe that metlife stadium will ever be the same after this. they brought in 4,000 tons of dirt and they have to get it out of here sometime. big event going on. if you have ever seen monster trucks or the monster jam is what the tour is called. i have john, two time champion of monster jam. we are pretty high up here in one of these trucks. do you flips in the trucks. tell me about this. >> this is awful awesome. 16 of the best trucks, 16 of the best drivers. we're going to tear this place apart. doing some racing, a little bit of free styling. tom is going to try a double back flip. >> a double back flip like a diving board person one thing double back flip off a truck how do you that?
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>> i was able to do one last week. it's going to be cool. >> i have got to tell you this has got to be a lot of fun. take a look at this. tell me what this competition is like. it's a timed competition and then there is also a freestyle, is that the case. >> do chicago style racing. two trucks on. the winner goes on to the next round and the loser sits back and waits for freestyle. all the fans love. timed competition, points for all the obstacles we do. big air, donuts and wheelies. >> start up the truck, we are going to take off here in a second. how many fans are out here to watch this. >> i imagine there would probably be 40,000 plus. still tickets available at ticket master. you don't want to miss this. it's going to be epic. >> 4 million a year. this isn't a small thing. go ahead and take off travis about 4 million people a year. >> 4 million people a year watch us live. plus we are on speed channel every day. hot wheel toys are phenomenal. this whole sport is fantastic.
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>> you make your living doing. this yeah i get to travel around the world and crush cars and entertain millions of fans. >> you are not a kid how old are you. >> i'm 46. >> this is how you make a living. >> i have been doing this 23 years. >> would you encourage kids. >> education first. i'm living my dream. there is nothing wrong with following your dreams. >> there you go, monster trucks we will be here all morning long. send it back to you. >> kick it up a notch go faster than 5 miles per hour, rick. i want some mud in your hair. >> i want to drive those things. coming up next, on the government's list to get hand downs, arab americans are being called socially disadvantaged but what are the statistics really say. >> forget your normal summer camp or having your high schooler spend time at a beach. up next talk to one student who is trying to find a cure for cancer. she is getting some big support from a golf professional. people with a machine.
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>> alisyn: super star skinner was inspired to battle against breast cancer after losing fellow golfer heather far at the young age of 28 years old. our own jennifer griffin a breast cancer survivor herself spoke of val's life foundation at their event last year. >> in the military you don't leave your battle buddies on the battle field. you don't forget anyone and you don't leave anyone behind. you dedicated yourself to this cause. thank you from all of us who have been diagnosed and you didn't leave your battle buddy behind. >> this year one of the speakers shared her own emotional journey. >> they immediately
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recommended a double mastectomy. i just couldn't fathom it. i was just trying to go to the junior prom. 16 years old, the last thing on your mind is breast cancer. >> val's mission is to change all of that bringing awareness to the younger generation through, of all things, a summer camp. she joins us now to share how she is doing that. with her high school teacher jessica top and student abonka anone. thank you for being here. >> thank you thanks for having me. >> why is it important to teach young women about breast cancer. >> the idea to not get blind sided or bullet proof is important for young women. the fact that this disease does not typically strike women that young often. but when it does, it's a very different experience. and so what we wanted to do was reach out to create a proactive environment around the high school setting through biology and science classes for these kids to learn through a problem
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solving model how to learn about cancer genetics and how to solve problems within the cancer space. >> jessica, you are implementing this. you are a high school teacher. obviously we think reading, writing, arrhythmia particular have you implemented it how is it going. >> it's been absolutely amazing. inel ter active curriculum. engages students following two high school twins through their journey their mom is struggling with breast cancer. very relatable to high school students. most of them have unfortunately parents, friends, other family members that are going through a very similar process. as a teacher, it's a real life application of biology and genetics which you can't have for a better way to teach than a role life application that's problem-solving and at the same time, they are understanding diagnosis, they are understanding the treatment processes and the options they have and there is nothing greater than to be able to teach biology and have students feel they can be
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proactive in their own health. it's been amazing. >> avan canka you have choices what to do during your summer. some go to surfing camp. you went to a cmp and focused on breast cancer. what were you hoping to get out of that. >> cancer is something that a lot of people don't understand. i have been interested in science for a long time. i have never really known much about cancer except for what my mom tells me as a clinical trial specialist. at first when we went to the camp all the kids are what are we doing here? this is going to be a really boring week. but through the end of it after going through so much and meeting all these doctors and pathologists and clinical trial specialists we really got it see what cancer really is and that sometimes it's not as bad as we think it is. especially with all the research going on. >> you must be so graduate find hearing. this exhibit a it's working. >> yes, it is the cancer new jersey one of the top 10
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designated cancer centers in the country. our center of excellence at the life center really focused on this mission. launched it in 2008. and this is living proof that it is working. the take away for these young kids are just absolutely fantastic. we're proud. >> how do people get involved. >> they can go to the cancer institute of new jersey or go to the -- >> we will put both of those out on twitter. >> thank you so much for coming. >> thank you very much. >> are arab americans the next in line to get handouts from the government. they are being called socially disadvantaged. up next we will break down the statistics. then, this person was named teacher of the year. why was she just handed a pink slip? crazy, right ? well, with this droid razr by motorola on verizon 4g lte,
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>> welcome back the commerce department is considering naming arab americans a socially and economically disadvantaged minority. that's eligible for government handouts. >> do the stats really show a disadvantage? joining us now is the vice president of legal and public affairs center for individual freedom. timothy lee, good to see you, sir. >> thanks for having me. i appreciate it. >> we do have some numbers showing, first, the percent of arab americans who are earning their bachelor degrees shows a far greater percentage than americans as a whole. also the median income of arab americans even higher than that of americans as a whole. so why then would that group be considered a minority disadvantaged group here in the united states? it's not just as you pointed out.
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more broadly a message equal treatment under the law in the declaration of independence, in the constitution, it's in federal state and local laws. be a somebody who practiced labor employment law there is no shortage of attorneys out there who can take cases of actual discrimination. there are remedies available. going back to your statistic as little bit. steve jobs is of arabic dissent or partly so. that is an example of somebody who made it in this supposedly discriminatory country of ours despite his heritage. one other thing to keep in mind as well. even if you favor affirmative action, the usual justification for that is legacy of discrimination and slavery and things of that sort. obviously that's not the case here. so even for those who tend to favor affirmative answer. they don't fit under the principle that justifies it. >> you talk about equal protection under the law and
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that's what critics would say equal protection under the law you take umbrage with that and say it's really special treatment. >> it is special treatment. if you read the commerce department initiative on this, it talks about specifically granting privileges on the basis of national origin, now, we're a country that is trying to -- a government that should be ending discrimination whether it's on the basis of race, sex, national origin, religion. but this only increases it unfortunately, sort of like chief justice roberts said. the best way to end discrimination on the basis of race or national origin is to stop discriminating on the basis of race or national origin. >> timothy lee from the center for individual freedom. thanks for being with us sir, have a great weekend. >> thanks you too. i appreciate it. >> weigh in on this story on ff weekend on twitter. >> darrell issa ready to give eric holder more time contempt vote over the botched fast and furious operation. what he wants him to turn over. a live report coming♪ up.
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teacher of the year. why is she now out of a job? i sound like john stossel there asking that question. >> a little bit. "fox & friends" hour two. >> no stache though. >> starts right now.
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>> stossel was there last night. >> stossel was at fox fan night last night. >> sea thin guy. he is a thin guy. >> i could take him in a fight. >> fox fan night citifield the. >> rodeo theme where dave got thrown off a bull. this year it was baseball theme it was fun. bill o'reilly threw out the first pitch. >> still looking for youtube videos. send us that. first we are going to start with what president obama did on friday that is raising a few eyebrows, congress, who needs you? legislation now. the president is going to stop deportations of around half a million up to 800,000 illegal immigrants. stop the deportations and say at least in the short-term you can stay here on a certain few conditions. >> let's listen to the
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president's rationale for this yesterday. >> it makes no sense to expel talented young people who for all intents and purposes are americans. they have been raised as americans. understand themselves to be part of this country. to expel these young people who want to staff our labs, start new businesses or defend our country, simply because of the actions of their parents. or because the inaction of politicians. >> so the president unilaterally, through an executive order, is going to change the policy. here is what it will be now. that those young people who came to the u.s. by nature of their parents bringing them before they were 16 years old, and who are currently under 30 years old have and continuously lived in the u.s. five years prior to now they will be eligible. >> also at issue is the fact they have it be high school graduates, g.e.d. or they have to have served in the military. they have a clean record, no criminal past.
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a lot of people think this is what marco rubio was about to roll out, a very similar policy a policy that mitt romney has come out against. so a lot of people wondering how can mitt romney spin this to his ad vantage if there is a way. it seems like he is really boxed in by. this of course, bill o'reilly last night on the show pointing out this is purely politics but he thinks the policy is fair. take a listen. >> the president strongly court ago vote he desperately needs. as for the policy, how you can blame kids when they're dragged to the u.s.a. from wherever? if you are a fair person, you can't. not the child's fault immigration laws were broken. it's their parents who did it thus a new policy is humane. >> now, some are asking if this is a political play. it's a no-brainer political play. is he angling for colorado, for nevada, for florida in the upcoming election. and the president sits down as does mitt romney with the group of hispanic elected leaders in florida this week so the plan is clearly to draw a contrast, put republicans in a corner and say hey, how are
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you going to oppose this? and it's clear that there is no real room for them right now. mitt romney said the big problem is this makes it more difficult to reach a long-term solution. >> he disagreed with him. but the issue is if republicans now, and this is -- i mean it's sort of a brilliant political move by democrats right now no ho have been slipping in the polls. they need something. if republicans come out against this and there are some who have already admitted they are going to go to court over. this if they start suing and mitt romney aligns himself with the sewers, that's going to be a problem for him as he is trying to court. >> the sewers? >> the litigants. >> the suers. it's a thorny issue for both sides it always has been. congressman david schweikart was on our program and hold you he was bothered by what the president did. >> it created this loophole. if you make an application, we will give you a job, you know,
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a work visa. but two years later it all blows up again one more time this administration did something cynical political. i have spoken to law enforcement very worried we just created incentive for more people to try to cross our desert in the middle of this summer. >> what's fascinating what the president did yesterday it is the complete antithesis of what he said exactly acone year ago when he was with univision, hispanic broadcasting company. the anchor asked him why can't do you this via executive order and the president said he couldn't. let's listen. >> with respect to the notion that i can just suspend deportations through executive order, that's just not the case. congress passes the law, the executive branch's job is to enforce and implement those laws and then the judiciary
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has to interpreted the laws. there are enough laws on the books by congress that are very clear in terms of how we have to enforce our immigration system that for me to simply through executive order ignore those congressional mandates would not conform with my appropriate role as president. >> where is that coming from? what's informing his decision-making process? after all is he a constitutional scholar. does he have the authority to do it? >> not to mention the fact that he had two years to do it. he had congress. he had the numbers in the house. he had the numbers in the senate. he prioritized healthcare and prioritized the -- he did not get this done. he had them, he just chose now because it works more politically four months out from an election. >> so now lots of people are saying that he doesn't even actually have the authority to change this law since congress
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has not changed it through executive order you can't necessarily change it that's where the lawsuits come in. lou dobbs last night was talking about whether or not the president actually can do this? >> what happened in the last six months? this is the president who acknowledged he didn't have the authority to do precisely what he has done today back in september of 2011. i think it's highly debatable that he has the authority. i think he is going to be challenged and i think successfully on exceeding that authority. mitt romney coming up later on the show about to meet with latino leaders down there in florida. some suggested that mitt romney's preemptive speech the other day was anemic. suggesting may sue the administration to stop this executive order. we're not sure about the legal grounds of that but we will ask governor huckabee about that later. >> let's turn our attention to eric holder.
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house oversight committee and darryl size is a is giving the embattled attorney general holder a chance to avoid a contempt of congress vote because of the botched fast and furious operation. >> peter doocy is live in washington, d.c. with more on this. good morning, peter. >> good morning, clayton. on thursday the attorney general eric holder said he is he finally ready to fork over internal justice documents to determine how officials at the doj figured out their agents were gun walking in arizona. congressman darrell issa says seeing those documents might help holder avoid a contempt of congress citation but they might not. in a letter yesterday issa wrote, quote: while i do have substantial concerns these documents may not be sufficient to allow the committee to complete its investigation, delivery of these documents to the committee before the scheduled consideration of contempt at 10:00 a.m. on wednesday, june 2012 would be sufficient to justify the postponement of the proceeding to allow for the review of the materials. the doj has apparently told
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issa to expect about 1300 pages of new material this week. and issa just doesn't know if that's going to be enough to satisfy him and the other members of congress all pushing to vote to hold holder in contempt for not complying with their subpoena connected to the operation fast and furious investigation. even so though, the doj are glad they are getting a meeting with the spokeswoman saying quote we are pleased that chairman issa has agreed to our request to meet next week. we look forward to a productive session. it is in the best interest of all parties to bring this matter to a final resolution by avoiding a confrontation that avoids contempt. keep in mind at this hour that contempt vote is still scheduled for this wednesday at 10:00 a.m. back to you in new yk. >> peter, thanks so much for breaking all that down for us get to the rest of your headlines. we have a fox news alert for you. we're just learning that the saudi crowned prince has died. the saudi royal family confirming he passed away at a
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hospital in the u.s. after weeks of testing because of medical complications. prince nayef was next in line to the throne. he was also well known for spur heeding the fierce crackdown on al qaeda. brand new report from the homeland security painting a picture of misconduct at the secret service over the past 8 years. the 229 page report including a host of shocking allegations, they include an alleged sexual assault. a complaint that an agent was involved with a prostitution ring and bizarre claim that an agent implanted a chip in a victim's brain. this coming just months after the secret service prostitution scandal in colombia, the agency says the report, quote: simply reflects an intake log. well, being named a teacher of the year in sacramento, california apparentlies did not account for much if you don't have accept yort. sixth grade teacher michelle acreson getting a pink slip just weeks after receiving the honor. her job being cut because of $43 million in budget cuts.
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parents are outraged that an award winning teacher could lose her job. the district defending the layoff based on seniority not on performance and mandated by the state. critics say it's proof that the educational system needs an overhaul. >> thank you, alisyn. let's get right to rick reichmuth because we have been wanting to see him covered in mud all morning which we will a little bit later. >> he ♪ achieving it yet. >> not yet with you is he out giving us our weather report. hey, rick. >> i i am. here at metlife stadium they have until 2014 to clean this up for the super bowl. a lot of dirt for the monster jam event going on tonight. there is also a lot of weather going on across the country. let's talk with that real quickly. hurricane made land fall in southern mix can he sunday night. around the puerto he is con deed da area rain probably over
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15 inches. threat for landslides there across areas of mexico. move to the u.s. for today. big swath that's going to be seeing severe weather. areas from oklahoma stretched back towards michigan. if we see any tornadoes it's likely going to be across areas of kansas, missouri and iowa. much of the rest of the area seeing hail and very damaging winds today. watch out across that area. other big story we have been following since last weekend is that fire out across areas of colorado. the high parks fire just to the west of fort collins now burned over 50,000 acres. unfortunately fire conditions for the next number of days are going to continue to get worse. wind on the increase by tomorrow. we have fire watches in effect again for tomorrow. we're going to see the winds gusting up to 50 miles per hour at times. so, it's going to make conditions very difficult for those firefighters that are battling that blaze. over it looks like probably the next four to five days. the other story is big heat building in across the central plains. get ready today for a day you are going to want to be in the
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pool. temps in the 80's and 90's across areas of the central plains. into the northeast though, i tell you i hope you enjoyed yesterday and this weekend because this is about as good as the weather gets in across areas of the northeast. guys? >> so you mean it's going to get worse? that's what you are saying? >> what are you standing on? >> dirt. >> it's as good as it gets in the northeast. >> gotcha. >> >> coming up, the military is testing ships and planes with alternative fuel but is trying to become green costing us when it comes to real defense issues? we asked colonel tony shaffer next. >> plus dare devil nic wallenda makes his daring walk across niagara falls. we will tell you if it was a success. wake up!
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that's good morning, veggie style. hmmm. fohalf the calories plus vgie nutrition. could've had a v8.
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our cloud is made of bedrock. concrete. and steel. our cloud is the smartest brains combating the latest security threats. it spans oceans, stretches continents. and is scalable as far as the mind can see. our cloud is the cloud other clouds look up to. welcome to the uppernet. verizon.
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>> the military can fuel a fighter jet for under 4 bucks
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a gallon so con gerbille critics were shocked when the navy paid $26 a gallon for biofuel. good morning, lt. colonel? >> good morning. thanks for having me. >> thanks for being on. john mccain says using defense dollars to subsidize new energy technologies is not the navy's responsibility. is it? >> it is not. this is not helping us. if we are paying $26 a gallon and getting 10 or 20 more gallons out of it i could see it we need to be focusing on either operational or combat readiness. this does not do that. this is not an alternate form of fuel that is somehow uniquely available somewhere else and we can tap into it. this is bad policy. this is not the thing we
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should be doing right now when secretary of defense panetta says we can't find any cuts in the budget when we're faced with is he quation coming up, we have to do something to figure out why we can -- cut it clearly this is one of those areas we can cut. some the in the military would say we have got our healthcare and our benefits are being cut back. so, yes, it's not a will the of money, but look what you are taking from the military with the defense cuts you mentioned. >> right. well there is $2 billion plus. again, this does add up. this is a back door solyndra. you are finding a way to pass money to some of these companies who would not be able to make it otherwise. that's part of the issue here. dod does have some great energy programs, something called star tides.
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looking how we can sustain ourselves. northern command has something called spiders how qui maintain military facilities during difficult times regarding energy. these are all investments in how we can do things better and get through difficult times. this fuel investment isn't that and like you point out, there is other issues regarding benefits, medical that are going to be cut. when you look at the big picture this does not help improve our readiness and takes away from actual things we must be funding. so, again, this is not the time to be investing in biofuels. >> do you equate this as like a luxury item? it would be nice to have in different times and different economic times maybe like leather seats in your car? again, nice to have, but not something we absolutely need right now and need to be spending when we're cutting? >> we, the job of dod is to defend the country and to do that as efficiently and effectively as possible. biofuel doesn't do that for you.
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it's experimental thing it's not going to help you get more mileage not more available than fossil fuel and again it's more expensive. there is no net benefit. and the cost of doing this really detracts from focusing on operational readiness and being able to do what dod does which is defend the country. >> certainly aan interesting headline when you hear about navy flotilla powered by cooking grease and algae oil. listen up, men, go ahead and build. why some of your vices are actually healthy habits. clint carter of men's health has the details of things like beer and red meat and why they are a good move. plus, mirror, mirror on the wall. who is the fittest dad of all? not me? no. not close. tell you who wins.
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>> 24 minutes past the hour. time for news by the numbers. first 1800 feet. that's how far nick wallenda wrote on a tight rope last night becoming the first person to walk the entire spans of niagara falls. next, $375,000 that's how much one of apple's very first computers sold for at auction. congratulations clayton. the gadget hand built by steve jobs was any ache back in 1976. finally number 1, that's where will smith ranked in a gold gym survey of hollywood's fittest dads. david beckham coming in a close second. that's got to hurt. that's got to hurt the dads. >> i told you not to put my photo up on the scene. >> super impose david's head
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on your body. >> because of all my new eating vices. we have all the habits we feel guilty about. drinking beer, that's bad for us. some of these vices, dads, guys out there are actually good for you. >> even a guy's night. here to explain associate editor for men's health magazine. good to see you, clint, good to see you as well. >> some of these actually will be good for you consuming a gallon of coffee. >> a vice that kicks off many men's morning not so bad actually. one recent study just published shows guys who drink six or more cups of coffee today. >> come on that's a the lo. >> we are talking six ounce cups though doll that out however you want. drink that much coffee over 14 year period of the study. less likely to die of any cause. >> do you have to drink those six cups to see those benefits. >> no. >> or do you see them if you drink two? >> the more you drink the more you see. >> you know, you also have to consider is it going to keep
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you up at night and things too. that can start to counter act the benefits. >> the next one is very good news. to men out there everywhere who like to have beer. >> love it. >> who doesn't? >> what are the health benefits. >> health benefits. guys that drink moderate amount of beer. we're talking 1 to 2 beers a day are actually skinnier on average than guys that don't drink at all. >> how is that possible? >> there is all kinds of good things going on in beer. there is a lot of antioxidants, a lot of iron. counter react whatever effect you are getting from the calories. again, if you are chowing on chips and pork rinds the whole time you are drinking you are not going to see those effects. just eni didn't those beers. >> one of my all-time favorite quotes say it a lot. beer is proof that god loves us and's us to be happy. thank you ben franklin. next up, having a guy's night. that's important. this is my buddy not too lock ago she calls it a mandate. go out and have a beer.
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>> active social life is key to a healthy body. that's just true. so, less stress. less anxiety. people that are socially active live longer. so there is all these great things happening. all you have to do is plan an occasional poker night. get particulars to the ballgame. anything like that is going to make you feel better and make you live longer. >> it can't turn into a scene from the hangover. >> you can take it too far as with all vices that's why they're vices. you can go too far from it get a couple times a week it will be good for you. >> missing a tooth. >> one of my personal favorites on father's day weekend napping. >> i brought a pillow if you want to take a nap right now. you are looking at at least five hours before did you go to sleep at night. if you do that it's not going to effect your sleep and if you do that you are going to be more productive. you are going to feel better and sharper. >> 20 to 30 minutes. whatever time you lose during that nap you will make up for
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it with a sharper mind. >> wake up from your nap and you have got red meat important part. >> don't let the nay sayers tell you that red meat is a problem because they there are all kinds of amazing things in that w 12 which you can only get from meat helps you use the food you eat as energy. iron. protein helps you stay skinny and the fat that we fear in red meat almost half of it is what you find in olive oil. >> you do point out it should be grass fed. >> grass fed is better. get another set more omega three fat. >> men rejoice everywhere. good news. >> god your breakfast, ahly. >> a steak. >> coffee beer, red meat, nap. it's all there. >> thanks, clint. always great to he he sue. >> glad i could bring good news. >> check it out, clint. monster truck invasion. rick is at the center of it. catch up with him next what
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you can expect at the big monster jam. >> dramatic speed chase has drastic ending. all the details for you. those surprising little things she does still make you te notice. there are a million reasons why. but your erectile dysfunction that could be a question of blood flow. cialis for daily use helps you be ready anytime the moment's right. you can be more confident in your ability to be ready. and the same cialis is the only daily ed tablet approved to treat ed and symptoms of bph, like needing to go frequently or urgently.
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morning, everybody. bill o'reilly bringing the no spin zone to the baseball diamond last night. not sure if there was any spin on the pitch. but the o'reilly factor host threw out the first pitch. fox fan night in new york. bill got to meet mr. met. >> he is even taller. >> even with the baseball head, bill is almost is tall as mr. met. >> there you are group of friends last night at fox fan night. >> shady characters there. >> absolutely shady. >> we had them locked up afterwards. these are some friends. >> here is the group from the five. dana perino, kimberly guilfoyle and andrea tantaros. >> gutfeld. >> gutfeld is not allowed out in public and neither is bowling. >> search surprise sod see beckel. >> sporting the suspenders nice look. >> stossel was there too. >> no word of the quality of the o'reilly pitch though from
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all indications it looked pretty solid. i was athletic guy. >> i'm expecting a solid strike. i haven't seen any reviewed yet and no video. >> we have a quiz for you this morning. it will help to determine which side of the political i'll you are -- aisle you are. the you are what you buy. the products you buy will reveal whether you are a democrat or a republic. >> take a look at your car. these are the type of cars that democrats buy. if you are the most desired car category. democrats would buy a jeep if they had their druthers. and republicans a bmw. >> i'm surprised by. this i think that would be flipped. >> me too. >> americans, jeeps, of course, german bmw. >> massive study from buyology. most desired coffee shop even. republicans dunkin' donuts. democrats starbucks. no big surprise there except for the fact that dunkin'
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donuts is largely a northeast brand and there is mostly issue wills in the northeast. that one is a little surprising. i think because liberals, lattes, dunkin' donuts is more of a straight up coffee cup of joe. >> most desired restaurant if you are a democrat you like wendy's. and who can argue with a frosty, frankly and if you are a republic you like subway which, by the way, also has great subs. >> it's a $5-foot long they like to be economical the republicans. >> you get the hot peppers on them they're both good. that's a toss-up, frankly. most desired sports. you would know, this dave. >> i think bipartisan love for both of these sports. more democrats prefer the nfl and more republicans prefer major league baseball. do you agree with all of this? i would love to hear your comments ff weekend on twitter. email us as well to that address. what do you think? >> the sports is interesting where the teams are located, right? >> all across the country really. there is no geographic break
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june. >> nfl more major markets which the cities tend to have more liberals this them man green bay is one of the exceptions to that roll. >> new orleans and green bay. let us know what you think. we are breaking it down in our brains. >> i'm bui partisan. >> it's true bipartisan. ed christian will be laid to rest in boston today. 23-year-old one of the three men shot and killed pool party near alabama's campus last week. phillips also a former auburn football player, some of his former teammates served as paul bearers at his funeral yesterday. 22-year-old desmonth leonard has confessed to the shooting reportedly sparked by a fight over a young woman. well, the japanese government approving bringing bag back the country's first nuclear reactor since last year's nationwide shutdown.
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the shutdown coming after the earthquake and tsunami which led to the worst atomic disaster since chernobyl. many residents of japan are against the nuclear power resumption because of the crisis at fukushima's plant. well a police case coming to it a dramatic end in california overnight. let's watch. >> oh, oh look at that. >> a suspected drunk driver speeding through hollywood at more than 100 miles per hour before a tire blew out on his mercedes benz. the suspect sideswiping another vehicle before police cuffed him under a freeway overpass. finally is he not your average wedding singer attack a look who serenaded one very unsuspecting couple on their special day. ♪ ♪ [cheers and applause] wow, of course that was super star stevie wonder. he just happened to be staying
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at the same london hotel where paul and kelly scott were having their wedding reception and he decided he would stop by for a surprise performance. the couple absolutely stunned. >> wouldn't you be? >> i would be. >> you can imagine? who would you like to see? bon jovi? >> i love bon jovi because is he a jersey guy. who would you most like to see serenade me? stevie wonder would be fantastic he has a fantastic voice. >> bieber. >> no. for your wedding to serenade you? >> baby baby walking down the aisle? let's head to the monster truck show and rick reichmuth is out in new jersey. and, rick, we hope at some point you are going to get a little bit dirty for us. >> rolled up the sleeves. >> i'm going to try. i wanted that track to go fast. but i guess they have rules they can start on fire and stuff so they wouldn't let us go all that fast.
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that won't be the case tonight. i'm joined by tom mince. you are a 10-time world champion that's pretty good, right. >> that's awesome, man, i'm the only one. it's a cool thing. >> this sport has been around about 30 years. it's exploded over the last few. we are in metlife stadium. what do you attribute that success to. >> advance auto parts monster jam in metlife stadium we are here, we are in new york, baby. it's all about the fans. they come out in huge numbers, families, fans are families. we got them. >> you got them. now, you are pretty good at this. you were the first guy to land a flip so you do a back trip with a truck? >> 10,000-pound truck rotating in the air and landing back on the fires. >> how highs up do you have to do that. >> 25 or 30 feet. tonight we're going for two. >> this is the first time eve you are going to attempt a double back flip. >> yep, do or die. we are going to do her right here tonight two flips in the air.
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>> how do you practice for that? >> you know, very carefully. how about that? that's the first part. a lot of it is, you know, when you get out here in metlife stadium and see all the fans going crazy that just pumps you up, we'll make it. >> pumps you up one thing. our body if you are doing a flip you can contort your body how do you contort a truck to do it? go much faster? >> use a big ramp like this. move it pile of dirt out of way. use the blunt side of that ramp. use a lot of throttle at the right time. you have got to crack the whip on the motor at the exact perfect time. >> i think you will do all right. also, he is driving fdny first time ever. debuting that in honor of the fdny monster jam in new york city. double flip we will be watching. >> thank you. coming up on the show, a newly approved ivy in britain raising ethical questions. a baby being created by three different parents. how is it possible and is this a good idea?
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we'll debate it straight ahead. >> plus, steak, eggs and bacon. all the fixings of the perfect father's day brunch. top chef winner floyd sharing delicious recipes with you next. ♪
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doeshere's what you can the finaexpect from regions.ds? a bank that provides you with real business expertise. check. a professional optimization of your cash flow with a regions cashcor analysis. check. cash management solutions and the smart lending options you need to grow your business. check. plus, it all comes with award-winning service to help you achieve more balance. interested? let's talk. looking good. (bike bell) >> imagine a baby being created not by a mother and father but by three people. this isn't science fiction it's real called three parent invitro fertilization. designed to helper radiculopathy indicate birth defects. just been approved by an ethics panel in britain. raising all sorts of ethical concerns here. medical and dental association
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president and john, than the president of medical ethics and health policy at the university of pennsylvania and the author of the body politic, the battle over science in america. gentlemen, thanks so much for joining us for this debate. dr. stevens, let me start with you. this procedure is designed for women who have faulty myto chondrial d.n.a. have a chance for being born with birth defects. they use the d.n.a. from a different woman and that way this baby has d.n.a. from three different parents. avoiding birth defects. why don't you like this idea? >> well, first of all it's unethical. second of all, it's unnecessary, and third, it's dangerous, aly. it's unethical because this crosses the bright line in the sand that we have had in science that you don't manipulate genes in embryos, eggs or sperm because it's passed on from generation to generation. and if you make a mistake, it's going to be something that effects those kids
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forever. secondly, it's unnecessary. it's unnecessary. >> obviously there is all sorts of other pregestational diagnosis that can be done to prevent people being done with birth defects. there is option obviously these women can resort to. i want to bring in dr. stevens here. i'm sorry i want to bring in dr. more ran know. basically this is playing god. playing with genes. why do you support this treatment. >> i don't see how we tell moms and dads that they can't avoid serious musculo diseases in their babies if they want to have babies. i don't see how the state or any authority has the right to do that it has to be safe and effective. i very much agree with dr. stevens that it's not think that it's not safe and it's not effective. we have some tough schoises coming down the road. i don't think this is one of them. >> dr. stevens, what do you say to to that? how do you deprive patience who desperately want a child
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from something that is scientifically and technically available to them? >> well, they can have child in other ways, through an egg donation, through embryo adoption, through regular adoption, you are not denying them children. the bottom line is that what is happening here is that we are opening the door to designer children. we are essentially saying let's manipulate the jeans and design the child we want. also this effects relatively few must be of people. there is 12 and a half people in the united kingdom. women of fertile age. this would probably effect around less than 2,000. and they have these other options for them. it opens the door to so much more. >> dr. morano that's really the heart of the matter, isn't it? so many worry about the sleepry slope argument. how could this not open the door to designer babies. maybe in the future you don't want a baby who is deaf. maybe you don't want a baby who is short some day. how could it not create ultimately designer babies?
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>> this is preventing serious disease in babies. i don't see this as designing baby it's preventing a disease. there are going to be tough choices coming along. you mentioned a couple of them. there are some should agree you should not manipulate for example an embryo might likely be shy. preventing a serious disease, vast majority of people are going to be very comfortable with doing that. >> it's a fascinating debate and the fact that this ethics panel just approved it in britain means we will be having to make these decisions here in the united states soon. doctors, thanks so much for coming. >> in happy father father's day to all. >> taxpayer dollars hard at work. one taxpayer exposing millions of dollars of waste. why companies are using your hard earned cash like wine tours and reality shows. chef floyd is showing us how to make a manly man brunch fit for dad this father's day.
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[ male announcer ] what's in your energy drink? ♪ wer surge, let it blow your mind. [ male announcer ] for fruits, veggies and natural green tea energy... new v8 v-fusion plus energy. could've had a v8.
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>> moms and kids, this is your public service announcement. this t. is father's day weekend if you forgot. you can still make up for it with a nice brunch. believe me, that's all it takes, isn't it, clayton? >> something that guys want to eat. who better than to have one of the best chefs in the world, folks. no joke. winner of the season 3. >> thanks for having me. >> one of the best chef is
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going to cook this morning. eggs benedict steak sandwich. >> man it up a little bit with steak. >> i have a son who loves eggs benedict. and he is always asking me to make them on a saturday and sunday morning. i don't have the clarified butter. i thought of a different way to do it. you know we always have steak on the weekends. one of the two things i want to do with steak. i have steak, which is grilled, sliced. and it has the eggs on top like traditional eggs benedict. i like to do it on a which i which i bat that. ciabatta. arugla. mayo same ingredients without the butter. i pump it up with butter and little bit of horse radish and mustard. always a litigation bit of pepper on top makes it better
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if you like a spicey sauce that can go right on top. >> i smelled you cooking. this we have done grits on the show. i can't say i have seen bacon and roasted tomato grits. >> i made this on brunch one year. it was a thanksgiving. we were going out for lunch. i always do a cornbread stuffing. i wanted to make something like that. i always use sausage and bacon and roasted tomatoes and thyme. i come from a land of a lot of flavor. when i eat grits and there is no flavor happening it's disappointing. >> you need that bacon in there. >> i put the bacon and spicey sausage and it's delicious. >> in a moment we will will see the famous infantry -- fritata. >> this is the only way i can get by boys up in the morning. >> the smell of the fritata.
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a little butter in there. i put -- i always -- we have left over vegetables from the night before. roasted onions with steak or potatoes or sugar snapped peas or zucchini. i put lettuce and spinach in there. a way to get them to eat their vegetables. >> potatoes are next. >> potatoes go in next. >> again this doesn't have to be onions and toe mate tomatoes. >> whatever you had over from dinner last night. broccoli, zucchini and left over steak which i died up. that goes right in there, too. >> that is manly. >> and. >> so how long are you going to saute. >> i'm going to saute this for two or three minutes. >> you have previously cooked even the night before? >> this is already cooked. just warming it up. you have your oven on. put a little of rosemary and thyme. a little bit of parsley. if you don't like parsley
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don't put it in. cilantro. i put a lot of ingredients in. when it's almost done i add my egg in there. >> you stir it up. >> i stir it up. starts setting up a little bit. i take it right from this stage and it goes right in the oven. >> how long? >> about three or four minutes at 400-degrees. >> that's it? >> that's it. >> maybe a little cheese in there. >> if you want cheese you can put cheese. >> you can put whatever you want into a fritata that's what i love about that. >> floyd's famous fritata. alisyn? i can check out the north end grill in battery park. >> great to see you this morning. check him out on twitter he has chef tips on there as well. thank you. >> more "fox & friends" in two minutes. don't go away. obama's end around congress on immigration coming up.
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good morning, it's saturday, june 16th. i'm alisyn camerota. here is what is happening. obama changing the rules bypassing congress to make it easier for some 800,000 immigrants to stay. >> makes no sense to expel talented young people who for all intents and purposes are americans. >> but critics are calling this new policy a short-term fix and a political ploy. we report. you decide. hear. >> hear that sound? [cash register] >> that's the sound of your taxpayer dollars going to waste. companies spending your hard earned cash on things like wine coolers and pet shampoo? >> wine tours a waste? >> following the money trail ahead. >> over the falls on a high wire. a famous dare devil making history by crossing niagara
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falls, look at that just walking across it wait until you hear what he wants to do next. live from the stunt scene up there in niagara just moments. "fox & friends" hour three starts right now. >> good morning, everybody. >> come on in. >> don't try that at home. i get so nervous when these dare devils try their stunts. thank goodness this one happened last night. so i know the outcome. >> on your couch watching it on tv. how did you deal with that? >> it's a calorie burner for me. i break out in a sweat. >> he did have a harness on so he did have a thing attached to him. >> then what would have happened if he toppled over. >> he would have been hanging there by a harness. >> thankfully our friend rick leventhal is not covering the carnage this morning but instead he is covering the victorious walk across niagara
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falls. how about that show. >> it was amazing. little known fact i actually followed nick wallenda across the wire to the canadian border and then i walked back because i forgot my passport. >> what was it like watching him do this never before done feat. >> i have seen amazing things in this wonderful career, and this is right up there at the top of the list. it was really really cool to watch nick wallenda. is he a very cool guy. soft-spoken and intelligent and focused that's what he says helped him get across. one other thing pretty incredible. before you go to video. look at the scene here, the wire is already gone. it weighed like 7 tons, 1800-foot 2-inch steel cable, t started here on the u.s. side. stretched across the widest part of the horseshoe falls other that good morning, 1800 feet to the crane on the other side of the wire is gone and so are the 100,000 plus
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who were here to watch nick wall len davment the other cool thing about the event and maybe you can show him crossing the wire, he was moving pretty fast. he was taking measured steps but he he was walking pretty quickly across the wire. in fact, he said it might take him 35, 40 minutes, it only took him 25 minutes to make the crossing. he talked a lot about the wind afterwards that bass was coming from every direction. he said the moist -- mist was so powerful it clouded his vision. he did drop to one knee and look skyward a tribute to his great father carl wallenda to died from a fall from a high wire in 1978. wife and three kids were waiting on the canadian side when he came across. i thought really the coolest thing when he got off the wire there were two customs officials waiting for him to ask for his passport and one of them said what is the purpose of your visit? and nick wallenda said to inspire people around the world and the custom officials said you did. >> oh that is great. that is really nice. i would be like don't look
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down, don't look down. >> they are always worried about copycat people do the stuff there is a museum niagara falls where people have gone over in barrels unsuccessfully. no wonder why they probably got that wire down overnight as quickly as possible, right? >> one guy went over the falls twice successfully is in town. is he already trying to get permits to go over a third time in a barrel. and there are a lot of people who say because nick wallenda got this approved and there was no stunt policy for a number of years. other people are going to try to come out of the of the woodwork to try to do their own stunts. >> we can't wait to he see your stunt. >> i'm going to stay right here. >> cup of coffee. thanks, rick. let's get to your headlines. we have a fox news alert to tell you about right now because the saudi royal family is confirming that counsel prince nayef has died.
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he was also next to the saudi throne. succession one of the america's key allies in the arab world. he had been suffering from health problems for while. earlier there were reports that he died in a hospital in the u.s. saudi family is clarifying simply saying he died quote somewhere outside the kingdom. attorney general eric holder may now avoid coon tempt of congress vote. holder has said that he would meet with house oversight committee chairman darrell issa and turn over internal emails in the fast and furious scandal. meanwhile congressman issa says he would halt vote if they get additional records on the botched gun trafficking operation. but issa says the number of documents may not be enough to end the congressional investigation. right now the contempt vote is set for wednesday. extreme weather out of colorado where a wildfire is raging and it has destroyed
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112 homes. it's scorched more than 152,000 acres. firefighters traveling from all over the country to help put out the blaze. right now they have only managed to contain 20% of it. it could be weeks before the flames are completely extinguished and people are let back in their homes. there is more drama for lindsay lohan. another weekend, another drama. paramedics rushed to her hotel room in california after someone reported that she was unconscious. lohan who was supposed to be shooting the elizabeth taylor biopick claims she was exhausted and in a very deep sleep. she is expected to be back at work today. >> all right. thanks alisyn for the lohan update. now, for an immigration update because president obama making major headlines yesterday by announcing that the united states would stop deporting up to 800,000 illegal immigrants giving them work permits but he was quick to say this is
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not a road to amnesty. he says it's wrong for us to kick these people out of this country. take a listen. >> it makes no sense to expect talented young people who for all intents and purposes are americans. they have been raised as americans, understand themselves to be part of this country. to expel these young people who want to staff our labs, start new businesses, or defend our country simply because of the actions of their parents. or because of the inaction of politicians. >> now the president wanted to add this is not amnesty. this is not immunity. not a path to citizenship. but, of course, it is going completely around congress. not asking for their permission, not asking for legislation. when the president to his critic's point had time and opportunity to do this the first two years of his term when he had the house and the senate but decided to go with healthcare and stimulus and put immigration on the back burner. >> his argue.
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now is that it is stalled in congress in the senate. that the dream act is stalled there. so that nobody wants to make a politically risky move. which is what immigration policy has become. >> so what's so risky about it? because some of the specifics are this, right? if you are 16 years of age or younger and up to age 30. you were brought here illegally by your parents. you served in the military, have a clean criminal record, have gone to high school and have a degree, those are the qualifications to be a part of this very similar to what marco rubio is about to put forth. and so yesterday, mitt romney was forced to sort of preemptively respond to what the president was going to do. and well, it was sort of a meandering way of putting it. take a listen to what mitt romney had had to say about this? >> i believe the status of young people who come here through no fault of their own is an important matter to be considered and shoulding solved on a long-term basis so they know what their future would be in this country. i think the action that the president took today makes it more difficult to reach that
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long-term solution because an executive order is, of course, just a short-term matter it can be reversed by subsequent presidents. i would like to see legislation that deals with this issue. i happen to agree with marco rubio as he looked at this issue. he said that this is an important matter that we have to find a long-term solution but that the president's action makes reaching a long-term solution more difficult. if i'm president, we'll do our very best to have that kind of long-term solution, that provides certainty and clarity for the people who come into this country through no fault of their own by virtue of the action of their parents. >> this is a delicate issue, obviously for mitt romney and he is having a hard time. >> he was walking the tight rope there. >> he was doing his flying wallenda act there because he is saying that he -- what he doesn't like about t is that it is not long-term. he didn't spell out what the long-term solution is. >> he has aligned himself in a very different path than some
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other members of his party on immigration. it's not an easy path for him on this. so, if he aligns himself with the likes of representative steve king who wants to now sue and take this thing to court against the president, does he align himself with the people who want to go anti-immigrant in the courtroom? who are does he want to go the marco rubleio way which is very similar to what the president is putting forth? >> after all, rubio could be on the romney ticket and that changes everything. rubio has presented some form of his only dream act though it's not on paper yet. quote, here is rubio saying there is broad support for the idea that we should figure out a way to help kids who are undocumented through no faulted of their own. there is also broad con ken us is that it should be done in a way that does not encourage illegal immigration in the future. a difficult balance to strike one that this new policy imposed by executive order, key point, will make harder to achieve in the long run. will it? many agree with ruinio there it will increase immigration.
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millions will pour across the border. some saying this is a job killer for americans who want these jobs 18 million unemployed. >> some are using that as an argue argument. number of studies come out and studies this thing at nauseam they do not take away american jobs, in fact, companies when they are ready to hire individuals it gives other americans higher probability of getting it there is broad debate no wonder mitt romney is having to walk that tight rope. >> no wonder president obama has been on not both sides of the issue but certainly on both sides of what to do about it. just a year ago he told univision i can't do this by executive order that would circumvent congress that's not possible. and yesterday he did just that. >> then he added thats would would not conform to my appropriate role as president more appropriately. clearly a political play for him. >> coming up on the show, is
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the e.p.a. effectively putting the coal industry out of business? the president of the ohio coal association calling it a war on coal. is he here next to talk about it. >> call him fundraiser and chief. president obama holding more fundraisers than the past four presidents. is this over the top or is it just a sign of the times we live in? we're going to ask governor mike huckabee about that.
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acknowledging the fallout for community that rely on coal. >>er are, if you go to west virginia, pennsylvania, and all those places, you have whole communities who depend on coal to. say we just think those communities should just go away. we can't do that. but you had to do what the
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policy suggested and it's painful. it's painful every step of the way. >> joining us now is the president of the ohio coal association mike carey. mike, nice to see you this morning. what did you think when you heard those comments? >> well, good morning. it's it great to be with you. unbelievable. it's not just western pennsylvania or west virginia. it's ohio. it's illinois, it's indiana. it's coal communities across this country. it shouldn't be a surprise. this is an administration that has continually picked winners and losers when it's come to energy. obviously when the government picks the winners or loser it's the american taxpayer that's the loser. >> sounds like what the administration believes it is time to segway away from coal to something cleaner, less dangerous, more easily accessed. are you willing to admit that it might be time for some newer energy technologies? >> absolutely not. what you have seen with coal fired utilities over the last 15 years they have become
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increasingly clean. the bottom line is that coal is a resource. we have the largest coal reserves in this country and the world. india, china, the rest of the world is embracing clean coal technology. what we are seeing again with this president is an attempt to force other energy sources upon us. you see solyndra or just the list go goes on and on with the different types of energy ideas that he he is pushing. the bottom line is. this coal is the lowest cost electric generating fuel and so we have got to embrace it. it's here, it's domestic and we need to use it. >> here are some of the regulations being put forth. set limits on carbon pollution power plants. allow new power plants to phase in technology. plants can choose to burn any fossil fuel to burn electricity including natural gas. the argument from the e.p.a. is natural gas is equally as cheap and apundit and much more environmentally friendly so maybe we should move in that direction, your take? >> it is now. you are seeing natural gas prices at historic lows.
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typically the natural gas market is volatile it usually goes to 2 to it 4 to 6 in a heart beat. rarely do you see the prices of coal double you never see them triple. the bottom line is gas historic low rates right now, it is economical. but i can assure you that it will go up to 4 and 6. odds are that it could go up to 340 by christmas. >> here is what the e.p.a. says in a statement we are taking a common sense step to reduce pollution in our air, protect the planet for our children and move us into a new era of american energy. your response? >> you know, the bottom line is this e.p.a., what folks need to understand is that 50% of this country spends close to 20% of their income on energy. and the bottom, the bottom 10% spend close to 78% of their income on energy. these rules and regulations that the e.p.a. are claiming is going to be beneficial to the health and welfare of society, they have to understand that when you have to make that decision on
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whether you are going to buy food, whether you are going to buy your medicine or whether you are actually going to keep the lights on in your house or keep your home heated, those are tough decisions we shouldn't have, again, the idea that you pick winners and loadsers in energy. ultimately what we are seeing is that the american taxpayer will be the loser. >> you are the president of the ohio coal association thanks for coming in. >> it's great being with you. >> coming up on the show, they lost a championship. what did this coach allegedly do? buy the team beer, just one problem, the kids are all high school students. >> where is the problem? [ laughter ] weekend plus greed, passion and of course oil. fueling the family drama as the tv show dallas comes back to prime time. the new generation of ungs join us. [ male announcer ] what's in your energy drink?
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>> greed, passion, and, of course, oil is fueling the family drama again as the tv show dallas comes back to prime time. and now a new generation of ewings are picking up the south fork. >> what are you doing. >> ms. ellie threw him off the ranch. >> 80 years ago, christopher. >> you have no right to drill on this land. >> i'm a ewing, i have every right. >> confirm this morning. bobby john was going to tell you tonight. >> you are a part of this. >> part of the reserve seismic survey. if i am right, you are sitting on a couple of billion barrels of light sweet crude, the most sought after crude oil in the world. >> new generation of dallas.
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juror dana and julie, a show of hands, who was alive when dallas debuted back in april of 1978? >> no. >> no one was alive when this show debuted. how do you go about preparing for a show so iconic that you missed? >> well, i think the four of us were in the same boat in that we are all relatively new characters to the show. there wasn't a lot of history that we had to adhered to. we went back and watched as many episodes as we could before we started shooting. put a small dent in the 350 episodes. get a tone where we came from and how dysfunctional this family really was. >> one character that had to studied a little bit it might be yours of john ross. how did you go back and study. i was only 2 when it debuted myself. how do you prepare for a show so iconic 30 years ago. >> before i got my hands on the dvds i youtubeed everything i could find on j.r. and bobby and dallas. i quickly became up to speed
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on why j.r. or how j.r. was so magnetic. i wanted to basically, you know, his son now. had to figure out that special -- try to translate it into who his son would be. >> what is it that worked 30 years ago that still can work today. >> people with relate to this family. people like to see a dysfunctional family go, you know, feuding and about of course we don't want to let those fans down.
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at the same time we have got linda gray, patrick duffy and larry hagman coming back. i think those fans want to tune in and watch them. >> to give people a good sense of what kind of what the show is all about. obviously it is about oil and greed and romance. if there is one thing your character is after, what is it? >> both ewing boys and. >> both ewing boys. >> very ambitious she wants to make it on their own. >> she wants both ewing boys. >> ambitious other way as well. >> good part about this show is the women are so strong and powerful. and they are very independent. and it was in that way in the original. >> what about yours. >> i think about one word i would say change. he wants change in the family. >> you are all about alternative energy, right? >> that's right. >> that's what you guys are feuding over is basically between energy. you have got the romantic feud and then you have got the energy feud here. >> lots of issues. we have a lot to feud about, actually. >> we do. >> talk about j.r. if you will, such an iconic villain a long time ago.
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now he is 80 years old. does he still pull that off. >> oh my gosh he walks into the room and his energy he just consumes everything. you get in a scene with him had and it's intense. you have to really raise your game because if not, he will burr i couldn't. he is j.r. from when they say action until when he leaves. and so it's a pretty special thing to be able to work with him. >> >> lastly jordan that, it was a show all about loyalty. one thing that i remember it was on every friday night. it was a routine, it was a ritual. now it's a different era now because there is a thousand channels out there. how do you breed loyalty in your viewers again. >> i think that's what's so wonderful about it being a continuation, everyone identifies with the show in one way or another. hopefully they will start identifying with our set of characters and they will just want to come back to us. >> all right, guys. alonging forward to the show. wednesday night, 9:00 eastern time. jesse, josh, julie, jordana thank you for being here. >> thank you. >> no family is that good
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looking. >> good looking crop of people dave keeps us away from them. >> exactly. >> still ahead, we have been telling you about the president's policy to allow young illegal immigrants to stay in the u.s. is this just an election year ploy? governor mike huckabee i understand is here somewhere. >> >> we are going to find him. >> talk about that we don't know where he is. >> also, what's that sound? that's the sound of your taxpayer dollars going to waste. companies spending your hard earned cash on things like wine tours and pet shampoo. following the money trail ahead. a little pet skin dandruff. i take insulin,
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♪ ♪ the walls are shaking ♪ the earth was swinging. >> that's awesome. shot of the morning. i don't know if it gets much better than. this try to top. this acdc shaking all night long. he shook me all night long. his head totally insink with the beat. that cock do you should have been here for def leppard. pour sugar on me have that
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cockatoo. >> is he rocking out. >> that's how i do the cockatoo. >> talk about that later. >> sit there quietly, please, governor. get to your headlines, tell you what's happening at this moment before we get to the governor because just moments ago the united nations making a major decision because of the escalating violence in syria. [explosion] >> the u.n. has just revealed that its owners will be suspending all activities and patrols there because of safety concerns. the move comes as the u.s. and other countries debate whether they must intervene in an attempt to halt the ongoing blood shed there the u.s. has criticized russia for sending attack helicopters to damascus and not approving a stronger u.n. response. well, his golf team lost their shot at a championship by one
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stroke. assistant coach kyle gordon earnst likely lose much more now accused of buying booze for three underaged members of the her man town high school team in minnesota. police say earnst admitted buying the alcohol. he faces up to a year behind bars and $3,000 fine. well, republic oklahoma senator tomko burn exposing a harsh reality about our tax dollars. the government is spending millions on the market access program or map as it's called. it's part of the department of agriculture that helps private companies promote and conduct market research. well, some examples california's wine institute has received 60 million taxpayer dollars from map over the last decade. then their is sunkist which has more than a billion dollars a year in sales but still gets 4 million a year in subsidies from the fed. and some of music's biggest acts taking the stage for a good cause. listen.
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♪ for a good time. ♪ it's time, y'all. >> alan jackson, of course, one of the many super stars headlighting this year's bama jam festival in enterprise, alabama. the festival originally started to raise money for the town after it was demolished by tornadoes back in 2007. this year the goal is to help nurture local economies in the region. kid rock and uncle cracker set to take the stage today. they are attached at the hip. >> thanks, aly, let's talk about this illegal immigration issue that the president unveiled on friday. joining us now to talk more about it is governor mike huckabee here because had you had an interesting take on this. had you representative steve king on your radio show yesterday. and interestingly he is the one saying he is now going to sue over this issue because this goes around congress, the president saying you know we're going to stop deportation of 800,000 americans that fall into certain criteria. what do you say about both representative king's position and the president's position? >> first of all, i think on
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the content itself, the goal, that's an admirable thing to make it so you are not going to deport a kid valedictorian of his high school only kid he knows i get that i tried to pass a similar measure in arkansas it wasn't very popular by the way and it failed. it never occurred to me that i could just bypass the legislature and do what i wanted to do. i think for some people, it's -- they don't want to have this passed, period. i get that but even if you want it, you can't bypass the process that is very clear in law where you have to have the legislature create a law, the executive branch carries it out. this is basic constitutional 101. i can't imagine that the president who even a year ago on univision said i can't do this by myself. now he has decided yes, i can. >> not only said he couldn't said it would not conform to my appropriate role as the president. >> that's exactly right. >> there is the process that we are talking about there. and there is the policy itself. what about the policy itself.
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some attack this as a job killer. but it's clear mitt romney isn't sure yet how to navigate this. what do republicans-what does mitt romney do with this next though? >> it's not necessarily a job killer. here is what you are looking at. looking at kids that didn't have any choice about growing up here. the law forced them to go to school in the u.s. we had similar cases when i was governor. one in fact where a kid at one of the largest high schools in the case was the vac victor valedictorian the question was should he get in state tuition? why not the only education he knew from kindergarten to high school was our state education he excelled and beat other every kid in the school. would we rather have him be a doctor or picking tomato. >> of the policy. you don't punish a kid for what his or her parents did. that makes me very unpopular with a lot of republicans and i will get some hate mail over it. >> other republicans have said the same thing. remember john mccain trying to do something that went even
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further than this. marco rubio a path to citizenship. >> president george w. bush. >> similar to this. >> this isn't amnesty. let me make clear. this does not say you are automatic citizen. in fact, what we tried to propose in my state was that you would have to apply for citizenship, you would have to go through the processes, so that you would work through the normal pathway to become legal it doesn't make sense to throw you out because somehow you have done well. >> the president is saying that okay? and i think he did not say this yesterday. but we'll give him the benefit of the doubt that the reason is he using the executive order is because there is so much gridlock in congress has stalled in congress, the dream act. so he had to do something. >> you don't. >> punted in the first place. >> the law does not give you the ability to say well they are not working with me like i want them to. an effective leader can work with people. the reason obama can't get anything done. look what he did at the podium. he gets up and slams the republicans. if he had good leadership
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skills, if he had ever been a governor, a mayor for that matter heck if he had been a sheriff, he would have known that you have opposition and you figure out ways to get them to work with you rather than against you. he he has not done that. bill clinton could do it. john f. kennedy could do it. ronald reagan could do it. most presidents who are effective are able -- george bush got ted kennedy to help him with no child left behind. this president is a partisan, a hyperpartisan and can't get it done. >> president george w. bush we were just talking about obviously tried to move in this direction as well. got a lot of blow back from his own party on this. he was praised by some. and some in his observe party said. no to dave's question on mitt romney. i think it's interesting. on one side you have marco rubio who by all accounts is trying to put forth his version of this dream act which is very much in line with what the president just announced on friday. you have mitt romney who has aligned himself with governor brewer on the arizona immigration issue and talked about self-deportation. so, how does he thread that
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needle? >> well, first of all, i think you have got to separate the difference between an adult who comes here sneaking across the border and a kid who had nothing to do with how he or she got here and came probably as a 2, a 3, a 5, or even a 10-year-old didn't say i'm going to get in a truck and pay somebody hundred dollars and cross the border. >> how does he thread the needle support the president's position here. >> no he supports law. he says we need to make a fundamental change in the way we deal with people. no amnesty, that's got to be clear. before all of this is talked about, do you know what the first step is? secure the doggone borders. that's where this president and every president has failed. secure the borders. then you can move forward. >> without that you may just open the flood gate in the next couple of years. >> absolutely. that's really the problem. that's why arizona was right to do what they did. because they are trying to enforce a law that the federal government refuses to. >> governor, stick around, you are not done yet. >> oh. >> you have done well but you are not done yet. >> you passed.
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>> good. >> coming up, some sobering statistics. the nation's wealth levels are down to the levels that they were at 20 years ago. so will this hurt president obama? governor huckabee is going to stick around. and from dude to dad. a new book about the transition into fatherhood. the author of dan gets a minivan. very funny book. he joins us with some comic relief for father's day coming up. ♪
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our cloud is the cloud other clouds look up to. welcome to the uppernet. verizon. >> welcome back. a sobering economic report from the federal reserve. actually down to wealth levels of about 20 years ago. so more bad news for president obama? >> governor huckabee is back with us to weigh in on this. it was staggering to see the number. if we can put it up now. the median netted family worth
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is down now from $126,000 in 2007 to $77,000. that's a 38% drop in a very short period of time. devastating to people who have been working for the next several decades anticipating retirement. anticipating getting a second home or getting an rv and seeing america. now they may be living in a camper trailer not as a second home to live in. that may be the only place they have got. it's really devastating and especially i think sorriful, america has been a place if you worked hard and set aside you would be able to live the american dream. now it's the american nightmare. >> lost 20 years somehow economically. >> housing mainly. >> of course you know the president said the private sector is fine. you are good at interpreting what policies should mean. this is your second line of business. what was he referring to about the private sector being fine in that case? >> you know, i tried to look at that many ways. i don't think it was a gaffe.
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i think deep down it's an honest reflection that he believes everybody in the private sector is doing great. it's the public sector we have got to prop up with a bunch of more spending. the fallacy of that is that the public sector can only get money from the private sector which isn't doing that fine. that's why the unemployment rates have not gone down. and there are big corporations by the way who have lots of cash and they are sitting on it the reason they are sitting on it, because they don't know but what they are going to be taxed to the nose on this stuff. and that's why the tax policy and regulatory policy has got to be resolved and settled or you are not going to see a recovery. >> let's go back to the question we asked off the top which is is this a problem for president obama? after all we get this news though in the same week we have a new interesting poll from gallup which most americans still blame the current recession on president obama. even in the la teen know community it's overwhelmingly still blame president bush for the economic recession that we have face and come out of. is this going to be a problem for president obama? >> well, t is a problem for him because, remember, right
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now obama the bully pulpit as the president of the united states. he has got the mega phone. every speech he makes the first line is we inherited the worst economy since the great depression. we can quote that now by memory because it's in every speech. what's about to happen is very intense and highly focused presidential campaign in which mitt romney and his people and all the super pacs will begin to point out that he did inherit all of this. he doubled the debt. he is the one whose policies have kept us at high unemployment. it's going to be a very different picture in the fall. >> it will be interesting. want to say happy early father's day to you. >> thank you. >> is there any advice that you have either received or that you can dole out this morning for dads like myself. >> the simplest and i believe the best is love is spelled time. there is a lot of substitutes. don't be the dad who thinks you can buy something big and substitute that for the time
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you spend. when you hear people say i don't have a lot of time but i spend quality time. that's nonsense, quantity is quality. there is no substitute for it there are many jobs you can outsource can you get somebody else to mow the lawn and do at love things. the only job you can't outsource is the job of being dad to your kids. don't let somebody else end up doing that for you. >> why are you looking at me? >> i was actually looking at aly. >> you are right. >> my son says to me every morning where is daddy? >> i say at work. >> my son says again? he just misses his dad every day. >> governor huckabee, great to see you this morning, the show at 8:00 p.m. who is on tonight? >> we have got one of the most powerful shows the father of the young soldier who was shot little rock arkansas by islamic terrorist never acknowledged he was islamic terrorist. that father is on. the father of the young man who did the shooting son. when i those two fathers. it is going to be very powerful. they will be together tonight
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on the show and talk about the radicalization of that young man and the loss of the soldier's life who couldn't even get a purple heart because the government will not acknowledge that what happened to him was, in fact, an act of war. >> powerful show tonight also. tomorrow night on father's day as well. the re-run if you want to see it twice. >> thank you, governor. >> speaking of father's day, is he going from dude to dad. >> i real cool you know why because they don't have kids yet. >> transition into fatherhood. >> plus, towns now looking to fine you if your yard is not up to par. here is clayton's backyard. just so they can help with their own budget short falls, should homeowners be paying the price? we report. you decide.
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>> clean up your yard. ♪ hold your head up. let it blo. [ male announcer ] for fruits, veggies and natural green tea energy... new v8 v-fusion plus energy. could've had a v8.
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>> joining us now, dan, author of dan gets a minivan, yes, we must clarify he really does drive a minivan and it has flames painted on the side. dan, good to see you. >> it's good to see you. >> look at this thing. that is beautiful. >> wow. >> it's hilarious journey you take us on between dude and dad. what was the moment that you said, all right, life is different now?
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>> the moment that i life was different i think i was in a chucky cheese caught in one of those ball pits. there are so many things that none of us saw coming until we had kids, right? >> oh, yeah. >> and that's the kind of stuff that i'm trying to capture in this book is those small funny moments. >> it's true. the birthday parties. i have gone to more kids' birthday parties in the last year than i have in my life. the chapter you say the day i turned into my father. what was that moment that you realize you turned into your father. >> i don't want to give too much away there is a chapter in the book about going to cosco which is my father's favorite place on planet earth. and my answer to your question is now it's my favorite place on planet earth. >> cosco man, like i am had my dad now. >> is the mini equivalent of mom jeans? >> there is nothing mini about
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it i call it my maxy van. it's just, you know, i wrote this book thinking that i had outgrown my car initially. i'm the first writer who ever got an idea for a book by packing his trunk. there is so much stuff when you have kids. then i realized you know what? i have actually outgrown my life and my wife and i call our minivan the gateway to suburbia. >> a lot of dads fight back against the things you embrace. what is your advice? they are not driving a minivan. they are not going to the birthday parties. i know a lot of them are watching now. what do you acceptance? >> i would say my first bit of advice for dads is get yourself some cargo pants. those kind with the 27 pockets. that's a minivan for your legs right there. and my second bit of advice about you know giving into it, like i say in the book, when life deals you a minivan, you
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may as well enjoy the ride. it's great. i do embrace it i think being cool is having a great house, having a great family. i love. >> no fannie pack. >> i do draw the line at the fannie pack. i will wear the cargo pants. >> women are buying this book like crazy, too. >> it's been really surprising. that has been really funny. i keep hearing from a lot of people who have read it. their wife ends up getting it as a father's day gift. but, yeah, women are really -- insight into parenting from a male point of view. >> father's day gift right here dan gets a minivan. dan zevin thank you very much. >> thank you. >> is this really the example parents want to be set for preschoolers. bunch of moms into all out brawl at graduation. >> monster truck invasion. antithesis of at minivan. >> check in with him from
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monster jam. [ truck beeping ]
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>> good morning, everyone, it's saturday, june 16th, i'm alisyn camerota. president obama passing congress and making it easier for immigrants to stay here. >> they're americans in their hearts and minds in every single way, but one, on paper. >> alisyn: critics are calling this a short-term fix and a political ploy. we report, you decide. >> and it's the movie nobody in hollywood wanted to make, no, not adam sandler's new one. for greater glory, now stirring up controversy for its message of religious freedom. we talked to the ceo of the company who helped put out the andy garcia flick coming up. >> clayton: plus, lawn and order. towns looking to fine you if your yard isn't up to the
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clayton morris level of cutting and mowing and pay their budget shortfall, because they're going to fine you for an ugly yard, letting it 0 grow up, trash piled up in the yard. home owners will be on the hook for this. "fox & friends" hour four starts right now. ♪ >> welcome to "fox & friends" on this saturday morning. thank you so much for waking up with us and thank you for making us the number one show in all of morning television right now. >> in all of history. >> cable. >> there you go. >> alisyn: thanks so much. let's talk about what went on in the rose garden yesterday. the president dropped a bombshell. certainly, he went head long into a very thorny issue of illegal immigration. he's changing the policy unilaterally and what he now believes should happen for 800,000 young illegal immigrants.
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>> it makes no sense to expel talented young people who, foreall intents and purposes are americans, have been raised as americans, understand to be part of this country. to expel these young people who want to start new businesses or defense our country simply because of the actions of their parents, or because the inaction of politicians. >> clayton: and in the bag. s qualifications are interesting. because it's pretty severe, it's not an easy hurdle to jump over, here are the qualifications the president is talking about. came to the u.s. before age of 16. under the age of 30. >> dave: under. >> clayton: thank you. continuously lived in the the united states for five years prior to the policy and look, there's a whole long line of education requirements as well. high school, graduation, g.e.d. or have to be a member of the military.
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>> dave: the president says this is not amnesty, not a path to citizenship, though its 800,000 people given work permits when we already have 14 million unemployed. some say it's a job killer and the fact that he punted the first two years house and the senate and chose not to use legislation to get it done and governor huckabee was angry about the process. it wasn't the policy, the process of doing an end around. >> alisyn: and in terms of the policy, there have been at sometimes, republicans supported this, famously, george w. bush, and john mccain's plan went further than what the president is suggested. and it's very confounding who is on which side, but last night. bill o'reilly says he believes this policy is fair. >> the president strongly courting a vote he desperately needs. as for the policy, how could you blame kids when they're dragged to the usa from wherever. if you're a fair person, you
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can't. not the child's fault immigration laws were broken, it's the parents who did it, thus the new policy is humane. >> clayton: humane, and at issue to what governor huckabee was talking about, saying, look, again to the point for process, going around congress, but the question for mitt romney now, it's difficult. look the at the headlines this morning, puts the political pressure on mitt romney to have to answer the questions politically. this was an arrow in the quiver of the administration saying look we've been hit on the economy lately, poor jobs numbers recently, we have the supreme court court battle over health care, what arrow in our quiver do we have on the liberal side to fire the at mitt romney. rush limbaugh sayses' using political ammo early in this campaign, listen. >> so what this is is catch, release, vote. you know what surprises me about this? he's using up his political ammo pretty early here, i know he's going to go talk to, i
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don't know, laronsa or some latino group next week, i'll telling you, if you have any doubt that people are paying attention, forget it, they obviously are. the president is in full panic mode. he's not keeping his powder dry until the fall. he's not, he's not, why? because people are paying attention and we don't like what we're seeing or what we're getting from obama. . >> dave: why do it now? because as rush was alluding to there's a meeting with immigration activists on monday and later in the week romney and obama meet with elected hispanic leaders in florida and the hope would be that obama wants to show a contrast between he and mitt romney and hopes to court voters in colorado, nevada, florida. >> alisyn: and some said he's trying to steal the thunder of marco rubio, a plan up his
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sleeve, and echoes and mirrors just as the president came out and said, so he was trying to upstage marco rubio. >> clayton: find out what you're saying, pundits saying this was the worst day of the campaign his preemptive response. >> alisyn: we have a fox news alert, we're learning that the saudi crown prince nayadd, known for fierce crackdown on al-qaeda and next in line to the saudi throne, his death reopening the question he of succession in the oil rich nation, and prince nayef had been suffering for health problems for a while now, 79 years old. a 229 days before just released by the department of homeland security, allegations against the secret service during the the last eight years, new shocking plans include other agents being involved with prostitutes and one accused of prosecute tutitu
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ring. and the prostitution scandal in colombia, secret service says the quote simply reflects their intake log. a major brawl breaking out at a pre-school graduation. >> this video is out of los angeles, turns ott the pre-school only had enough money for one cap and gown. so, all the children had to share, which made picture taking time very difficult and when some of the parents throwing punchings. at least one woman got the lip. fortunately none of the children were hers. >> what a great lesson for pre-school. he called it a dream come true, nikwalenda, praying out
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loud as he walked the two inch wide cable. battling whipping winds along theway. and 1800 feet later on the other side of canada, and jokingly asked him to see his passport. he comes from a long line of circus performing and next goal is to cross the grand can pion. can't we call it a day and be satisfied with this one. >> dave: i'd like to see him doing it while tweeting next time. >> clayton: he had a microphone on walking across and he was talking back and forth and he was walking with a microphone. >> dave: next one is tweeting. >> clayton: rick can't walk across the street and tweet at the same time, imagine that guy. hey, rick. >> rick: hey, guys, yeah, except we should see if he can stand on a monster truck tire
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teas been greased up with armor all. not that easy. and first time ever in the new york area, 40,000 people here this evening for a big event, a big afternoon event, as the big party goes on and everybody can come meet the drivers. do want to talk about the weather this morning, a lot going on, hurricane carlotta hit the coast of mexico last night or the overnight hours and in the state of wahoka and it's going to continue to bring a lot of rain and two fatalities and two children who died when a mudslide landed on their home and expected to see the big threat for mudslides when you get 12 to 15 inches of rainfall and mountainous terrain and problems the next four to five days and not moving quickly, unfortunately, as well. also, some problems also the lower 48 for us, we have some severe weather today. and areas from oklahoma, up towards the great lakes, places like chicago and towards detroit, and strong
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winds and maybe a toward or two. towar tornados likely across kansas and the last week or so, many of those still burning and fire index very high the next few days, and fire watches across areas from nevada toward the panhandle of nebraska and of course that northern colorado fire, the hyde park fire continues to burn and wind are kicking up there. the next number of days, 50 miles per hour gusting, treacherous for the firefighters and the threat today for a little dry lightning and a few thunderstorms could spark some more fires. in fact, a warm day across the central plains and a nice day across the northeast. more coming up from the monster jam event at the bottom of the hour. back to you. >> dave: ear plugs, rick, ear plugs. >> clayton: too loud. all right. so, there are towns that you know and there are neighborhoods you see when you drive by certain homes where they've let their home go foul, paint chipping off the walls and grass is overgrown
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and pile garbage out in the front lawn. now, if you do that in massapequa park, new york, you're going to be fined or could be thrown in jail for 15 days or less. >> alisyn: they argue that these houses have become such an eyesore that it actually diminishes the property values of your neighbors and the street. massapequa by the way, home to brian kilmeade. >> clayton: and jerry seinfeld. >> alisyn: it's happening around the country. in alabama, south carolina, and jail time. >> dave: a woman in mt. pleasant, ten days jail team. clean it up or pay up. >> clayton: i'm all for this is. >> dave: mind neighbors if their grass were to be overgrown, it's freedom to me. i tend to lean toward freedom, isn't if your right to have a messed up property. the mayor says to keep track of the banks that had the
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foreclosed homes and killed property values and why they enacted this. >> clayton: of course, we want you to have your home and paint it whatever color you want. it's a mess and bringing down the neighborhood. you have a responsibility to your neighbors, you're part of a neighborhood. it's annoying, tweet from greg rights, fine, pure laziness, lack of personal pride and not respecting your neighbors. i agree with bill o'reilly on this, lazy, lazy, lazy, clean up your yard. >> alisyn: and the president is sticking to his strategy, blaming president bush for the bad economy. but is it the former president's fault that the u.s. is still not moving ahead? we'll explore that next. unforgetsable wedding moment. stevie wonder surprises newlyweds with a performance. can you imagine? (applause). 14 clubs. that's what they tell us a legal golf bag can hold.
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>> i inherited a trillion dollar debt. it's like somebody goes to a restaurant, orders a big steak dinner, martini, all of that stuff, and then just as you're sitting down, they leave. and accused you of running up the tab. >> clayton: really. >> dave: the president's attempt to point the finger at his predecessor for the bad economy, may be working according to a new poll. shows 68% blame president bush, while 52% blame president obama. >> clayton: our next guest says it's the president's current economic policies that have failed. the council of economic advisors and the hoover institution, fellow. nice to see you this morning, you saw the numbers and i mean, even after the bad jobs numbers last week, that we were talking about, the new gallup poll comes out and shows that most americans
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still blame president bush for the current state of affairs. so, what, how do you measure all of this? >> well, the problem is that we actually started to recover and start today recover pretty significantly, in 2010. and by the way, that's not unusual, when i was chairing the council of economic advisors, as we were going out. we were predicting the economy would start to turn in 2009 and have robust growth in 2010. not because of stimulus policies, but because that's the way all recessions work, eventually, they end and you start to recover. but then something happened. if you look back at july of 2010, after we had about 4% growth for three quarters, which is pretty good. things started to slow. and they've continued to slow and more recently, they slowed even more significantly. so, this is a new wave of slowdown, this is not a continuation of what happened in the past. this is, to my view, a result of recent policies of know i
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think of as ancient policies. >> moving forward on this, is this something likely to show up at the polls, in 2010, we saw a complete reversal, if they were trying to blame bush, looking ahead four or five months from the election, is this something the president can run on looking back? >> well, you know, i'm not your best political analyst on this, but i will tell that you it's going be to be pretty tough. because, people feel those numbers directly. this is not something that they have to watch tv to understand. and if you look at the situation right now and you ask what's the probability that an unemployed worker finds a job today, compared with, say, back in 2007, three times as high a chance in 2007 finding a job as you do today. teas something that you feel directly, you don't need to watch tv to figure out if that's going on and i think that's going to affect people, particularly as the economy starts to turn south and unfortunately, one of the things that we've been seeing in recent months is most of
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the trends are down. >> so, interestingly, when you pointed that one statistic where that slowdown start today occur, democrats argued and they have, china is starting to slow down. manufacturing there, home buying market in china starting to tank and of course, the euro crisis. that obviously, has trickle effects over to the united states. what do you say to that? >> well, it does. but this perceives most of these changes and little to do i think with the euro or with china. we are connected to europe, obviously, and we are connected to china, but those are relatively minor parts of our economy right now. and europe depends much more heavily on international trade than we do, and that's in some sense, urn fortunate. i hope in the fortunate we become much more international economy. for right now, you can't really argue that everything happening here is a result of china or europe. now, you know, you go into the future and obviously, it's going to have some effect and if europe has problems that they are having, that's going
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to slow the economy. but we do have one thing working in a positive direction and that's that oil prices have been falling and falling significantly over the past few months. >> the summer months. >> that's a big help. >> a silver lining. >> exactly. we've got to go, edward, thank you for your expertise and joining us on "fox & friends." >> thank you, a pleasure to be with you. >> coming up, they are some of iraq war's most forgotten victims. now one group hopes to help them. we'll find out how and hear the story of one woman who risked her life by helping the ideas military. >> one man thought he hit the jackpot when an atm let him make unlimited withdrawals, now it looks like he'll be spending time behind bars. we'll explain what happened next. that's good morning, veggie style. hmmm. fohalf the calories plus vgie nutrition. could've had a v8.
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>> when president obama announced an end to the war in iraq, most americans breathed a sigh of relief, knowing our troops would soon be returning home. what would become of the thousands of iraqis who risked their lives by working directly for our armed forces? 30-year-old farrah is one of those people, a mother and earning near works closely with the military. she was assaulted and her father kidnapped and her husband was murdered. farrah joins us now along with mike bream, whose organization was able to step in, co-founder of iraqi assistance project. wonderful to have both of you here, and sarah, we're happy that you're safe here now and can tell your story. >> thank you so much. >> alisyn: by way of background, let me tell viewers what happened. in 2003 you started an engineering firm and provided support and supplies to the u.s. military.
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you provided them with barriers, with trailers, and with gravel, among other things. why did you want to do that for the u.s. soldiers? >> you know, because we believe in the united states government supporting iraqi people, and thousands of miles, leaving their families to support us. to build our country. and they came here in 2003 to free us and the iraqi people, supposed to be side by side with them so we believe in them. >> alisyn: you did this at great risk to yourself and your family as you said. your bodyguard was murdered, you were assaulted, your father kidnapped, your husband was killed in retaliation for your work. do you understand the terrible consequences that could come to your family if you helped the u.s. soldiers?
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>> we understand this and, but since what we believe in and we feel it's the right thing, and we, we proud of it, you know, because we know the right way and people think a different way, and you know, they don't like and they don't want american, just because they're weak and sick and not good. >> alisyn: mike, your organization was found today protect people like farrah. why has that been such a challenge? >> well, it's been very, very difficult in part because of the bureaucrat particular hurdles that exist for getting people out, even those who like farrah with unbelievable courage. you i mean, i served in iraq as an officer in an army infantry unit and paratroopers and farrah's courage humbles me more than i can say and i think it's so important that
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the iraqi project, and every church and organization across this country stand up and do what's right by these people who have sacrificed so much in a fight for freedom, that, that we helped lead. >> alisyn: show do you feel now that you're in the u.s.? >> i feel safe and feel like, you know, normal life. i can sleep deeply without thet day and night to my family and i just feel i'm he blessed. >> alisyn: that's beautiful. well, we will let people know how to get involved in help people like farrah if there can be another, your story is so inspiring and you have been so brave. farrah and mike bream, the urban justice center, we will put a link to your center on our website. thank you both for coming in and sharing your story. >> thank you so much, thank
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you. >> thank you so much. >> alisyn: a movie nobody in hollywood wanted to make. for greater glory now stirring up controversy for its message of religious freedom. we talked with the ceo of the company who helped put the film out. home depot has everything from power tools to gourmet grills. they're here to show them off next. ♪ [ male announcer ] imagine facing the day with less chronic osteoarthritis pain. imagine living your life with less chronic low back pain. imagine you, with less pain. cymbalta can help. cymbalta is fda-approved to manage chronic musculoskeletal pain. one non-narcotic pill a day, every day, can help reduce this pain. tell your doctor right away if your mood worsens, you have unusual changes in mood or behavior or thoughts of suicide. antidepressants can increase these in children, teens, and young adults. cymbalta is not approved for children under 18. people taking maois or thioridazine
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>> welcome back everybody, the shot of the morning. check out bill o'reilly, the no spin zone goes to city field and i believe the pitch had some spin on it though. i hear it was a beauty between the mets and the reds and the host of the factor throughout the first pitch. good time had by all. >> last night was fan night, he got to meet mr. met and i think he's actualer than mr. met. >> and slightly bigger head, we kid, bill, we kid. >> and that's me on the far right had a great time with a lot of folks there at city field and also the folks from the "the five" showed up. dana perino, kimberly guilfoyle, beckel, and andrea. and we want to thanks the fans for coming out and appreciate
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everybody coming out there. >> before bill o'reilly arrived at the field, everybody said where is bill, where is bill. and got fired up on the illegal immigration and the president's announcement. and bill to the point about deporting 800 illegal immigrants which would be stopped now under the new proposal, bill o'reilly is not, doesn't have a problem with the process-- >> the policy. >> clayton: the policy, but has a big issue with the entire process. listen to bill last night. >> bill, we've got to look at the politics clear right here. he had a democratic congress. >> he didn't do jack. >> nancy pelosi was speaker of the house, harry reid the majority leader and two years he didn't do it. what makes it objectionable is that he blames republicans, saying that he couldn't get it through congress, we can't wait. and completely distorts the reality and the record. >> that being said, and we all know-- >> it's a political move. >> of course it is, we all
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know it's a political move. >> dave: i don't think there's any objection to that, he wants florida, wants colorado, wants nevada. how the republicans play it will determine where we go from here. >> alisyn: right. a lot of people say the timing was obviously well played because he also managed to preempt marco rubio, who was behind the scenes working on his own plan similar to ice, bipartisan plan trying to figure out what to do with those illegal immigrants who happen to be valedictorians, or serving in the military or students and the president managed to steal his thunder with timing. >> clayton: then we head out to rick reichmuth, out to met life stadium, for the big monster truck rally out there, hey, rick,yeah, if you've ever come out it a monster jam event. the grave digger. with the grave digger, dennis anderson you kind of created this entire sport on that truck there. >> 30 years ago, that's all we
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had to work with, there was no monster truck and that's it. i mean, that's the old truck, the original piece and it's honestly, a remake of it, but made just like the other old truck was in the beginning. >> rick: you took parts from the farm, tractor parts and put it together. >> i always liked tractor fires and big trucks and integrated them. i was a future former of america, ffa, and that's where i started grave digger and got in with one of the higher ups in the farm operations one morning as we were working, and basically with a few, few other kind words told him i'd take the junk grave, and spray paint and painted grave digger on the side of the door and history after that. >> rick: it worked. i want to take a look at that. from that truck right there that you started it, now you're out in front of met life stadium in new jersey and this is what you're going to be racing in today. >> exactly, that truck back 30 years ago, i had about $1200
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invested in it and about broke me to do that. this truck right here, met life, $265,000 monster truck, the top of the the heap. i've been playing monster trucks a long time met life stadium, we're going to rock the house here, probably the biggest event that we've ever put on on the east coast. and you know, and met life is the place. we want it to be big and come back i've never been here today. >> and you're big, it's great. good luck to you today. the icon, the legend of this sport, guys, right here, dennis anderson. back to you. >> clayton: thanks, rick. >> alisyn: great. what a colorful character. thank you so much. your headlines now, the house oversight committee darrell issa, is giving eric holder a chance to avoid a contempt of congress vote. the botched fast and furious operation. and says if holder's justice department submits more records before the scheduled vote on wednesday. holder said he'd meet with issa and turn over internal
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e-mails in a quote, extraordinary accommodation, end quote. issa says he doubts the documents will be enough to end the investigation. a retired gm worker in detroit thought he finally hit it big, but now likely to be hit with prison time. police say ronald page was somehow allowed to make unlimited atm withdrawals at three casinos. the sudden luck went on for 15 days, with page allegedly cashing in on 1.5 million dollars. but the money all gone, with page allegingly gamble it away. admitting the bank was the at fault for letting this happen. and finally, thought your average wedding singer, take a look who serenaded one very unsuspecting couple who r into him on their wedding day. >> ♪
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yeah. [applause]. [applause]. >> . >> clayton: well, of course, that was superstar stevie wonder happened to be staying at the same london hotel where paul and kelly scott were having their wedding reception and he decided he would surprise them with this performance. the couple was stunned and in a funny small world side note, my friend was at that wedding and watched that moment. my friend told me, earlier this week, we had lunch and he said you won't believe what happened at this wedding stevie wonder played a song for my friends and i think you can see him in that video. is that not incredible. he said it was a once in a lifetime moment. >> dave: wow, that's outstanding. and clayton morris, how in the world do you top that, my friend. >> clayton: i don't know, that story sounds made up. i'll fact check that one later. happy father's day, everyone, now what dad wants, good power tools, good outdoor utility items and my wife got me last year and i was super excited. i've used it more thanks to the home depot segment than
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anything else in the house, including the shower. dave white is here to tell us about the great father's day-- ♪ isn't she lovely how is that? how is that? was it great? never mind. >> clayton: let's talk about the tools. >> i was trying to compete with stevie. >> clayton: let's talk about the power tools, milwaukee ones every year and so many things with this. >> whether dad is an accomplished do-it-yourselfer, we've got great combo kits. like this milwaukee. m-# 12. it's a 12 volt lithium ion and a whole lot of power to it and how nice it feels, a nice grip on it, go, go, here you go. very nice. the cool thing about this combo kit. it comes with, not only the drill driver, but a radio and it has a compartment here for your mp3 player, weather resistent and dad can have music while working on the project. >> clayton: cool. we've got the rigid combo, this is awesome, you get two
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drivers, a drill driver and the impact driver we've showed you before, and things like lag screws and a lot of power. >> clayton: yeah. >> oh, wrong way. >> clayton: that's right, baby. >> rick: awesome, you get both of those, two chargers and dad will love that. >> clayton: let's talk about the tools. the the tool kits are important storage. dad has lots of tools and may have things like this, like the little 45 piece kit. where do you put them right? so you can get dad a two bag combo, great for your projects and don't have to have a huge toolbox and then you also have some storage so we've got a couple of different husky storage base cabinets. one with drawers in it, cool to have handy. >> and the compressor. so this is great. if you want to give your dad
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something to do a lot with, the compressor and the nail gun, this is a finish nailer, great for crown molding and all kinds of projects around the house. >> and talking grills, dave. a grill over here from char broil. >> char broil red, and infra fred. so it doesn't look like norm inside. and what it does, it sears and seals in the flavor of whatever you're grilling and you can throw in some wood chips to smoke that. >> one of the things i love is one of these cordless power. you don't need to worry about plugs or any sort of cords you're dragging around. >> the ryobi 1 plus. and we showed you the drill and the saws and exactly the same batteries, now, you can use the same battery you use for your drill and plug it into the string trimmer and you're mobile and go wherever you need to in the yard. >> and finally, like a full yard mow and a half and you've got to charge it and never-- >> exactly. and use the chargerment and the best gift, probably of all is the man card.
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>> it says right there. a card. >> clayton: dave briggs is looking for one, if he needs to get one at home depot, it is a great father's day. >> one final thought for father's day, when it comes to father day gift ideas, the choices we have are many, but why buy just one, because after all, isn't dad worth every penny? >> there you go, poetry by dave white. >> alisyn: from stevie wonder to steve white. thank you, steve. >> dave: and of now, stirring up controversy for a message of religious freedom. and the company who helped put this out. >> alisyn: a hot new band to hit the country sing performing life from the debut album. ♪ >> first, let's check in with
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neil cavuto. >> hey, guys, good morning, well, greece is the word. not another new government, they could well be deciding the fate of our economy while they're at it. and u.s. senators grilling jp morgan ceo, about a deal gone bad. and a pension time bomb that the firm just uncovered, but we're uncovering it all over it even if washington is not. it's all on the cost of freedom and we'll see you at the top of the hour.
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>> >> the fight for religious freedom is the named story line after controversial new film. film. >> today we're going to send a message, our home, our wives, our children, and we will defend it. >> and joining us now, is the ceo of vizio entertainment
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part of the film "for greater glory" dennis rice. >> thanks, dave and alisyn for having me on the show. >> the more we read about it, the talked about the film nobody wanted to make in hollywood, why not? >> well, i think in today's world, big studio america would rather invest their money into the avengers or men in black 3. and i think anytime there's a movie that has a theme that might raise an eyebrow, they shy away from it. >> a brief synopsis of for greater glory? >> sure, this is a true story that takes place in the mexico, when the government decided that religious services should be banned and think outlawed them. and it started a civil war where nearly 100,000 people lost their lives fighting for their freedom. >> some argue a battle over religious freedom is going on today in our country. why do you think the film is striking a particular nerve? >> well, i think it was a philosopher, george santa ana
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who said if we don't have history, we're doomed to repeat it. and the films like 20's in mexico are happening again in america, where our religious freedoms are being taken away from us, little by little. >> alisyn: in fact, this movie was filmed of course, before the contraception mandates that happened in the country, but you must think the timing for he release are uncanny. >> we're very fortunate to be able to take advantage after topic that is on everybody's mind, and for us to be able to connect the dots with our movie, it's a good thing. >> all right, well, it's in more than 700 theaters across the country. andy garcia did a great job from all we're told. for greater glory. check it out, a bold, brave movie. thank you, dennis. >> thank you very much. >> alisyn: thanks, dennis. up next, a live performance from new country band, eden's
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edge. ♪ [ male announcer ] you're at the age where you don't get thrown by curveballs. ♪ this is the age of knowing how to get things done. so, why let erectile dysfunction get in your way? talk to your doctor about viagra. 20 million men already have. ask your doctor if your heart is healthy enough for sex. do not take viagra if you take nitrates for chest pain; it may cause an unsafe drop in blood pressure. side effects include headache, flushing, upset stomach, and abnormal vision. to avoid long-term injury, seek immediate medical help for an erection lasting more than four hours. stop taking viagra and call your doctor right away if you experience a sudden decrease or loss in vision or hearing. this is the age of taking action. viagra. talk to your doctor. i'd like to thank eating right, whole grain, multigrain cheerios! mom, are those my jeans? [ female announcer ] people who choose more whole grain
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♪ night >> they're new to the country music seen, they're not new to the scene, but edens edge, strong ties to their faith and go buy the album on itunes. and joining us, nice to see you guys. >> nice to see you, thanks for having us. >> we've got you in boston on tour with rascal flats and tell us about the new song. >> this is our new single on the radio, to be true. our first single amen and we say that amen was the edens of edens edge, we love it and
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excited about the new album coming out and we've been together from eight years and little towns in arkansas, this is a pretty big deal. >> i saw the governor in the hawway. >> he knows my whole family, it's awesome, arkansas is like that. >> it's that tight. the new song, too good to be true. i'll get you out of your way so you can play. >> hawsome, thank you. ♪ ♪ oh, oh >> ♪
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♪ too good to be true ♪ ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪
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they are tall. welcome back, we're back with edens enl. you played with ras car flats and tonight again in boston, mass. >> you've got to come out and see us. >> tweeted out there, itunes
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or the amazon store, join us for the after the show, show. >> bracing for greece and the countdown for sunday's election close ins, the fear that chaos will break out and a leader who wants to break out of the eu. if the vote goes that way will a massive financial meltdown be on the way. i'm lori roth in for brenda buttner for bulls and bears. tobin smith, jonas max ferris, gary b smith along with todd shown berger and susan. todd, start with your worries. >> absolutely, tell you, laurie, this vote is not going the way that we, wall street, main street, anybody around the globe wants to hear, this is going to be a horrific moment not just for the united states economy, but everybody in main street, right here, usa has to be vitally concerned with what takes place with greece

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