tv FOX and Friends Sunday FOX News July 1, 2012 6:00am-10:00am EDT
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good to see you. >> good to see you both. >> dave: alisyn and clayton are both after. >> we're getting it together. a lot of news to tell you about. we'll begin with the extreme weather alert. a lot of people without electricity. the storms are gone, but devastation far from over surrounding the violent summer storms that pummel the eastern u.s., and compared to a serious hurricane in terms of death and destruction. we now know that 13 people are killed, including a two and seven year old camping with families in new jersey when tree branch fell on top of their tent. maryland, virginia, west virginia, ohio the district of columbia under states of emergency. >> and the biggest concern here going forward, the power outages. more than 3 million people in eight states and of course, the district of columbia without air conditioning, in the middle of an intense heatwave and some power companies saying it will take
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several days, even weeks, to restore. most hotels in the region now at maximum capacity as people try to beat this heat, mike. >> yeah, the travel impacted many roads blocked by downed trees and also amtrak running on a limited schedule with major delays in the northeast, especially d.c. and philly as crews work to repair or move debris from the tax. of course, all this have making for a nightmare situation right before the 4th of july holiday people trying to travel all over the country. now, let's get to peter doocy live in bethesda, maryland. what's going on. >> reporter: if anybody out at home is watching the at&t golf tournament, that's in this town, bethesda, maryland. montgomery county has over 200 it is people with no power and this is why, this is a street with no outlet the only way to and from this street to all of these cars and to all of these houses is blocked by a power
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line snaking across the entire street and it doesn't look like things are getting better because the power company drove right on by and drove on this. if you look what caused this, a huge tree in the middle of a major thoroughfare, and it's already been chopped up. and that is progress that they have made. they pushed it out from blocking more of the road. so, as crews literally are overwelcomed right now, authorities are trying to get people into cooling centers and highlightings a list of libraries that have air conditioning and malls are packed and people are sprawled out in the food court, trying to plug in phones and devices and the authorities are circulating a list as best they can, of public pools for people to spend time in. it's going to be really hot again today the authorities are trying to really with great urgency to get people to get a list of phone numbers and grab your prescription medication and a pillow, if you want, and just get out of
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the house and get somewhere that has air conditioning, coffee shops, any retail location, they've all been very, very crowd and that's because it's very dangerous for people to stay in their homes right now. >> trying to get bottled water, too. >> thank you, peter. i'm toll, i'm seeing on twitter waiting 30, 40 minutes to get something in starbucks and power up their phones, it's a far more serious-- >> were you watching the professional golf tournament. there was no crowd, they weren't allowed in. . >> dave: tiger woods with no gallery. >> mike: maybe playing better. i think he secretly loved it. >> dave: let's talk to maria molina, any relief? >> unfortunately not today. where it goes from the southwest and east into the parts of the carolinas, a large area of the country
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dealing with the heatwave and also, the very hot temperatures, upper 90's and triple digits, phoenix 111 and kansas city expecting a high at 100 and in atlanta, a high at 105 degrees. we did make a record in the city reaching 106 degrees. we are going to start to see the ridge of high pressure gradually breaking down and continue to do so the next couple of days, not big time relief. hot up there, upper 90's, kansas, raleigh, north carolina, new york city will be better and expecting highs into the upper 80's and the issue if you factor in some humidity. it feels hotter as you head out the door. it's supposed to be hot, but well above average and some of the temperatures are 15 degrees above where they should be at and some creep ip in the triple digits, kansas city, kansas, expecting a high at 100 degrees, still in the upper 90's for louisville,
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kentucky and d.c. a high at 96 degrees. still expecting the hot temperatures to continue. the other area of high pressure across the southeast, moisture from the gulf overriding that system and thunderstorms, that could produce severe weather across parts much montana and across the great lakes and across the state of virginia. north carolina and south carolina so the mid atlantic could see more storms that could produce strong winds and very bad timing the combination of the damaging wind gusts we saw, knocking out power and also the heatwave. we have some showers across eastern virginia and nothing too severe and a couple of sprinkles, as we head westward, isolated rumbles of thunder across parts of southern indiana and central portions of illinois. as we head into the afternoon hours and also, later on into the evening, as we get that daytime heating, all of that
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humidity in place, you're going to see the showers and storms firing up and the risk for severe weather, tracking westward. that system will head into the upper mid best as we head into the start of work week, the other big story we do not want to forget about. the elevated fire danger out west, montana into utah and colorado, it's dry, it's windy with wind gusts in excess of 40 miles per hour and also hot temperaturesments mid 90's in colorado springs, terrible news for my friends there. folks in d.c. trying to deal with the weather and the power outages, but many on capitol hill trying to figure out how to sort out the health care ruling and how to play it in the weeks and months ahead. it's not yet clear, the democrats don't want to refer to this thing, and they don't want this to be seen as a tax increase. >> so keep going back on back and back, two little three
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letter words, tax and how long are we going to have this debate go on. >> the white house saying it's not a tax. first a penalty, now a be tax, and now it's pack to a pent. >> mike: it's because chief roberts used both words in his opinion so people are confused i guess. >> everyone has a different opinion, republican-- i should say democrat helped to write the health care bill, he says it's not a tax, it's a requirement. it's a penalty that through the tax code so that the republicans say this is a tax, and see charges as the biggest tax increase in american history, that's ridiculous, this is not a real tax inchretien, it's a requirement that everybody get health insurance. >> democrats say it's a requirement just as if you're buying insurance for your car, this is the same thing. >> what many pointed out, this isn't just that 1% of folks that can't afford it, there
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are many folks this just don't make enough money, they make between 40 and $50,000 for a family of four or five, and that's not a lot of money for any means not like they're making a conscious choice, that it doesn't fit in the family budget. how about the republicans, how are they going to spin this, use this as a campaign issue ahead? to get an indication, rather, from senator barasso. >> president obama has repeatedly promised and i quote, if you're a family making less than $250,000 a year, my plan, he says, won't raise your taxes one penny, closed quote. now, all of america knows the truth. the president's health care law hires more irs agents to investigate and to make sure that you buy insurance, but it fails to deal with the shortage of nurses and doctors to actually take care of you. and so that's what we're looking at. i think you're going to see
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republicans try to make this an economic issue and about broken promises, more on that now, presidential candidate mitt romney making a bold pledge for his first day in office, if elected. >> what the court did not do on its last day in session, i will do on my first day if elected president of the united states. and that is i will act to repeal obamacare. our mission is clear. if we want to get rid of obamacare, we are going to have to replace president obama. my mission is to make sure we do exactly that. >> our next guest says it's statements like that that could hp mitt romney since the election come november. what would it take to repeal the health care law? >> the former deputy secretary of the u.s. department of health and human services under gw bush and health care advisor to mitt romney's campaign and joins us now from washington. good morning. >> good morning, ainsley.
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>> what would it take to repeal this. >> first thing it would take is electing mitt romney as president and having a republican senate to go along with the republican house, i think those are the key essential elements, if we have that, we can get started on the repeal effort. >> the fact that mitt romney did almost the exact same thing as governor of massachusetts, he of course has, you can call it a fee, but tax revenue has increased under the health care legislation mitt romney passed. how much more difficult does that make it for romney to thread this needle? >> well, i wouldn't agree that he did exactly the same thing at all. >> how is it different. >> in massachusetts it was different. he didn't try to impose it on all 50 states and second of all didn't cut medicare by 500 million dollars without shoring up the long-term financing, didn't hike taxes 21 times as the obama health care law did and didn't have the fake game that i know congressman wax marn trying to talk it go, but isn't. the fact is that they represented to the american
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people that it's something that it wasn't and now justice roberts said that it clearly is a tax. >> mike: would you be okay with -- if obamacare looked more like romney care, would that be okay with you? >> what i would like to see is more experimenttation, more ability of the states to show some flexibility. governor romney's plan calls for nor flexibility by the states and individuals to tang their own choices and allow market mechanisms to go into effect. >> they still have an individual mandate don't they. >> governor romney's plan does not call for an individual mandate and again, up to the-- >> well you do have to pay if you do not elect to buy a health insurance there in massachusetts, did you have to pay, call it a fee, did you indeed have to pay. >> and you're confusing two issues, there's the massachusetts plan and governor romney's plan for if he were president. >> got you. >> what do you make of what democrats are attempting to do
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with this? on friday, jay carney called it a fee of choice. on saturday, maybe more interesting, president obama did his weekly address and not one mention, not a single word of this supreme court decision, the most impactful of his presidency, do you expect them to stay away from the issue entirely moving forward. >> except for the last few days, there has been radio silence on the health care bill, they don't know what to say on it, they know how unpopular it is. talking ow the democrats are still seeing the health care as a communication challenge, it's not a communication challenge, it's a policy challenge, it's unpopular, raises taxes, cuts medicare ab doesn't do the thing it's says it's going to do. it's a bad bill. >> as we approach november, how important is this issue? is this about jobs? >> well, look, i think that jobs and the economy are the number one issue the fact is health care bill is related to jobs. you're talking a moment ago
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how the irs agents are hired, and that's the only hiring you're going to get. it's a disincentive to employ, if you've got 49 employees, you'll think hard before you hire 50. and we don't have enough people hiring. >> when the debate starts, governor romney's going to have a more concrete plan for his health care plan. and he can't run against obama-- >> that's an important question, i think, that mike brings up. is romney going to have a clear plan? should he have a clear plan? >> or just go against obamacare. >> it's a great points. >> a great point and question and address it this way, first of all there is repeal and that's clear and concrete. second of all he's talking about replace after that. and replace is a combination of principles i talked about earlier, states flexibility and market based and safeguard for individuals needed, but at the same time you also have
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unsharkling, health savings account and let people save for their own health care and talks about tort reform and people purchase across state lines and create a national market that will allow people to purchase insurance more easily and cheaply. >> good point. >> dave: former deputy secretary of health care and human services under president george w. bush, thanks for being with us. >> good to see you. now for the rest of today's headlines, another u.s. drone strike is reportedly killed. eight suspected militants in pakistan, this happened near the afghan border earlier this morning, pakistani mornings-- southern drawl is coming out. pakistani officials say they struck a house, top officials were believed to be. tragedy in wyoming, three boy scouts, scout master and toddler are dead after a head on collision.
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this is authority of thermopolis. is that the way you say that. the car they were travelling in veered into on joming traffic, a three-year-old inside that motor home was killed, four others injured. no word what cause that had accident. and former israeli prime minister shamir passed away, his family killed in the who will cot, known as a fighter in the jewish movement before he was prime minister in 1983. he served in office and massive airlift of ethiopians. and he won favor from the the u.s. for not attacking iraq. he was 96 years old. brand new video out of kazakhstan. take a look at this. >> touchdown, 3:14. >> isn't that cool? that's the soyuz spacecraft
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making a picture perfect landing bringing three crew members from a nearly seven month mission on the space station. >> mike: boy, that's old school space travel. remember the old dales we had parachutes instead of coming in for a nice landing. >> dave: very nice. our border patrols, some of the best trained law officials our country has. imagine if you're one of the folks trying to protect our borders many of them arms. gets a directive from higher ups, if there's a gunman on the loose, you may want to high tail it out of there. run away. instead of and maybe saving your own life, the policy seems to indicate you turn and run away from that, how weird is that. >> isn't that bizarre, why have law enforcement if you're
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going to run away. aren't they there to protect us. >> dave: this is a directive of department of homeland security to our border agents namely in air aalong the border of mexico. and here is what a union leader says about this. we are now taught in an active shooter course, if we encounter a shooter in a public place, we are to run away and hide if we're cornered by such a shooter, we are to only as a last resort become aggressive and what does aggressive mean, apparently throw things. >> throw things at him or her. >> dave: we are then advised to call law enforcement and wait for their arrival, presumably while more innocent victims are slaughtered. i'm not editorializing. those are his words. >> dave: this is a different scenario, think of fort hood, for example, what you want, want someone around with a gunman if there's a workplace
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violence and someone turns on their own, you want someone not only trained to handle that situation, but armed to do so as well. in my opinion, but i don't know, maybe they think this will save lives. >> if you look the at the numbers, el paso sector i've been there. >> mike: oh, yeah. >> in 1993, most agents or the average apprehension per agent, 470, and in 2011, last year, 3.8 apprehensions per agents not arresting as many people or coaching as many people. i don't know if fewer people are crossing over or told not to face the danger. >> throw things. >> dave: that's right. friends@foxnews.com and find us on twitter and weigh in on this next story, it's 4th of july, and on wednesday many people around this country go and visit their lost soldiers, those whom they loved to lost their lives at war and they lay a flag on the grave. that's custom, how you show your love of this country and
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your love of those troops and the sacrifice they made, but not in one dallas town. >> mike: yes, a little town, mineral wells, texas. it's time for the common sense police, fox. this is the ordinance in mineral wells, only have the flags out during a two week period around memorial day and veterans day. not around the 4th of july. >> how about 365 days you should be able to do that. when someone dies for our country we should be able to put a flag on their grave side. >> mike: and leave it there. >> i get it, you don't want the teddy bears and vases and plastic flowers and want it nice and clean, but a flag, i don't know anybody who would be opposed to that. what happens to the memorial. >> mike: you're talking about the clutter, flowers wilt, but how is a flag going to deteriorate. >> i think it's beautiful. if it's tattered, put another
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one there. >> dave: you make that sacrifice you probably would want a flag on your grave. let us know how you feel about that. would you want that-- ff weekend on twitter, there it is, friends@foxnews.com. the romney clan off on their annual family vacation this weekend. we bet it's like none other you've heard of or maybe it is. forget rest and relaxation, try a home run derby and yes, the romney olympics. the romney olympics, you'll love this story. >> mike: then, are you stronger than a tiger? the odds might be stacked against you, but there's no shortage of volunteers willing to take on this unusual challenge. >> bring it on. >> looks like the lady is in the cage with the tiger. is she? ♪
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>> now, your shot of the morning, a game of tug-of-war, that can really circumstance r sink some teeth into. and there's a competition, i don't know that i would do this. you can take on a tiger. >> ainsley: that looks wrong, wrong for so many reasons. >> in busch garden, they're testing strength against the tiger, taking part in the tiger did you go of war. and matt kenseth who won in 2009 is seen not there, somewhere in the video giving it a try. take a listen. >> oh, go matt.
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. >> dave: come on, kenseth. >> mike: he's leading nascar right now. >> dave: matt. >> ainsley: even a group of kid, they got to try it, too, this looks dangerous. >> dave: i don't think it looks dangerous at all in terms. tiger. >> mike: i've had a major injury doing the tug of war. >> ainsley: does the tiger lose their teeth. >> mike: i didn't know the tiger was that strong. >> ainsley: are you kidding, rip your face off. >> dave: it's about that time of year where folks go on family vacation and bring the whole extended family and the question for us, what do you do on the family vacations? some drink, some argue, but not the romneys, baby, they compete. they compete like arguably no other family i have a seen before. right now there are 30 of them. that's one of annual christmas cards and 18 grandkids and they take part, guys in the annual romney olympics.
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>> ainsley: romney games. >> mike: in wolfboro, new hampshire, biggest lake where their house is there like three stories, bedrooms, sound like a ton of fun. >> dave: not tiddly-winks. it was a mini triathlon, baking and swimming and running, but mitt, he's very competitive and getting older and decided i might change some events now we do things like hang on to a pole the longest. >> ainsley: requirement. >> dave: throw the football the furthest. >> mike: here is my favorite, hammer the most nails into a board in two minutes. >> dave: also like that one and they compete all through the vacation and see who wins the romney olympics. >> ainsley: and requirement. one of the kids working for at dodgers called dad, i'm not coming home for the event, he said, oh, yes, you are. >> mike: no opt out. and apparently guys against the girls, it's his five sons
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and he against ann and the daughter in laws. >> dave: five sons. >> ainsley: he said he had to step up his game his daughter-in-law had almost beat him and just given birth two weeks before. he had to step it up. >> dave: similar to other political families, kennedys, hyannis port, and even the bushes. >> mike: kennebunkport. >> ainsley: or like wedding crashers. >> dave: like wedding crashers, right. >> set, hut, hut, hut, hut. >> go! >> here we go. >> hit me. >> boo yeah! >> that's what we call a sack lunch! >> do you think that goes on? i believe they went on to say two things we do in maryland, crab cakes and football. but i'm curious, do you compete on family vacations. >> mike: no. >> dave: not mine, we're
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hanging around the pool. >> mike: fight each other for the beer, get away from the keg. >> dave: that could be an event. >> ainsley: it sounds like it's not a vacation to me. . >> dave: i love it. >> ainsley: guys love that. when you go to the beach the girls are always lying out in the sun and the guys are always with the frisbees with the dogs running around and sit there a long time. >> mike: when i was reading about it, i thought it sounded like a great thing. >> ainsley: it's a man thing. it's a man thing. >> mike: hammer and nails. >> ainsley: right. i'm not inspired to do that on vacation. >> dave: are you up for the the romney olympics on your family vacation? contact us on twitter. >> ainsley: it could be weeks of uncertainty in new york's democratic primaries, disgrac disgraced charlie rangel and this only 802 votes and 200 paper ballots need to be tallied and in the meantime,
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the new york state supreme court will hold a hearing tomorrow, with the primary results, and espaillat campaign says they didn't let them poll. >> former governor, enrique nato is expect today win by double digits he comes from the same party that mexicans threw out years ago. and a truck racing in mud bog competition flies off the track and then crashes into that crowd. five people were injured, including a six-year-old boy. the second time in 17 years, a crash like that occurred during this event. the cause now being investigated. a former marine set out on 0 cross country 100 day journey to raise money for service
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members, has completed his mission. awesome!. >> ainsley: 71-year-old raised more than $10,000 for the semper fi fund and his trip began in south carolina and he traveled about 33 miles per day, until he made his way back home to san diego. traveled on that thing, what are they called. >> like an elliptical. >> like an elliptical bike, that you stand the whole time. >> and what jersey have you got? >> i know nothing about soccer so do you want italy or spain? >> i said spain. and didn't know that's the good team. >> dave: and you with think the euro zone bailout would be the big news in italy and spain, but that's not the case, folks, soccer of utmost importance, as the two prepared for the euro 2012 finals.
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now, scoring is your thing. and spain is allowed just one goal in the tournament to italy, mind you, has not allowed a goal in nine straight elimination contests and spain also playing for its third straight title after winning '08. and the final today 2:30. and to golf where weather was the story to start round three. downed trees all over, kept the fans from the at&t. what would tiger woods do, without all of them yelling get it in the hole. >> ainsley: he loved it. >> dave: i think he loves the no distractions and weird to see tiger with no gallery and wood meanwhile, one back from your leader, entering the final round at congressional. i believe they will allow fans in for the final round. meanwhile, check this out. a life size version of a hot wheels track, at the x-games
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in l.a. and. >> ainsley: you can't make it up. >> dave: and simultaneously driving through the 60 foot tall double vertical loop. and the drivers were stuntmen, exactly like the toy that my son plays with at home. that's the real deal. >> mike: when i see stuff like that, i wonder, who did the first attempt? >> right, you have to go really fast. >> but how fast. they're stunt drivers. >> how do you know mayonnaise is done. when you invented it or cottage cheese. >> dave: i had no idea where he was going with that. >> mike: somebody has it eat it for the first time. let's get back to the weather. talking to you my daughter jill in kansas city yesterday, she goes, disgusting, used words, gross, sticky, 110 there yesterday, maria. >> that's accurate, disgusting
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and gross and we go the triple digits across kansas and parts of the desert somewhat in the east coast and a large part of the country in upper 90's and triple digits. atlanta actually broke a record all-time high reaching 106 degrees, so incredibly hot out there and we're expect to go see more of that triple digit heat for the city of atlanta as we head into this afternoon. but we don't want to forget about the people out west because we've been talking about wildfires, basically for several weeks now and unfortunately, we still have that elevated fire danger in place, and very dry conditions, low humidity and strong winds in excess of 40 miles per hour and also, very hot temperatures. and something to keep in mind out there. we have a number of red flag warnings and just advisories, stating these conditions from montana down into parts of colorado and also the state of utah, otherwise in other news, severe weather that's possible once again across portions of the upper midwest into the mid atlantic and looking at that for large hail, damaging wind
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gusts and isolated tornados that cannot be ruled out and hit friday night over a thousand reports of severe weather and also the storms that knocked out powers and seeing some areas, again, hit by severe weather as we head into tonight and overnight hours and our bug story is the heatwave. more triple digit heat and talking about the hot temperatures as well across new york city with heat advisories, excessive heat warnings and further south across parts of the north carolina in through parts of also, florida so, again, continuing to see the heatwave in place and if we click ahead take a look at high temperatures for today. we could see more records being set. 104 in atlanta. 104 this afternoon in the city of nashville, st. louis, whew, 103 this afternoon and even in columbia, south carolina looking very hot with a high temperature at 106. the other big problem is that you factor in the humidity and it feels even hotter, so today's heat index value in the next graphics, shows we're going to be dealing with
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triple digit heat temperatures or values for a large area of the country. south carolina, north carolina, d.c. could feel like 101 degrees could you've got to be make sure to high hydrated and worry light colored or loose fitting clothing, should help you out and try to stay in a.c. head to your shelters if you don't have any power this afternoon. as we head into tomorrow, heat index as well very hot and the next graphic will show you more triple digits and better in the city of atlanta, it will feel like 99 though, still a pretty hot day there for people in atlanta. >> maria. >> yes. >> you look fantastic in that dress and i didn't call you after the show because my battery was dead, but i'll get back to you right away. >> what. >> mike: those are three lies (laughter) >> and right, that dress. >> ainsley: he's not lying,
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you look great. >> mike: there she goes. >> dave: he wasn't lying. >> ainsley: first, where are you going with that. how inappropriate with this. are you flirting? but then i realize. >> mike: and your butt doesn't look the at all big in that dress. we're getting into-- she's very beautiful woman woman. we're getting into the top ten list of lies men tell women and one is how do i look in this dress and does my butt look big, no, you look fantastic. >> dave: this is a big trend on twitter, what are the big lies that men tell. so, yahoo! talked to some males, relationship experts and found out. let's cut through the chatter. >> mike: be real. >> dave: what are the ten biggest lies that men tell their ladies. >> mike: do you do this? i'm stuck in traffic? j my wife's not up. >> ainsley: what are you really doing, that's the question. all right, number nine, and it wasn't that expensive. >> mike: women say that all the time.
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i'm on my way. >> dave: exactly. i'm on my way, everyone uses that, i'm on my way, and that covers a lot of things. >> mike: i didn't have too much to drink. >> dave: yeah, sorry i missed your call. i use that a the lot most the time i'm telling the truth though. >> ainsley: sometimes you're just-- >> my wife called me the other day, why are you ignoring my call. i said i didn't see it. >> ainsley: i went online and, here are more. >> mike: my battery died, i just use that had. >> dave: if you have an iphone, your battery does die by three o'clock. >> ainsley: i had no snag. >> mike: i couldn't get a signal. >> ainsley: your rear end doesn't look big in that dress. >> mike: here is the thing, let's be honest with this, if it actually did, wouldn't i be better off to tell that it did. >> ainsley: i would prefer that. >> mike: so you wouldn't embarrass yourself out in public. >> ainsley: i would rather a man be honest. if i'm going to ask you. >> mike: speaking of lying. . >> dave: number one lie that women tell. >> ainsley: we do what we want to do. the woman could try on the
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green dress and blue dress, which do you like, if you like the blue dress, walking out in the green dress most of the time. >> mike: absolutely. >> ainsley: we might ask, but we don't want to know. >> dave: and from number one, number two, this will be my last beer, every man i know has used that one. number one, nothing's wrong, i'm fine. i think that's the will's. >> ainsley: i looked up to see what women lie about, that's on the list, know wrong, i'm fine. the number two, i don't know where it is, i haven't touched it. where it the remote or where is my wallet. >> dave: do guys say nothing's wrong. >> mike: yes, we do. >> dave: we don't want to have problem. >> ainsley: you don't want to have a dialog and talk about your emotions, heaven forbid. >> mike: women say it, too, after two or three tries, you will tell us. we could go months without. >> ainsley: and it might start with a sobbing, right? nothing's wrong. >> oh, gosh, starting. let us know is there more lies should be be on the list?
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be honest, what do you lie to your ladies go and ladies, what do your husbands lie to you about. >> mike: i don't think it's a diabolical thing, not to hurt each other just easier, easier. >> ainsley: on a need to know basis, right. >> mike: coming up, you served your country and now you need to pay up. >> dave: the white house wants to hike health care costs for our nation's heroes, and our next guest says he's fired about this. he is a former navy seal. >> mike: and then do the crime, and do the time. in air conditioning? do criminals have a right to a climate controlled jail cell? it's awfully hot right now. ♪ ♪
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i upgraded to the new sprint direct connect. so i can get three times the coverage. [ chirp ] [ manager 2 ] it's like working in a giant sandbox with all these huge toys. and with the fastest push-to-talk... i can keep track of them all. [ chirp ] [ chirp ] [ male announcer ] upgrade to the new "done." with access to the fastest push-to-talk and three times the coverage. now when you buy one kyocera duracore rugged phone, for $49.99, you'll get four free. visit a sprint store, or call 855-878-4biz. [ chirp ] visit a sprint store, or call 855-878-4biz. avoid bad.fats. don't go over 2000... 1200 calories a day. carbs are bad. carbs are good. the story keeps changing. so i'm not listening... to anyone but myself. i know better nutrition when i see it: great grains. great grains cereal starts whole and stays whole. see the seam? more processed flakes look nothing like naturalrains. you can't argue with nutrition you can see. great grains. search great grains and see for yourself. for multi grain flakes tt are anxcellent source of fiber try great grains banana nut crunch and cranberry almond crunch. i've been fortunate to win on golf's biggest stages. but when joint pain and stiffness
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>> quick headlines for you this morning. marathon swimmer, penny palfrey, swimming through shark infested water. trying to be the first without a protective came. she had to stop because of waves. and katie holmes has been planning her divorce from tom cruise for weeks now and a new york city hide away, to hide with daughter suri and filed the divorce papers while he was in iceland shooting a movie, dave. >> dave: ouch, that's cold. and meanwhile, they serve and protect our freedoms and now president obama is saying pay up. the obama administration is threatening to veto an appropriations bill the house passed in part because it does not include higher fees for members of the military. why is the white house pushing for the increase? joining us now to weigh in is navy seal, scott taylor good
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morning, sir. >> good morning, how are you. >> i'm sure when you see the fees and the increases, tell us exactly what they will do to families and what they mean to troops like yourself? >> well, let me first say, i don't know how the president could look at a soldier who served 20 or 30 years, possible combat force and upheld his part of the bargain and with a straight face and let him know that his health care costs are going to rise, 30, 78%, in the first year alone according to the budget and of course, they will he' see the co-payments for pharmaceuticals increase immediately. of course, unionized civilian workers won't see a change, and conveniently won't take place the increases until after the election. >> right. now, these are for retirees under the age of 65. again, not current active troops. that's the problem, i guess, the one you brought up. when you look at like what was
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happening in wisconsin, for example, the white house was vocal. the wrong cuts to make when it comes to public employees and unions and why call for the kids to the military and not ask all the public unions in this country to make shared sacrifices? >> absolutely, i think that, i think that if you were the commander-in-chief of the armed forces and the perception is, unionized civilian workers and not with those who you're asked to go into battle for and those who came before you, the reality srate their health care cost and not the civilian union, you have some explaining to do to current service members who will see their co-pays increase and those who previously served. >> the numbers you mentioned up on the screen, so folks can see exactly what we're talking about at 2013. we're talking an increase of 30 to 78%, every five years after that increase will dramatically increase for those who again, under 65, not serving active duty.
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and what does it mean to these military families in this country? >> well, you know, why are we asking that 1% of the population who serve as the military to bare pa sacrifice that 99% do not. why are we asking them to pair more of a burden. i think we ask every single penny. >> the white house statement. quote, the administration is disappointed that congress did not incorporate the requested tri care fees into either the proegs or authorization legislation and the administration asked the house it reconsider the fee proposals which are essential for dod to successfully address rising personnel costs. are there ways to responsibly make those cuts without cutting health care benefits? >> i think so, i think that we, you the dod is going to have to cut 500 million dollars and potentially a trillion, if not mistaken, but
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there are different ways to cut responsibly, whether it's programs, weapons programs or potential things. i think it's a mistake to ask for service members, retirees and active service members and retirees to pay for the co-payments. >> thank you for being with us this morning. >> thank you guys, have a wonderful day. >> dave: let you know on twitter, do you think the military should have the increased fees on twitter. and coming up, do criminals have a right to climate controlled jail cells? there's a new lawsuit demanding it, but a fair and balanced debate. next, need not apply, now we know where all the jobs are. the results of a surprising new study, why so much cash is on the sidelines. ♪
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>> welcome back. as you were listening to maria give you the weather, you know, it's hot as blazes across the country and the heat is on over a new lawsuit demanding texas state prisoners install air conditioners for prisoners. the suit filed by a family of an inmate who died from heat exhaustion, so do prisoners have a right to keep cool in their cells? joining us now for the debate is tamara holder, fox news contributor and the former prosecutor and defense attorney, thanks for coming in. so, tamara, is this cruel and unusual punishment, so hot in the cell? >> absolutely, first of all i thought we were talking about katie holmes and tom cruise,
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i'm the not prepared for this. >> mike: more on tom-kas later. >> and it is cruel and unusual punishment, the problem is i know that people think you're guilty and serve your time and spend time in prison and you're not entitled to this wonderful life style behind bars. >> mike: no sympathy. >> no sympathy, however, there's something called cruel and unusual punishment, we're not a brutal society. we are not a society that actually punches peop-- punishes people-- >> how did i live 20 years in my life in hot kansas and we didn't have air conditioning, how did i survive? >> a lot of people don't have air conditioning or conveniences. the texas prison system is not intentionally cooking criminals. they do other things, they give them extra water and give them ice and let them take cold showers. >> mike: how about fans. >> they have fans, even though it's not central air, it's
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enough to keep people safe and that's all we tear about. >> mike: only 21 out of some that have air conditioning. >> texas, arizona, those are southern states that have high, hot temperatures and it's just not fair to a criminal to treat them that way. >> mike: but it's not ftorture. >> it could be. think about the fact that a lot of people in texas, especially are wrongfully accused and victimed. >> mike: that's another issue. >> should innocent people, potentially innocent people be treated like this. i think we should treat people with a certain level of humane respect. >> when we have law abiding citizens down the street that don't have air conditioning. taxpayers don't pay for them to have central air. >> mike: i did notice a supreme court out in california say you've got to reduce the size of the prison population, because that, that
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creates bad conditions. >> right, right, there was one prisoner a week, i believe, that was dying in prison in california. one prisoner a week because of a physical or a mental condition and they said, look, this is too much. you guys have to do something to fix this problem. >> mike: do you think that law would translate to the heat issue? >> i'm agreeing with the california system, they have 45,000 extra bodies in the prison systems. that's like taking 100 people and throwing them in a phone booth and now you're going to eat and sleep here, that's apples and oranges totally different from texas. the guy who died in text, 365 pounds and pre-existing medical conditions. >> mike: and set up a twitter. you know our twitter, good to see you, tamara. >> thank you. >> mike: janna. good to see you. keep the bawling rolling on that subject. and if you see a bad guy, run.
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is that the advice they're giving to border patrol agents? does that makes any sense, weigh in on that on facebook as well. a homeless guy manage today live like a million dollar man for two years, the amazing way he slipped under the radar, that's at the top of the hour. see you in a couple of minutes. er just the right amount of light. so you see everything the way it's meant to be seen. experience life well lit, ask for transitions adaptive lenses. this mom has been doing it for years. she's got bounty. in this lab demo, one sheet of new bounty leaves this surface cleaner than two sheets of the leading ordinary brand. bounty. let the spills begin. hey. hey eddie. i brought your stuff. you don't have to do this. yes i do. i want you to keep this. it'd be weird. take care. you too.
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with two times the points on dining in restaurants, you may find yourself asking why not, a lot. chase sapphire preferred. >> good sunday morning, i'm ainsley ha ainsley earhart. millions of people without power along the east coast, and with the heatwave on the way, it could be days until they see relief. we're going to have a live report for you. . >> dave: and border patrol agents, if you see a gunman, run for your life.
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is that really the knew advice coming from the homeland security department. >> mike: out after job? a new study pulls back the curtain why private businesses really are not hiring and washington d.c. is not going to like this new survey. "fox & friends" the second hour on a sunday, july 1st, right now. ♪ good morning, everybody, thanks for being here on a sunday morning. clayton and ali are off. pardon me, still suffering from a nasty cold. regarding the health care decision, the virginia attorney general ken cuccinelli will join us next. it was a dark day to america, and now sees a bright day. >> ainsley: a silver line. >> dave: that's next. >> ainsley: the first the extreme weather alert. the violent summer storms through the eastern u.s., compared to a serious
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hurricane as far as death and destruction is concerned. 13 people were killed, including a two-year-old and a seven-year-old. camping with their families in new jersey, when a tree branch fell on top of their tents. maryland, virginia, west virginia, ohio, district of columbia all under states of emergency. >> dave: yeah, the biggest concern going forward, power outages. more than 3 million people in eight states and the district of columbia still without air conditioning. and that's brutal. right in the middle of an intense heatwave. some power companies say days, even weeks to restore power, many people also being told to conserve water until sewage plants get their power back. >> mike: now, people running off to hotel rooms, getting bottled water and traveled across the country and many roads blocked by downed trees and also amtrak running on a limited schedule with significant delays in the northeast, as crews worked to repair and remove debris from the track. all this making for a big mess
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right before the 4th of july holiday. >> ainsley: that's right, it's hard to look at the video because you worked your whole life to build your house, to build your family and all of this for your loved ones and then in one swoop, come on. >> mike: such a giant storm, with a lot of trees. >> ainsley: and let's get to peter doocy, live to bethesda, maryland. folks are struggling with powers and trees and everything, what are you seeing there? >> reporter: we're seeing a big mess, dave. the last time we heard, 200,000 people in montgomery county outside the nation's capital are still in the dark and we actually just took a drive up and down old georgetown road here bethesda and very, very few traffic signals actually working, including one outside the national institute of health. and as you mentioned, power companies are saying it's going to be a few days and this is why. a huge power line came down here, two days ago, it's completely tangled up in the poll, and then it's just laying in the middle of the
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street blocking the only outlet on to lucas lane. these people have no other way to get to their cars or homes, they cannot drive over this, they're very concerned, right now, that the wire is still there. nobody wants to touch it or go near it and really the only thing keeping them away is some flimsy caution tape. and the reason, really, that nothing's getting better quicker, is because being look at this tree. that tree was clearly much further across the street. because it's already completely chopped up, but it's still taken up two full lanes of a four lane road. so, it's a big mess, it's still early, it's very muggy here and it's very, very hot. no electricity, obviously means no air conditioning. authorities are trying to circulate lists of public pools and libraries, and for people to go to. and also, just down the road, they do have electricity in the retail district. so, we expect to see a lot of bars and restaurants throughout the day with a lot of folks inside, just huddled
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around. ordering food, hopefully and plugging in their phones so they can keep in touch. back to you. >> ainsley: that should be a priority. people have been sitting on the ground for days, peter like triage in the emergency room, someone needs to fix that. >> dave: thank you, peter. we had had a hurricane hit a year ago and in my neighborhood alone, 10, 12, 15 streets in my small neighborhood alone and the power company is doing what they can. >> mike: it so widespread. >> ainsley: it's so dangerous, anyway, we've got maria molina in with more on our weather, hey, maria. >> good to see you, we're expecting more heat today, across a large area of the country. basically from the desert southwest in through parts of the east coast, and everywhere talking across the lower 48. 92 in phoenix, very hot right now as well across parts of the plains, already warm. 82 in kansas city and 81 in memphis. we'll warm up in the afternoon hours, a lot of sunshine, a
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large area of high pressure that's set in across the u.s. and that's the system that is producing those generally clear skies during the afternoon and bringing all that have sunshine and suppressing that air across the region. 104, your high this afternoon, in the city of atlanta. yesterday, we saw a high there at 106 degrees, breaking all time record, 101 will be your high temperature in raleigh, north carolina. another hot day to kick off the work week tomorrow. still warm out there. that high pressure system is going to slowly break down and not seeing that much improvement. 96 in raleigh, still warm out there. >> thank you, when you talk about the fires in colorado springs, around 350 homes that have been destroyed, but when you look at the video you've got a whole line of houses that have been destroyed and their neighbors homes are fine. and so, what if your home is surrounded by homes that are burned down and trees burned town, your home is suddenly worth nothing as well. it's something--
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>> they're worrying about-- >> they're thankful it's there, but the value is gone. >> ainsley: true, true. another u.s. drone strike reportedly killed eight suspected militants in pakistan. it happened near the border. officials say they struck a house, top loyalists were believed to be hiding out despite the demands they stop. tragedy in wyoming three boy scouts, scout master and a toddler all dead after a head on collision. this happened northwest of thermpolis. they were headed back to colorado springs from boy scout camp when the car they were travelling in veered into oncoming traffic, hitting a motor home. the three-year-old in the motor home was killed. and no word what caused the accident. former president bush are getting tear hands dirsy in south africa. and he and laura bush, helping
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to build a clinics, aimed at saving women from cervical cancer and hiv. from homeless to living like a king, david price apparently cons his way into florida luxurious hotels for two years, by posing as a guest. he would simply watch people check out and call the front desk to extend the stay and then went on a wild spending sprees, and in one case, racking up 9,000 in charges in one case. the price of luck ran out and police picked him up at the hard rock after he talked his way into a room that a hotel employee had been staying at. oh, those are your headlines. >> the guy is slick though. >> slick willy, right? and two years he got away with that. >> two years, wow. well, our border patrol in this countries are some of the highly trained law enforcement officials there, of course, trained to protect our border, but to protect one another, too, in the case of a gunman.
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and it's a little bit different now, and the department of homeland security tells the highly trained agents, no, don't defend your fellow agents, run away, flee the scene and maybe throw a rock or two. guys, if you see a gunman, a guy that's got a gun pointed at you. >> it could be a workplace violence incident. >> mike: don't pull your gun and engage that person. >> ainsley: you run. >> mike: you run and throw things. >> ainsley: across the border. >> mike: what's the point. i'd like to learn more about the policy, why they think that would save lives. >> ainsley: that allows people with weapons to get across the border. >> dave: let's tell you exactly what is happening from a border union leader, brandon judd we're now taught in an active shooter course, if we encounter them in a public place, we are to run and hide. if we're encountered by the shooter only as a last resort become aggressive and throw things at him or her and advised to call law
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enforcement and wait for their arrival and again in his words, presumably while more innocent victims are slauted. >> mike: he posted it on the website and his opinion as you say. >> dave: it's part of a training video and course from the department of homeland security. a different scenario, consider what happened at fort hood. one of the problems were, the folks around weren't armed to handle a situation like this. but, if they were armed, would 13 people have been killed down there at fort hood? likely not. these are highly trained in this case, border patrol agents that want to save lives and take control of the situation, they don't want to run away shall that's not their nature, not their instinct. two key words there, public place, and i'd like to read the policy. >> ainsley: they take the agents and not necessarily like looking at the border or watching the border. if you've been down there it's so vast, but put them at the check points and more people in texas can go across the
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border and enjoy the night life in mexico, a lot of of people don't want to do because it's not safe. >> dave: on e-mail us ang twitter oust on ff weekend. this woman worked her butt off to get the american dream until an illegal immigrant ran her down with a legally registered car. >> mike: how is that possible. >> ainsley: and virginia's attorney general called it a dark day when the supreme court upheld the president's health care law. now he says there's a silver lining. what is it? we'll ask him when he joins us next. ♪ think you can't get great auto insurance coverage
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to promote proper sleeping posture all night long. the revolutionary recharge sleep system... from beautyrest. it's you, fully charged. >> our next guest called it a dark day for america when the supreme court upheld the president's health care law, now, he says there's a silver lining. what is it? here to tell us is virginia
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attorney general ken cuccinelli. good to see you, mr. attorney general. >> good morning. >> what is the silver lining of the supreme court decision that the mandate lives on as a tax? >> yeah, obviously, this was a bad loss on thursday, but the way the chief justice did it by blowing the doors off the tax power, he expanded it extraordinarily. which was a shock. nobody expected this particular outcome. no judge anywhere in the federal system had done anything like this. he stands pretty much alone and i think that speaks to, frankly, what a bad decision it is, but the silver lining is that because it's a tax bill now and that from the supreme court, instead of an ordinary bill, it can only -- it can be repealed with only 50 senators instead of 60. and normally you've got to overcome that senate
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filibuster, now if you've got 50 and a vice-president it can be beaten and mitt romney has been talking a lot about repealing the bill and that's great for the president, you need someone in the presidency willing to do that, but you've still got to get them a bill. and that's a tall order in order of the ordinary scenarios we thought of in which we night lose, but the way the chief justice did this, we only need 50 senators and right now the republicans have 47 and when i listen to people like clare mccaskill and senator man chin, two democrats, i suspect some democrats will vote with republicans now to repeal anyway, so it makes it very much within reach and november matter even more, because that's how we can beat it. that's one silver lining. the other two, are you actually limiting the spending power of the federal government for the first time since the new deal. that's never happened before. that's a benefit-- >> the commercial portion, that's what you're referral
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to. >> no, that's the other silver lining, they restrained the commerce clause, again, putting an outer limit on it for the first time since the new deal. if only those two things that happened, it would have been a historic, but he went on to uphold the law for the taxing power. obviously we want to see this law to go on thursday, but there are a couple of items to look at and hope springs eternal. we can knock this out of the ballot box come november. and the reconciliation, you have to get a senate and republican president. your opinion how this will work going forward in term of the medicaid expansion. as you alluded to a bit there. states do not have to expand their medicaid rules because the government cannot punish them. will governors like yours, bob mcdonnell, chris christie,
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nikki haley, will they elect not to expand the medicaid rolls and throw them back on the government rolls, should they? >> we're talking extensively to our governor and have a conference call with all 140 legislators after the 4th of july week, to discuss that very question and that of course, is in their hands, but as somebody who is running for governor in virginia, not this year, but next, i sure don't want to see us be absorb, an additional 200 million dollar burden of expanding medicaid so massive live. you did point out and some of the spending power limitation of the chief justice and six others. this was a 7-2 vote was that they couldn't threaten our other 3 billion dollars worth of federal funding for medicaid to provide health care for the poor. to hold at that over our heads, to force us effectively into this new medicaid expansion. so. >> and lastly. >> i hope we don't and i think it's unlikely in virginia.
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>> lastly, i want to mention, you talked about the repeal option that mitt romney is clearly campaigning on. do you feel he should find and discuss a replacement option, how the republicans would counter, with their own plan should they get that done? >> absolutely. you can't just be about saying no, you've got to have positive alternatives, this has been a bipartisan failure for ten years, but when you say replace, you're speaking the singular. i think the way we need to do this is we don't need another 2000 page bill. we need a whole bunch of ten-page bills that every american can read and understand, for example, let's have one bill to deal with purchasing health insurance across state lines. right now, most people don't know it's illegal for a virginian to buy north carolina health insurance, that's silly and it unbelievably reduces competition and vulcanizes the market. mitt romney is talking about doing that, that should be be
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one bill and move on to whatever they can do for malpractice reform at the federal level. don't roll them all in. it makes for some the ugliest legislation you can imagine and obamacare is an example of some of the ugliest legislation you can imagine. >> should be interesting to find out if mitt romney follows your advice there. and ken cuccinelli from virginia. >> appreciate it. >> dave: she had her own american dream and her life was cut short by an illegal immigrant with a legally registered car. how did that slip through the cracks? does this look uncomfortable. and this model says it wasn't. she claims she literally broke her back for men in black.
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>> 7:23 eastern time. your news by the numbers, first, 193 days, that's how long three astronauts spent on the international space station before returning safely this morning, on the soyuz spacecraft. 30 pounds, how much this metal costume from men in black 3 weighs. the actress wearing it now suing columbia pictures after suffering a herniated disc. and want to see ainsley in that tomorrow. 10,000 how many free tacos the town in alaska is getting from taco bell. after ads saying a taco bell
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was coming to town turned out to be a fake. not cool. making those dorito tacos and they'll be happy. >> mike: they wanted their tacos, and bethel in and around. and how about this one. 64-year-old grandmother was on her way to work when she was killed by an illegal driver in june. how could that happen? well, massachusetts does not require a driver's license, or proof of legal residencesy to register a car. do you believe that? how many states do that. my next guest is vowing to never let that happen again, and increase the penalty for driving without a license. joining me now is massachusetts state senator richard moore. thank you for being with us. let's talk a little more about niece two individuals. 64-year-old grandmother sarah, on the other opposite end of
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the spectrum. sarah is from chili and came here the right way. the other did not do it, didn't file continue other paper work and stayed here and is here illegally. taking the immigration ash issue out of it, senator, don't we have to up the penalty for driving without a license in this country? >> absolutely. and that's what the intention of a bipartisan amendment that is incorporated in the state budget that's now on the governor's desk intends to do. we have increased the fine for, it's really a slap on the wrist right now, about $100 and the police in my area and i think across the states say they're routinely pulling over people on a daily basis who do not have a driver's license. we also need it included in this bipartisan provision we do, provide more requirements
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for registering the cars, she should not have been able to do that so we provided the in the legislation that you'd have to prove legal residence here and with social number, a variety of different provisions as well as, we stiffen the penalties for falsifying those documents as well. the one weakness that i saw came out of the conference committee on the budget which was different than what both the house and senate had adopted, during the the budget debate, was that we actually had subsequent attempts of driving without a license, the potential for jail time. right now, it's simply up to $2,000, and 20 times more severe than when we currently have it. but still, i'd like to see that stronger in the future. but right now, the real question is whether the governor vetoes those sections and told the immigrants
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advocacy on their side. >> wait a minute, if the amendment is on the governor's desk, have why isn't is already signed? >> he has ten days to sign it. >> is it going to happen? >> the bill. >> and he'll sign the budget bill, but he can veto sections and that's what our concern is, that, you know, this is not-- this is the tragedy with sarah is only one of a number in my own district in central massachusetts, we have in the the last two years, experienced three motor vehicle homicides committed by illegal immigrants. and we've had, the soul care giver, primary care giver of a disabled brother was killed, richard was killed by an illegal immigrant driver two years ago, and another, another individual was killed about a year ago and then last summer, a young college students just graduated with a promising career in front of him, matthew from milford was
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killed in a horrible accident. >> mike: so a whole litany here. we're going to stay on it, senator. >> it's an epidemic and it really needs to --. >> mike: sure. >> part of it is, the police are trying to do their part. when the penalties isn't severe enough, people come back and they're cooperating and the governor's made that difficult for them as well. >> mike: thanks for bringing it to our attention and we'll see if the governor does sign that amendment. thank you for joining us from newton, mass. and your state what, does it take in your state to register your car, let us know. next, a national disgrace, one city, just banned putting flags on the fwrafs graves of soldiers and then make your back yard barbecue the best without breaking the bank. don't miss our tips. it's sunday, july 1st. ♪
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i've been fortunate to win on golf's biggest stages. but when joint pain and stiffness from psoriatic arthritis hit, even the smallest things became difficult. i finally understood what serious joint pain is like. i talked to my rheumatologist and he prescribed enbrel. enbrel can help relieve pain, stiffness, and stop joint damage. because enbrel, etanercept, suppresses your immune system, it may lower your ability to fight infections. serious, sometimes fatal events including infections, tuberculosis, lymphoma, other cancers, and nervous system and blood disorders have occurred. before starting enbrel, your doctor should test you for tuberculosis and discuss whether you've been to a region where certain fungal infections are common. don't start enbrel if you have an infection like the flu. tell your doctor if you're prone to infections, have cuts or sores, have had hepatitis b, have been treated for heart failure, or if, whilen enbrel, you experice persistent fever, bruising, bleeding, or paleness. [ phil ] get back to the things that matter most. ask your rheumatologist if enbrel is right for you. [ doctor ] enbrel, the number one biolog medicine prescribed by rheumatologists.
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ali. and in addition to celebrating our independence, some of you may celebrate someone who made the ultimate sacrifice and visit the grave of one who made the ultimate sacrifice. guys, if you live in one texas town, better not bring a flag. it's placed on those. >> mike: it's called mineral wells, texas. you know, and now, they have the little slot where you can put a flag into it. >> ainsley: right. >> mike: they have an ordinance in that little town, you have to take that little flag out if it's not a two week period around memorial day or the two week period around veterans day. why not 365. >> ainsley: why not 4th of july, why not every day like you say. they say they're trying to clean up the cemetery, if you put a teddy bear and vase with plastic flowers. >> mike: they rot. >> ainsley: you can do that, as soon as 21 days, that has to be gone and flags for two weeks surrounding the
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holidays, veterans day, memorial day days and meanwhile, many of these individuals lost their lives, fighting for our country. >> dave: and let us know, friends@foxnews.com and ff weekend twitter. >> ainsley: and former israeli prime minister it's sa-- shamir, before he was prime minister in 1983 he served for seven years, hirs time in office, airlift of thousands of ethiopian jews to israel. and he was 96 years old. it could be weeks of urn certainty, as the congressional primary, great congressional charlie rangel is off on leave. and the opponent has only 802
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votes. 2000 paper ballots need to be tallied and it's supposed to happen this week. and they'll look at the primary results and claims that the election board didn't let his campaign-- why private businesses are holding on to cash and refusing to hire new workers even though the profits are showing improvement. the number one reason, corners over the future of the economy. that came in at 32%, followed by fearfulness of big government regulation. leftover anxiety from the the last election and 22% of businesses say they've become more efficient and they just don't need the extra facts. and those are your headlines. >> dave: let's go to maria m molina in for rick reichmuth. and she has news on the heat.
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>> yes, we have extreme heat in the desert southwest, across the plains, and the coast. it's a beautiful morning, a lot of sunshine and clear skies and temperatures in the low 80's, keep in mind the temperatures will be warming up and we're expecting them to meet the middle to upper 90's here in new york city and when you factor in the humidity, it feels hotter and that's the story for many today across the southeast into parts of the west. now, out west, we don't want to forget that we have the wildfires ongoing and it's dry, windy and another hot day. so we have an elevated fire danger from parts of montana into utah and colorado and we'll see some strong to severe storms firing up. across the mid atlantic, similar to those that saw the strong to severe storms with over a thousand reports of severe weather friday night and those are the storm systems that actually knocked out power for many that are having to deal with the heatwave as well and heat continues, we're expecting the triple digits or high
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temperatures in the triple digit as we head into this afternoon. 106 over in columbia and south carolina and raleigh, north carolina. and nashville 104. and atlanta, triple digits once again and they broke a high temperature record yesterday. reaching 106 degrees. ainsley. >> ainsley: thanks so much. maria. look at the beautiful thing, looking to throw a 4th of july party, easy and inexpensive tips to help you out. and joining us is the founder and ceo, thanks so much for many with us. and this is absolutely gorgeous, and you know, when you're planning a party, you want it to look this pretty. you don't want to spend money. >> definitely. >> one. things a lot of parties do at the holiday season is they have stars and stripes, and that's the thing, mark those up between two and three times, more than the solid color plates. what you can do, the 4th of
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july, buy, red, white and blue, plates and then instead of spending two to three times, then you can buy the star-- >> a pack of 100 versus a pack of 20. >> then you can reuse them for birthday parties. >> good idea. one thing you might want to splurge on, pretty inexpensive are the picks that have the american flag on them. >> those are so cute. >> where do you get those. >> yeah, like a party store, 144 for like $2. >> i dorable and you used the bandanas in the mason jars. >> you don't want to use paper goods, you can get a bandana, red, white and blue and this is someone's serving, grass and napkins and. >> i love this and kids will love it as well. >> and what else do you have for us. >> great, one thing you want to do if you you want it to look festive without spending too much on decorations, you want to incorporate your food
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and beverages as part of the theme. so, here we have jones soda, red, white and blue and vitamin water and do regular water and just put food coloring in it. you can do that and do the same thing withdrawburies, used in center pieces as well as jars, blue chips, red salsa and you know, so many things to do. >> how great. you walk down the aisles of the grocery store and find things that are red, white and blue. >> and something you you can't figure out how to make it work and this is a watermelon in a star shape and put that on a plate. >> i never would have thought about doing that. >> and look how cute this is. >> that's easy to make. >> caught it in the shape. >> and cut it here, this is one of my favorites today. it's dessert. and the center piece in one. and it's on skewers and then, you can put the blueberries on one and bananas and
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strawberries on the other, and dessert as center pieces. >> what about the marshmallows. >> this is great, all you have to do is buy the sprinkles as onen and marshmallows. >> how did you get it to sit. >> just water. dip it in water and put it in sugar. same thing with strawberries and dip it into white chocolate. >> you're such a good mom. you're excellent. now, dave briggs, asked some flags for his daughter. dad, i don't have a flag. and may i have one of those. >> sure. >> ainsley: dave i'm going to bring one. >> dave: dave wants food. daughter is great, but daddy wants-- >> if you want any tips, and on the the blog all of these things. . >> dave: that's great. >> mike: what you do with the fruit. >> mike: it's hard to find blue foods. . >> dave: blueberries. >> mike: a name of the book is don't eat blue food.
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but that works. >> dave: i love it. protesters backed by virginia democrats caught admitting voter fraud does exist and they're okay with it, mike. >> mike: and then, should high schoolers be allowed to carry cell phones in school? and it's a safety issue. a fair and balanced debate straight ahead. ♪ ip-on's the way to go. more people do that, security would be like -- there's no charge for the bag. thanks. i know a quiet little place where we can get some work done. there's a three-prong plug. i have club passes. [ male announcer ] get the mileage card with special perks on united, like a free checked bag, united club passes, and priority boarding. thanks. ♪ okay. what's your secret? [ male announcer ] the united mileageplus explorer card. get it and you're in. i have to know the weather patterns. i upgraded to the new sprint direct connect.
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>> welcome back, everybody. a protest organized by the democratic party of virginia, helped sides accused of voter fraud. when asked to comment. they stated clearly a certain amount of voter fraud is acceptable. >> we agree that there is voter fraud. >> and-- >> well, what percentage of it is okay for you? >> i don't understand wh you
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mean, at what percent is it okay voter fraud. you're saying that afp commits voter fraud. i'd like to see it. >> 999. >> dave: 999 is what he replayed. make sense of that? good luck to you. and up next is firsthand testimony from the situation who shot the video. tony katz, conservative radio host out here on the coast. and first off, these folks had signs up accusing americans for prosperity of voter fraud. >> correct. so they why organized, i mean, the first stop at fairfax county, fairfax virginia, organizationed by the virginia democratic party. the communications director was leading the way for them and one of them had the sign that said that american for prosperity, and supports voter fraud. >> dave: based on what. >> based on fantasy. the signs were made by the democratic party they c collecting them at the end to bring them back. >> dave: so you turned it on
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with the iphone. >> with this phone and i simply said can you prove it? why do you have that sign? and since you're now saying that afp voter fraud are you the democrats admitting there's voter fraud out there and i brought up james o'keefe, are you admitting how easy it is to fake someone's ballot, why it's so important to have voter i.d. laws and when i got into a conversation with that man. caesar d agilea, i hope i'm pronouncing it right. and he said six sigma is, made popular jack welch at ge. a business strategy and dictates that the proper amount for the acceptable amount per million. he gave a stat in the amount of voter fraud he's okay with. i want to know if anybody's going to ask the democratic party if they are engaged in voter fraud if they find a
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percentage of voter fraud is acceptable. if you ask people across the country, how much is acceptable. they'll say zero. >> dave: two sides from the left on voter fraud, one the effort to crack down on voter fraud disenfranchised mainly mierpts and number two that there's very, very little of it. does it imply to you that some level of voter fraud is okay? >> if they're going to say to me, just like caesar did there, the head of the fairfax county democratic committee there is a percentage that they're okay with with voter fraud, that's too big a percentage, it has be to be zero and the conversation you're having is one about voter suppression. first of all, no one believes in voter suppression you know what i don't believe it. two members of the black panthers sitening front with billy clubs. and when you need an i.d. be to be able to go to a michelle obama book signing, is that book signing suppression? when you go to an r-rated movie, is that movie suppression? when i want to buy a late
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night beer, is that beer suppression? exactly what is suppressing the vote about an i.d. to make sure we know who is voting. the real conversation is here is what is it that the virginia democratic party believes. what are they willing to accept? and i'm looking forward to some intrepid reporting asking them questions. >> let's not get into the beer suppression, okay? and i want to-- i'm glad that-- >> we can agree on that. tony katz radio conservative talk show host, thank you for being here. >> my pleasure. >> dave: is any amount of voter fraud to go? find me on twitter, dave briggs. should students be allowed to carry cell phones in school in the fair and balanced debate is next. the story you haven't heard about obamacare, how it could drive doctors straight out of business. we'll hear from one coming up. ♪ ♪
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>> new york city's ban on cell phones in schools caused a debate in the state and happening not only here, but schools in the country. some find that the policy is unjust and should be lifted while others feel that the ban serves a purpose of keeping our children safe in school. joining us nor for a fair and balanced debate. ken trump head of national school safety and services as well as david katz, ceo of global security group a former d.e.a. agent as well as a parents. thank you for being with us. >> good morning, ainsley. >> ainsley: ken, start with you. i want you to tell us why you think that kids should not have cell phones in schools?
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>> school officials clearly have the authority to set policies and procedures that keep schools safe, orderly and disciplined. there's no constitutional right to have a cell phone. biggest issue with cell phones, it's safety, when it should be be convenience. in a crisis situation, cell phones, texting, expedites parents to the school and accelerates rumors and gets parents that blocks fire and emergency services from getting in and out and distracts kids from following directions from a responsible trained adult who can keep them safe in the first place. a lot of people watching, side with you. we grew up and didn't have cell phones and we survived, surely our kids could do the same. however, david, you're a former d.e.a. agent and a parent and you're here to tell us to sell me why you think that kids should have them. in all of your experience as a d.e.a. agent and a parent, why should the kids have them. first of all there's no
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constitutional right to own a cell phone, no constitutional right to go to school. the fact is you can have technology that can be one, and two can enhance safety and security. absolutely the schools have a might to set policy as far as cell phone usage in school. where i reject the school's authority, you cannot bring it in. because the second that school bell rings and the child leaves school i want to be able to get in touch with my child period. i don't want to have to pay to have the cell phone watched during the day and god forbid, chapter and verse, the schools have dropped the ball and where a cell phone message has made a difference in response. and how many times has inappropriate conduct or dangerous conduct been captured on a cell phone in an emergency situation? that's another issue, but my biggest feeling is that the parent, when at that school bell rings, i want to be able to have access to my child period. >> ainsley: well, david, you have the flip side of this, and ken, i know you've made that argument. when there is a crisis all of
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these cell phones going off and kids calling their parents and parents are showing up at the school when, most of us should be listening to the precipitati principal or student that know how to handle the the swayings. if you have hundreds of parents showing up to pick up their kids and it's not supposed to happen, it makes the crisis worse. >> and addressed this to me or-- >> either one whoever wants to-- >> and i would say this, i'm a parent as well. if i don't have the confidence in my school officials that they can keep my kids safe, i have a much bigger issue than one that's going to be cured by a cell phone and me being able to get in touch with my kids. what i have there is not a problem with the cell phone and issue, i have problems with my confidence in my competence of my child-- or school officials to take care of my child and that is the issue that needs to be addressed. >> ainsley: david, you can respond quickly. >> i'm not a big familiar of the whole nanny state thing. most schools know what to do
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in an emergency situation. but many times schools are not equipped to handle it. >> ainsley: let the parent decide. >> as a parent, that's your job as a parent. >> and the school officials-- >> thanks for being with us. one in seven americans are on food stamps and the government is throwing parties to get more people on them. we're going to talk about that. hot wheels, the world record just broken and the video you'll talk about all day at the top of the hour. ♪ [ female announcer ] gross -- i'll tell you what's really gross: used dishclot. they can have a history that they drag around with them. try bounty extra soft. in this lab demo, one set of bounty extra so leaves this surface 3 times cleaner than a dishcloth. the cleaner way to clean. bounty extra soft.
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now, millions of people without power and with the heatwave on the way, things aren't looking good. we're live on the ground for you. >> dave: democrats doing damage control, trying to dismiss the supreme court ruling that calls obamacare a tax. >> so if the republicans say this is a tax, i've seen charges, this is the biggest tax increase in american history. teas ridiculous. >> and the full court press begins today. will it stick? we report, you decide. >> mike: i'm mike in for clayton, romney clan is off and their annual family vacation, a family reunion, all three of them. but is this a vacation or is it the olympics? the competition inside the family. how about hammering nails into a wooden board. >> yeah, buddy, sounds like a vacation, woo hoo, bring a hammer to the reunion. >> mike: "fox & friends" the third hour on sunday starts right now. ♪
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>> good morning, everybody, good to see you, if you're wondering if mitt romney is a competitor, we'll have an answer for you, a definitive guest coming up. mike in for clayton, ainsley for alley, good to see you both. >> ainsley: good to work with both you have guys. >> mike: we have two rookies, dave this is your show, your couch, thank you for having us in. >> dave: then i'll start it off. we begin with an extreme weather alert, the storms are gone, but the devastation is far from over, a round of violent summer storms, that pummelled the eastern u.s. now compared to a serious hurricane in terms of damage. and the death toll up to 13 with maryland, virginia, west virginia, ohio and the district of columbia, all under states of emergency and it's one of the biggest concerns of course, the power, guys. >> ainsley: yeah, more than 3 million people without power and air conditioning, and air conditioning, we're talking 100 degrees out there right in the middle of the intense
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heatwave. word is, it could take up to a week to restore that and travel also impacted and we're going to be seeing roads blocked by the trees for a while and be careful if you're travelling for the holiday and amtrak on a limited schedule with major delays in the northeast. >> mike: let's get right out to peter doocy, and in bethesda, maryland, power lines are down, trees are down, spirits are down. here is peter. >> reporter: 200,000 or so people without power or air conditioning right now are here in montgomery county, maryland, and you want to know it's going to take a few days to get the juice back on here. look at this, a dangerous situation, the full weight of this tree and even though they tried to get some of it off, it's on the high tension wires, many of which have not broken. this is a residential area, dozens and dozens of wires, the neighbors we have been talking to are petrified because they don't know if they're live or not. and we talked to some of the
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folks here. the residence of this right here, lucas lane had it worse, this is the only way to and from their cars and their houses and there's a wire running right through. and not only are they worried about the wire, but they're getting frustrated with the power company here, petco. >> everyone is here without power, i accept that, but we're on a dead-end street no way of getting out. >> and this wire has been here, it's an open wire or not, nobody wants to risk handling it or driving over it, all we do is move this wire and just deal with it like anyone else would. >> reporter: and the people that can't get to their cars are having a hard time getting around here because the tree is taking up two lanes of a four lane main road here, that runs into bethesda and then into a highway on the other end and there's no air conditioning and no traffic signals here and a lot of people we've been hearing are
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headed right down the road to starbucks. because shall it's within walking distance and they can plug in their phones and they can get coffee there. back to you guys. >> no dunkin' donuts? >> i like their could have coo. >> starbucks, it's bethesda. >> dave: get yourself a coffee, peter. it's interesting, no school in session right now that changes how it happens, when we had the hurricane, we had the kids missing a week, two weeks because of the damage. it looks like a hurricane. >> mike: i got a tweet a while ago from the power company they put out in south jersey, 500 people working on the downed power lines, it's so widespread. >> ainsley: maria has been working on it. >> good to see you, it's widespread, triple digits temperatures from the desert southwest and into the plains and east coast. it's experiencing the heatwave and when you factor in the humidity, it feels hotter and that's the reason why we're seeing dangerous levels of the
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heat up there. up to 115 degrees is possible. a lot of heat warnings from philadelphia to florida and as far west as eastern portions of arkansas and also, missouri and those in the maroon color are the accepted heat warnings where you're really looking at dangerous levels of heat. the advisories. you need to stay hydrated and try to head indoors into an area that does have ac. i know power was knocked out for many, and you may have cooling centers for the local cities or communities. otherwise, well above average, yes, the summer is supposed to be hot, but some of the temperatures as much as 15 degrees above what's average this time of the year and expect today continue into monday and tuesday, upper 90's, widespread, kansas, kentucky, d.c., north carolina and georgia and creeping back into up the triple digits and kansas. >> thank you, maria. now for the rest of your headlines today. another u.s. drone strike this
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happened near the afghan border. pakistani officials say they struck a house, fighters loyal to a top leader are hiding out and the attack becomes despite the demands that they stop. tragedy in wyoming, three boy scouts, their scout master and a toddler are dead after a head i don't know r on collision. this happened northwest of thermopolis. say that for me. the scouts were headed back to colorado springs from a boy scout camp. the car they were travelling in, veered into oncoming traffic and slamming into a motor home. a three-year-old inside the motor home was killed and others injured. no word what caused the accidents. it could be weeks ever uncertainty in new york's congressional prime minister. disgraced congressman charlie rangel over the challenger, and dipped to 802 votes. 2000 papers need to be tallied and new york state supreme
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court will hold a hearing to look at the primary results, and espiallat claims the board did not let them monitor the process. and it's a life sized version after hot wheel track at the x-games in los angeles two drivers making history for simultaneously racing through the 60 foot tall double vertical loop. and that's a world record. and the driver is a three times x-games medallist and-- >> the x-games are something, aren't they, making you stuff. >> dave: cool, baby, and played with those things when i was a kid. >> ainsley: remember this little guy, the mini version. >> dave: i have it at home. my kids rock that out and x-games. >>. the democrats may use this time to get on the same page with how they're going to sell the health care decision. because they don't like the language that the supreme
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court used. they don't like to call the mandate a tax. >> mike: a tax, tax. >> dave: choice is a new word as well. >> mike: democrats saying that it's a-- supreme court called it a tax. waxman says the whole thing is phony. >> it's phony, a tax code-- but the republicans say it's a tax and i see charges, this is the biggest tax increase in american history, that's ridiculous, this is not a real tax increase. it's a requirement that everybody get health insurance. >> ainsley: calling it a requirement like auto insurance, you need auto insurance to drive a car and need health insurance to live in america, if not, pay a tax, a penalty, whatever it is. >> mike: but you can avoid that tax if you pay for insuran insurance. >> dave: it will be interesting to see whether either party is running on this, but we talked to the
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virginia attorney general, ken cuccinelli who initially saw the ruling from the supreme court as a quote, dark day for america, later, he had digest it had all and said he found a bit of a silver lining. >> the silver lining is at that because it's a tax bill now, and that from the supreme court, instead of an ordinary bill, it can only-- it can be repealed with only 50 senators instead of 60. normally you've got to overcome the senate filibuster, now if you've got 50 and a vice-president it can be beaten. it can't just be about saying no, you've got to have positive alternative. this has been a bipartisan failure for ten years, when you say replace, you're speaking the singular, i think the way we need to do this, we don't need another 2000 page bill. we need a whole bunch of ten page bills that every american can read and understand. >> mike: dave, you mentioned
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immediately after that. mitt romney has to have a replacement, you you just can't run on i don't like this, let's get rid of it. what's the alternative. >> dave: namely, he says they need to be able to compete across state lines. a big thing from republicans. you don't hear that a lot. you hear about repeal, you don't hear replace. i don't think that mitt romney will come up with the replacement. i don't know if you can get republicans on the same page, but that should be interesting to find out if they find an alternative. >> mike: a little while ago we asked, now, when you go on a family reunion or a vacation, do you pack a hammer? do you compete, do you sit around and drink? what do you do on your family vacation. the romney family, a competitive bunch, they do the romney olympics. every four years family vacation, and 30 romneys in all. 18 grandchildren and they used to be ultra competitive.
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running and biking and mitt getting older and says i've got to change the event to compete a little bit. >> ainsley: ainsley says he changed it because he was start to go lose. mitt romney. >> ainsley: to his daughter-in-law just gave birth so he trained harder. this is what happens, guys, when you have five boys. >> mike: right. >> ainsley: got to entertain them, right. >> dave: hammer the most nails into a board in two minutes. that's what mike jerrick does on weekends typically. >> mike: with my head. >> dave: home run derby and throw the football the furthest, i don't know, i personally love it and love the idea of going on vacation and getting the competitive juices flowing. some probably think that's a little too much. >> ainsley: yeah, i, more girls in my family than boys, and not our idea of vacation, my dad and brother might disagree. >> mike: and i think it sounds like a really nice time to get all of your family members around and you can't opt out, and couple of family members-- >> one of the boys tried to opt out and i've got to work,
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uh-uh, you're coming and you've got to tell your bosses and he did. >> dave: i suggest the summer "fox & friends" olympics. >> ainsley: i have seen you race the canoe before, buddy. >> dave: do you compete on your summer vacation? let us know on twitter. the side of obamacare, you may not have heard about. america's doctors, some say it changes the way do you business. >> mike: then, are you stronger than tiger? the romneys probably are. they would be into this. the odds might be stacked against these guys, but there's no shortage of volunteers willing to take on that tiger. we'll tell i where it happened. >> ainsley: listen to the song, how appropriate. >> mike: eye of the tiger. ♪
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hear from, america doctors. many fear the new taxes and regulations could put their practices out of business. here with the physician's perspective, dr. ben carson. the director of pediatric neuro surgery at john hopkins, the medal of freedom. great to see you, doctor. >> thank you, nice to be here. why will it put doctors out of business? >> well, now, do we need health care reform? absolutely, there's no question about that. but, the aim really should be to lower the costs and to make access better. and what has happened with the increasing number of regulations, that keep coming down, it seems like on a monthly basis, is it detracts from the physician's ability to take care of their patients and make them have to hire more people. you have to hire all kinds of insurance specialists, because there's so many different insurance forms and different ways of submitting bills,
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different ways of collecting, and we need to bring some kind of uniformity there. we need to bring logic into the system, basically, and the more illogical we become and the more bureaucrat based we b become, the less effective the physician becomes and spend time having little to do with medicine and patient care. >> ainsley: dr. ka carson, what does it mean for patient out there. >> fewer decisions can devote to patient care because they're devoting to the superfluous things. and couple at that with this massive health reform bill, there's nothing in it about tort reform. you know, this is a major problem. i know some have come along and say it's only about 5 billion dollars, that's a ridiculous number.
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it's much more than that defensive medicine costs, and the ramifications thereof. and one of the things i think that's going to be be necessary, we can't simply sit around and complain about this 2700 bill -- 2700 page bill. what we need to do is start talking about how do we replace it with reasonable, logical things that actually will get the costs down and make health care available to the largest number of people. we spend twice as much per capita in this country as the next closest nation and yet, we have these horrendous access problems, we don't need to pour more money into the this, we need nor efficiency. >> doctor, you sound like you're echoing similar sentiments as ken cuccinelli from virginia. he says we need to first compete for insurance across state lines. one of the concerns is
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premiums instead of going up-- or going down going up from 10 to 40%? >> yes, of course, we need to understand that we live in america. and that the system that we have is a capitalistic, free enterprise system. so, let's let that system work. you know, it doesn't work when you bring into a system like that a bunch of bureaucracy. you're trying to mix and match things that don't work together and you get the least efficient effects from both of them. let's decide who we are. this is a big problem that we're having in this nation right now, are we a free enterprise, capitalistic society or are we a government-run society. this is really the issue that this whole thing is coming down to. and we need to make it crystal clear to people what the effects will be of choosing one over the other. there's a lot a subterfuge,
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this whole health care bill, a lot of subterfuge there. this is one of the things that the founders of our country actually feared, that we would get to the point where the people would lose their effect and the government will become massive and become an integral part of all of our lives and we would no longer be a country for, of and by the people. >> ainsley: we're going to love it there. we respect you immensely, all of those in your profession and have gone to medical school. thank you so much. >> thank you. >> dave: a story that every parent needs to hear, a little girl's nightgown goes up in flames, because of the type of softener used. >> ainsley: all parents need to hear that one. stick around. ♪
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>> one in 50 americans were on food stamps today. it's one in seven and the usda is now trying to hand out even more by promoting food stamps at parties. is it like a tupperware party? michelle, from the daily caller. great to see you. >> yeah, great to see you. >> mike: okay. who are the people who don't know that food stamps are available, first of all? >> i'm not sure, but look, the federal government is spending about 3 million dollars trying to advertise food stamps. so they're encouraging americans to have food stamp parties, right where you provide activities, games, food and encourage all of your friends and family to get on food stamps. which is absolutely crazy considering one in seven americans are on food stamps right now, our debt is out of control because of entitlement spending. the last thing we need is more people on food stamps. >> mike: they also put out a brochure, a pamphlet so to
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speak. we found, host social events where people mix and mingle. parties, have fun, games and entertainment, provide information about snap, putting snap in a game format, crossword puzzles or a quiz. it's fun and helps get your message across. what is the message again, michelle? >> the message is government dependency. look, we're spending 600 billion dollars per year on welfare. and if you look at the poverty rate, it has remained relatively consistent since 1965 despite this huge increase in welfare programs like food stamps. i think it's time we be honest with ourselves, this isn't working and our welfare programs are making those who are in the situations, what they're trying to to is create a more prosecutperous society.
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so people can rise above poverty and become job creators. that's the american dream. it's not government dependency, which they're creating. >> michelle, you did that, that's the definiting of insanity. doing the same thing over and over again, since the mid 60's, i think a lot of people would agree with you, it doesn't seem to work, but they're also spending millions of dollars on radio ads. here is a sample. >> when you look the at margie, she looks amazing. >> yes, she sure does. >> i wonder how she stays so fit. what's her secret? >> she told me that food stamps benefits help her eat right and she stays active, too. >> mike: no question, i imagine, people who really need food stamps we want them to get it of course, but what is your solution to something that doesn't seem be to be working? >> well, look, this money doesn't come out of thin air and doesn't grow on trees, the money that the government is using for these programs and advertising, why not allow
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americans to keep that money. we have so many americans who are suffering and that money is coming from their paycheck. allow them to keep it so they can feed themselves, they can feed their families, they can expand their existing small businesses so that we can have more jobs and it can stimulate the economy. >> mike: we asked the usda who's spending this money about this, what they said partially. five $5 new snap benefits generates 9.20 in additional community spending, therefore, if the national participation rate rose 5%, 5 percentage points, 2.5 million dollars total in new economic activity would be generated nationwide. do you disagree. i disagree, i think that we should allow americans to stimulate the economy with their own money rather than creating the government dependency. it's so much better for someone to have that money themselves and feed their family and pay their bills with the hard earned dollars, rather than getting it from the government. >> let me keep some taxes so i can buy my own food for my
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kids. thank you. >> exactly. >> mike: always good to see you. and the supreme court's diagnosis of obamacare is it's a tax. can democrats distance themselves from that claim in time for the election in fox news sunday's chris wallace on deck. and ladies, have you heard this one? i'm on my way, no, i'm on my way when you haven't left your apartment yet. ocean, i just missed your call. i didn't have cell service, my battery is dead. are these bad lines, diabolical or innocent white lies? we'll answer some of your e-mails in a second and read some of them for you. ♪ max! ( dog barking )
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>> okay, this is one of our better shots of the morning, a game of tug-of-war, with your family against a big tiger. would you do this? where are they doing this, dave. >> dave: they're doing this at busch gardens this florida, yeah, you got it. testing their strength against the tiger, the tiger tug and even nascar's matt kenseth who won the daytona 500 in 2009 took part in the challenge. >> go, matt!
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>> all right. and apparently nascar driving is not a strength sport. i love matt, but that's not-- >> the tigers are so strong. looks like you have some help from the female zoo keeper. >> ainsley: this seems wrong to me, dangerous like something is going to go terribly wrong ap the tiger is going to get mad and break through the fence. >> mike: we will have that video. >> right, exactly. speaking of zoos, let's bring in zoo keeper chris wallace anchor of fox news sunday. >> i do that with my yellow labrador, winston. >> dave: do you win? >> i like to let him win because it makes him feel good. >> dave: what a gentleman. chris, i want to talk to you about the health care decision, it's interesting, a lot of people on vacation in washington, but you wonder in this week ahead. do you expect the romney campaign to run on this decision from the supreme
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court? do you expect the democrats to do so or are both going to run away from the issue and back to the economy? >> well, i said the answer is i think both in the sense, i don't know it will be so much this week, it's kind of going to be a lost week for the campaign. i think that the president is going to continue to push the idea now that it's the law of the land, and there are a lot of things that are good about it, and extending access to 30 million people, you can say on your parents' health care coverage until you're 26. nobody can be cut of from pre-existing condition those kinds of things they've been trying to make that case not very successfully, i think you'll see them try to again and i think you'll see romney talk about obamacare in the context of the economy that this is hurting jobs, because a lot of businessmen and particularly some of smaller businessmen, you know, are going to be burdened by the costs, the added costs of having to provide health care for their employees. so, i think it will stay in, but having said that, the economy and jobs itself will certainly continue to be the
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key issue, but nobody's going to run away from this. >> dave: it was interesting that obama did not even mention it in his weekly address, not one mention. now, he did talk a lot about the colorado wildfires, close to my heart, but no mention-- >> the popularity, he doesn't want to bring it up. >> ainsley: and democrats trying to distance themselves from the tax word. >> and it will be interesting. we're talking to the white house chief of staff at the top of the hour, jack lou. and isn't this a tax and doesn't it break obama's promise in 2008, when he was running for president, doesn't it break his promise, and the estimate in 2016, this mandat mandate/tax, 75% of them in the graph there, get the republican's point of view from the senate's g.o.p.
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leader, mitch mcconnell. >> dave: i'm curious to see if he agrees with ken cuccinelli, he says you can't just repeal, you need to present alternatives and across state lines. do you have a sense that mcconnell, boehner, of course romney will present an alternative to obamacare? >> oh, absolutely. they have to. you can't say, because there are certainly parts of this program, i don't think, certainly plurality in the polls don't like obamacare was a 2000-page huge fix-it. but there are elements, two i mentioned, kids on parents' policies, and pre-existing conditions and republicans have to come up with a replacement. it will be smaller and incremental, but there will be things like being able to buy health insurance across state
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lines. >> mike: you know, on july 11th they're going to try to repeal it again, john binner says. do you think it's a good idea, chris or do we have fatigue when it comes to this, trying to repeal it over and over and over again. >> no, i don't think from a political view, they will repeal it in the house and won't repeal it in the senate. if somehow they did the president would veto it. it's a political stunt, but no more than the democrats pull off from time to time and i think it does make a statement, okay, the supreme court has closed off the legal avenue to stop obamacare, but there's the political avenue and the way to do that is to elect a republican president and senate. >> and the polls again, how it's so unpopular. 65%, something like that. i bet that gets close tower 50-50, don't you, chris, for the people who don't pay close attention look at the decision by the supreme court, well, maybe it's not such a bad
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idea? >> yeah, i think there will be that, although, obviously, and some people say this is a very clever part of john roberts' decision, conservatives who aren't happy with the fact that he saved obamacare, on the other hand they're kind of intrigued by the fact that he called it a tax and that has a certain political weight to it and a political voice. >> if you don't like it, vote. >> dave: therefore repealed through reconciliation. and chris wallace, nice of you to join us and nice to-- >> and the questions, these are things that i'm going to be asking jack lou and mitch mcconnell. >> mike: we are trying to help you. >> what's the last thing. >> dave: thanks, chris. >> start a war with a lion, or a tiger was it. >> a tiger. >> i'm going to have a tug-of-war with a tiger. we do every week on the show. >> dave: thank you, chris. >> ainsley: you brought up a good point there. republicans say repeal, repeal. i'm curious to find out how they want to repeal. what the option is. now for the rest of your headlines in just under a half
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hour from now, millions will head to the polls in mexico to vote for the country's next president, the former governor, is expected to win by double digits, he comes from the same political party that mexicans threw out, threw out of power 12 years ago after ruling for 70 years. a nine year old washington state girl fighting for her life after she lit a match and her nightgown caught on fire and now the clark county fire officials looking into the rolls some downey be fabric softener might have been in spreading fire. the warning on the label says it coulds increase flamability on some fabrics and she's suffering from burns on body. call him a sellout. the newly married alec baldwin sold his pictures of his wedding after a run in one one or two photographers, and hate
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the tabloids. the recent on the day before his wedding to hilaria thomas. he got into an argument as week outside of his apartment and baldwin punched a photographer on the chin and word is he didn't score much for the wedding pictures. speaking of bad boys, the top lies men tell women according to top relationship experts. you can see the the top five up on your screen. nothing's wrong, i'm fine, coming in at number one. followed by, this will be my last beer. and no, your rear end doesn't look as big or doesn't look big in that outfit. we asked if you want to contribute common male lies not on the list. bo e-mailed the two three. i wasn't looking at her. i don't have any cash on me, and i didn't meet the last one. jerry from south carolina says, no, i think the dog did that, it wasn't me. and finally, a woman's perspective, pam from texas says, i don't know what you're talking about is a lie that
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men often tell us. >> dave: my winner from darryl on twitter biggest lie men tell, i don't think she's that pretty. she's not my type. that's money. >> mike: and that's behind i wasn't look at her. >> ainsley: maria, can you relate to those. >> i've heard those before. mike, you look great. i like, your shirt, tie combination, looking good. >> mike: what color is my tie. >> striped. you caught me. and you want to talk about the heatwave across the country from the rockies to the east coast, and temperatures could reach again upper 90's into the triple digits and factor in the humidity and it's hotser out there and the reason we're seeing the top temperatures because we have a large area of high pressure in place, across the center of the country and when we get the mourt out and around the high pressure system you actually get the showers and thunderstorms, firing up and some of those today could produce the weather south of great lakes into the mid atlantic and some of those
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could produce some large hail and damaging winds and some of the the same areas that got hit hard, friday night could see more of that, otherwise clicking ahead quickly we'll see some of the high temperatures for today. like over in north carolina and raleigh a high at 101, 104 in atlantic and 100 degrees in kansas city. and another hot one, you guys. >> thank you, maria, we'll be prepared. >> thank you, we told, but this one, a group using your tax dollars to teach homeless people how to squat, is it? and now, there's a big update to the story and clearly you don't want to miss that. >> mike: i'm a very good squatter. >> dave: sometimes you don't know squat. >> ainsley: and forget the eggs, guys, have cake for breakfast, it can actually help you lose weight. could it be true? >> i've been doing that for years. ♪
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>> well, forget is healthy breakfast, we love this story and a study shows people who eat sweets first thing in the morning, lose more weight. yes, dieticians share that story, appears to explain all of this. so, there's a study, right, cher, that says that if we look at folks who ate 300 extra calories, 50 additional grams of carbs, they walked away and lost more than those who eat sweets at night. as a dietician, explain this, i love this. >> there are a couple of reasons why you can eat dessert in the morning, the first one is on a physical level. obviously you have much more
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time to burn off the calories and more active through the day. much more energetic and a little bit more exercise. and that's totally. >> ainsley: people say if you eat the big breakfast and don't eat a big meal at night. >> and smaller dinner, exactly, you'll lose a little bit more weight. >> ainsley: okay, this is a huge weakness right here for most women, the middle of summer, the last thing we need to eat. if you're going to eat sweets eat them in the morning. as a dietician were you shocked by this. >> after reading the study it could be okay because one of the biggest challenges people face when they try to lose weight. they feel deprived and like they're never going to eat another sweet again and that's not really the case, if they can control it and have it in moderation. >> ainsley: yeah. when you're dieting, you can never have it. >> you never have it. >> ainsley: then i hear people say splurge one day out of the
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week. >> in this setting we were talking about extremely obese people as opposed to somebody who needs to lose a little bit of weight. and it seemed to work every day, and with a protein source. >> ainsley: does that mean, a few bites? >> just a few bites of something, but obviously, an individual cookie, and when there's two cookies or two chocolate covered strawberries, it would hard to get all this have in front of you, you'd have to have a small, small piece. >> ainsley: the guys are waiting in the wings here, see this, mike, come over, what do you like the most? and this is all-- you like cher. (laughter) >> he's never-- >> i saw that. >> hi, hi. >> and i mean, banana pudding, you had yesterday. >> so good. >> and maybe it has bananas in it. >> see, it's healthy. >> ainsley: thank you so much for being here. good news for all of us this
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morning. well, lie about being had a police officer, that's a crime. lie about being in the military, no problem. our next guest served in the army for 21 years, and he wants to know why the double standard. then, hey, border patrol agent, if you see a gunman, run for your life. is that really the new advice from homeland security? ♪
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joining us now to react, army infantry infantry man, paul jordan. what do you think about this the the this is with a by the supreme court and no one was talking about it. is it illegal to impersonate a police officer, even a government official. what do you think of the fact you can now legally lie about military service? >> i think it's -- i think it's preposterous. >> dave: why? >> well, there's, there's a lot of good men and women out there, that are serving around the world that have actually earned these awards and there's people around this country that wear them falsely and portray themselves as military service members for personal gain. >> dave: and in defense of
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this, the supreme court justice kennedy basically said this is all about protecting your free speech. should you be allowed to lie about your military service. who does it hurt if one does that? >> well, i think it hurts everybody that's ever actually ever earned these awards when these frauds and fakes are caught, they actually damage the reputation of service members and they really take away from these awards. >> dave: this was of course, based upon xavier alvarez falsely declared himself a retired marine with 25 years of service. there are others who have done this, including most recently we saw somebody do this on nbc's america's got talent, tim poe, 35-year-old, even some would say putting in the
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candidate former attorney general richard blumenthal basically said he remembered the details differently than were actually true. you personally, when you see the lies, given the sacrifices you made for your country, the 21 years we talked about, what is your reaction inside when you you see the people lie? what are we trying to get away with? >> well, it enrages me, and to me, it's identity theft. these people they think that they can wear all of these medals and all of this stuff that they earned on call of duty, but, if you really want to wear all of these medals, go to a recruiting station. >> dave: and sign up. and paul jordan, retired army infantryman served our country. thank you for coming on. >> thank you. >> dave: folks, it's not illegal to lie about military service, find me on twitt twitter @dave briggs.
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with two times the points on dining in restaurants, you may find yourself asking why not, a lot. chase sapphire preferred. 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. it doesn't look risky. i mean, phil, does this look risky to you? nancy? fred? no. well it is. in a high-risk area,
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there's a 1-in-4 chance homes like us will flood. i'm glad i got flood insurance. fred, you should look into it. i'm a risk-taker. [ female announcer ] only flood insurance covers floods. visit floodsmart.gov/risk to learn your risk. i've been fortunate to win on golf's biggest stages. but when joint pain and stiffness from psoriatic arthritis hit, even the smallest things became difficult. i finally understood what serious joint pain is like. i talked to my rheumatologist and he prescribed enbrel. enbrel can help relieve pain, stiffness, and stop joint damage. because enbrel, etanercept, suppresses your immune system, it may lower your ability to fight infections. serious, sometimes fatal events including infections, tuberculosis, lymphoma, other cancers, and nervous system and blood disorders have occurred. before starting enbrel, your doctor should test you for tuberculosis and discuss whether you've been to a region where certain fungal infections are common. don't start enbrel if you have an infection like the flu. tell your doctor if you're prone to infections,
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have cuts or sores, have had hepatitis b, have been treated for heart failure, or if, whilen enbrel, you experice persistent fever, bruising, bleeding, or paleness. [ phil ] get back to the things that matter most. ask your rheumatologist if enbrel is right for you. [ doctor ] enbrel, the number one biolog medicine prescribed by rheumatologists. >> alisyn: good morning to you, it is sunday, it is july 1st, i'm ainsley earhart filling in for alisyn, we have a fox extreme weather alert. severe storms leaving neighborhoods ravaged and trees up rooted and it is about to get worse, millions without power in this sweltering heat. we are live on the ground in moments for you. >> dave: then a border patrol agent, if you see a gunman, run for your life. run away. that is really the new advice coming from the homeland
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security department. >> i'm mike in for clayton and the homeless man lived like a million bucks for two years. how did he do that? the 4th hour of "fox & friends" for this sunday, starts, right for this sunday, starts, right now. captioning by, closed captioning services, inc. >> good morning, july 1st. >> dave: is it? >> hard to believe. >> where did june go! >> gone, can't get it back. >> dave: ali and clayton are off this morning and, i said i feel like i could run a marathon in this show. >> we have one hour left with you this morning and we're honored to be here and bring you all the news, thanks for watching and we'll be dealing with an extreme weather alert. a round-up of violent summer storms that pummeled the eastern u.s. now, being compared to a serious hurricane. in terms of damage. death toll up to 13.
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mike? >> ohio, west virginia, virginia, maryland, district of columbia under state of emergency and even more states are affected by the weather. one of the biggest concerns, more than 3 million people are now without power and don't have air-conditioning on and right in the middle of the intense heat wave and word is it could take up to a week to restore power. >> dave: travel impacted as you would imagine, roads are blocked by trees, also, amtrak running on a limited schedule with major delays in the northeast, and, where peter doocy is in bethesda, maryland, roads in neighborhood blocked by downed power lines, peter, good morning to you again. it looks similar to what we saw with the hurricane not so long ago. >> reporter: we have been here since 5:00 app and we haven't s anyone from the power company or the tree company, for that matter come to try to clean up this mess. which is remarkable, because, look here. the big tree is now leaning at a
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45-degree angle over someone's house which is very, very scary for the person that lives there. but, look at the rest of it. there is a high mark where a huge branch broke off and a low mark where another huge set of branches broke off and they are all resting on the power lines, many of which have not yet broken which is really, really dangerous. so power company has apparent according to people who live in this neighborhood not told them if they are live wires or not and one of those wires which is not known to be a live or dead wire is completely blocking a street on the other side of this. and, residents there are all stranded. it's the only entrance or exit to the main road and they are getting very, very frustrated. listen to this: >> everyone is going to be without pouwer but we're on a denned street and have no way of getting out and the wire has been here and we don't know if it is live or not and no one wants to risk handling it or driving over it and we're asking
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pepco to move the wire and move it and deal with it like anyone else will. >> reporter: houses are hot, intersections are unruly, there are a lot of traffic lights out and people are saying they are spending their days at the basement and starbucks and can plug in their phones and get iced coffee. back to you guys. >> you know what is funny -- not funny, interesting, people who need to watch the news don't have electricity. and don't know -- >> losing power on their cell phones and whatnot, on twitter this morning. >> battery power and we are still getting tweets from people. sweltering in their homes. >> dave: let's see if the weather will die down and maria molina in for rick reichmuth. any good news on the way for folks in d.c., west virginia and maryland, so forth? >> not the best of news on the east coast and as far west as the rockies we are looking at hot condition expected today, tomorrow, and even as we head into the fourth of july, another
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stretch of time we will be seeing temperatures reaching the 90s and triple digits in some areas and one of those is in denver, we expect a high temperature today, at 100°, and, out west it is dry, windy and also, hot and we are looking at the elevated fire danger, again, across states that have been experiencing wildfires, not good news out there, wind gusts over 35 miles per hour, possible, again today. for states like colorado an utah. otherwise we will see another risk for more severe weather across portions of the midwest and mid atlantic, areas that were hit hard with storms, friday night that knocked out the power for those people that, unfortunately, are dealing with a heat wave and the heat wave expected to continue from the southwest to the east coast and here's a look at how hot it will get out there today. d.c., 100°, 104 in raleigh, north carolina and louisville, 102, 104 in atlanta, who, by the way, broke a record yesterday for the all-time record high temperature at 106°. factor in the humidity and it feels even hotter here, a look at what we expect today as far
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as heat and those values, 108 in columbia, south carolina and 109 in savannah, georgia, stay cool, safe, drink a lot of water and head over to a.c. during the afternoon hours. >> if you have it, for sure. >> dave: thanks. >> another u.s. drone strike reportedly killing 8 suspected militants in pakistan, near the afghan border earlier this morning and pakistani officials say the missiles struck a house where fighters loyal to the top militant leader there were believed to be hiding out. the attack comes despite islamabad's demands that they stop. it could be weeks of uncertainty in new york's democratic congressional primary. disgraced congressman charlie rangel's unofficial lead overstate senator adrian adriano espaillat is only 802 votes and, they'll be looking at all the primary results
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tomorrow, and, he claims the election board did not allow his campaign to monitor the voting process and it used taxpayer money to teach homeless people how to squat in vacant buildings and now manhattan's picture of the homeless program is squat itself. the city reportedly cutting all funding as of today, just weeks after the squatting tutorial was exposed by "the new york post" and these guys think that is hilarious. >> dave: i'm sorry. the image. teaching somebody how to squat. yeah. >> all right, another move this morning, from homeless to living like a king. david price apparently conned his way into some of florida's most luxurious hotels for two years by posing as a guest. listen to this: he was simply -- he'd watch people check out and would call the front desk to say, i want to extend my stay and went on a wild spending spree and all on the guest's dimes and one case, racking up a $9,000 charge and
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his luck ran out, police picked him up at the hard rock hotel after he talked his way into a room a hotel employee had been staying in. >> it's the word squat. inherently funny standing alone. >> squatting lessons, he has been taking the lessons all morning long, michael thought they were about something else. >> rip my pants. 9:07. we have talked about this all morning and getting a lot of response, e-mails, let's say you are a border patrol agent and run into a guy weather a gun. your instinct, i would think is engage. pull your gun. try to fight back. save everybody around you. but there is new policy apparently that says, no. because there are other people around you in a public place or might be cross-fire for whatever, the best thing to do is holster the gun and run away. >> dave: you used a good word, instinct, these guys are trained to defend not just the border but one another and you are
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right. their instincts are to defend people and this is workplace violence, new guidelines, new directives from the homeland security department. russia away and worst-case scenario, throw rocks at a workplace shooter. >> my question is why would it be a border patrol agent? that isn't anything i would do... >> dave: we're not talking about an illegal running across the border. that is a different situation. we're talking about workplace violence, some situations, similar to that. and fort hood is a story i think of. >> gotcha. >> dave: and the union leader says we are now taught in an active shooter course if we encounter a shooter in a public place we are to run away and hide if we are cornered by such a shooter we are to only as a last resort become aggressive and throw things at him or her. we are then advised to call law enforcement and wait for their arrival. in his words, presumably while more innocent victims are
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slaughtered. presumably the dhs is doing it to save lives beauty these border agents say, that is not how we save lives. >> but also they are border agents, and the rub is -- they are law enforcement. >> dave: and they are trained. >> they want city law enforcement or county law enforcement, police officers to come in and take care of it. >> what is this point of being a border agent if you can't defend yourself? i call that a civilian. >> dave: let us know what you think about all of this. meanwhile you may have heard that private businesses here in the united states are holding on to a lot of cash. if you will, shoved under the mattress like you and i might at home. more than a trillion dollars sitting on the sidelines, despite the fact corporate profits are up, higher than they were even three years ago. why? why are businesses sitting on this money? >> well, they are gun shy and nervous, why wouldn't you be, with the recession we are going through. a survey of these business people, 32% said there are concerns over the future economy. and look at that, 24% fearful of
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big government regulations. and 22%, anxiety, a hangover from the recession itself and 22%, more efficient, don't need to add staff. they may be learning -- are doing more with less and learned that over the last couple of years. >> that is a good point, after 2008 people cut back and there were hiring freezes and businesses that survived learned how to survive with fewer people working for them. >> why add on. >> when profits are going up again. and we don't have to hire more people. >> the one word you constantly hear and i talked to a few small business men, certainty, certainty, certainty. they want to know what is -- whether it be health care or taxes, and whether it be what president is in the white house, so, that is the word i hear. we'll see if some of the money is poured back into hiring. >> expansion. yeah. >> dave: we need that to grow. >> and courage to get back in, too, confidence. >> dave: coming up, was the supreme court pressured to rule in the president's favor?
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and approve his health care law? our next guest has a very interesting perspective. he helped argue the case for those 26 states suing. >> and this is a national disgrace. one city cracking down on flags for soldiers' graves? what! [ mechanical humming ] [ male announcer ] we began with the rx. ♪ then we turned the page, creating the rx hybrid. ♪ now we've turned the page again with the all-new rx f sport. ♪ this is the next chapter for the rx. this is the next chapter for lexus. this is the pursuit of perfection.
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>> mike: according to the supreme court's ruling the president's health care mandate could not stand under the constitution's commerce clause but can work as a tax. political pressure force justices to rewrite the law? joining me david rivkin, one who represented 26 states in their fight against this. thanks for being with us. >> good to be with you, mike. >> mike: who would the pressure
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be coming from? >> well there is a great deal of pressure brought by the president, remember, he's giet bold -- his bold and inappropriate statement after the argument, and, congressional democrats and, the mainstream media and a lot of pressure on the court and my hope is the decision does not reflect the pressure but people are wondering about in. >> mike: did justice roberts gets it wrong. >> let me put it this way, we are arguing -- in the "wall street journal," the opinion is a mixed bag. he got some things right. we are gratified the commerce clause argument, the notion that the federal government is going to excise limit powers, is reflected in the the opinion and that is the good part and the bad part you mentioned in the lead-in, the court rewrote the law and it is ironic, remember at the front end nancy pelosi said we have to pass the statute, to understand what is in it? what the court's majority did in
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the end, rewrote the law and took something havthat was a mandate and transformed it into a tax and in the process of transform it into a tax it is a bridge too far, rewriting statutes is not a judicial function, that is for the legislature. >> mike: why go so far out of the way to find that? >> i think there was a feeling, and it is... to preserve the statute as much as possible and rewriting the statute is not constitutional and they rewrote the statute and got it wrong on the taxing power and the court curtailed the commerce laws on steroids and created a taxing power on steroids and to put it crisply, there can be no broccoli mandate but you sure have a tax on not eating broccoli. >> mike: quickly, i'm looking at this. it says, justice roberts says you won't be breaking the law if you are willing to pay the penalty for not obeying the law.
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so is it a tax or a penalty? >> it is clearly a penalty. >> mike: a penalty. >> it is. >> mike: so it's not a tax. >> it's not a tax. that is the key part where the court got it wrong. >> mike: have you say it again. it's not a tax. it is a penalty. >> a penalty. a penalty. it cannot be both. >> mike: it cannot be both. what do you think will happen? did you read justice ginsburg, the opinion on it? she compared it to romney care, that a federal lass was basw wa the state law in massachusetts. do you agree. >> i don't, as a matter of policy she is wrong but fundamentally it shows she doesn't understand the key difference between the states, that have general police powers and a federal government that cannot. and it is entirely inapropos. >> mike: thanks for being with us on this sunday morning. >> good to be with you. >> mike: how abo this, what did you think when you heard yesterday on our show, egypt's new president making a chilling
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promise, he wants to free a terrorist, who plotted to blow up the world trade center. in fact they got it done, congressman peter king, here, with how the united states needs to respond to that comment, and then, think turning off the a.c. and rolling down your window will help you save gasoline? how about pumping up your tires? is that a good idea? well, we'll debunk the common gasoline-saving myths. after the break.
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for two teenagers stuck on mount olympus. crews said they left him behind on the trail to bring teenagers to safety and when they returned he had fallen down a 60 foot cliff, he leaves behind a wife and three children and former president george w. bush getting his hands dirty, he and former first lady laura bush helping to renovate a health center in africa this weekend, part of the pink ribbon/red ribbon initiative, helping save women from hiv and cervical cancer. >> dave: egypt's new islamist president was sworn this weekend and, mandates to work to free omar abdel rahman, known as the blind sheikh from the u.s. prison who was a key player in the 1993 world trade center bombing and planned to blow up several other new york landmarks. joining us to discuss this, congressman peter king. good morning to you, sir. >> good morning, dave, thank
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you. >> dave: this was concerning initially because many had fear of what will happen once the muslim brotherhood is in charge in egypt. how afraid are you now that you have heard him allude to the freeing of a terrorist, a convicted terrorist, like the blind sheikh? what does it mean to the united states and our position there in egypt? >> this very much confirms our worst fears, the muslim brotherhood is what he was part of and is part of said somehow they changed and moderated their position i think people in the administration want to believe that. and he makes a remark like this in a normal address, it shows what his real feelings are and he's sending a signal to his people and the renal and is challenging the united states and we have to make it clear it is nonnegotiable and we will not tolerate this type of talk and we give $1.8 billion in aid to the egyptians every year. and, if egypt wants to be serious about working with us in the war against terrorism, or
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counting on us as an ally this type of rhetoric has to stop and we have to make it clear it isn't something that is even on the table and we are offended that it is brought up and the blind sheikh is not just a terrorist, he's a ms. murderer. a person who attempted to bring about murder of thousands of people. >> mike: for 30 years we have been -- egypt has been an ally. specifically what would you -- the president should have to do this. what statements should he make? >> i think maybe not the president himself, i don't want him to get to mohamed morsi's level, but someone close to the president making clear he or she is speaking clear to the government to publicly rebuke him and make it clear we are not tolerating this. and, i'm afraid if it is from an anonymous state department source, mid-level, and no one knows who they are it will be
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looked on as a standard response and we have to make it clear it is unique, and intolerable. >> ainsley: what is happening? what are congressmen and women saying about this. >> there has been a number of congressmen speaking out, congresswomen but i don't see very much coming from the administration, you hear anonymous voices saying it isn't going to ham. not even, is it not going to happen, it shouldn't be brought up. that we would listen to a foreign country saying a mass murderer will be released from the head of state and that is something you expect someone on the street corner to say, not the president... >> dave: speaking of mass murder, i want your take on syria. the u.n. essentially said yesterday it is time to present a transitional government, and hillary said it is time for assad to go and will the words ever be met with action? is action possible in syria? >> we hope assad goes and even if he goes i'm concerned who will come in after him.
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i would hope that our intelligence agencies and others on the ground are shaping a new government that would be much more normal. that works within the region and i'm not sure that is happening but yes. i want assad to go but i'm concerned what will happen after the fact. like libya and gadhafi is gone and there is tremendous instability in libya and there are thousands of weapons that are floating around the middle east that were in libya and now who knows. >> dave: thanks, congressman, we appreciate you being here. >> ainsley: thanks, congressman, a national disgrace, a city cracking down on flags, the american flag, at soldiers' graves. >> and an unlikely pair of friends. >> ainsley: wow, that is so cute! >> mike: a dog and a guinea pig, cuddle up? we'll show you more... >> ainsley: he's cleaning her. >> dave: lunch. >> mike: dave! those surprising little things she does still make you te notice.
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>> dave: welcome back, everybody. time for your shot of the morning, what is this. >> ainsley: a cute little guinea pig, being cleaned by the older one, in the family. >> dave: a boston terrier giving the guinea pig, yes, a little sponge bath -- a lick bath. >> ainsley: how cute is the guinea pig -- >> he's prepping him for lunch. getting him ready. >> ainsley: i have a 4 pound and
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a 2 pound and the 4 pound erliches the 2 pounder. >> mike: your 4 pounder... >> mike: last night i gave my cat a bath and i couldn't get the fur off my tongue. >> ainsley: what goes on in that mind of yours! >> dave: goes well with coffee. >> ainsley: welcome back, everybody. >> dave: hair ball... >> ainsley: 31 minutes left in the show, glad you are here, a story to tell you about, there's a cemetery in texas and they say no more american flags, 365 days out of the year. >> dave: the city council, not just the cemetery, the entire city council. >> ainsley: city council. >> dave: why does it matter in fourth of july is about celebrating our nation's independence and many people honor the troops and many honor the troops that made the ultimate sacrifice and want to bring a flag to the grave and show how important it is to that troop and you can't do it unless it is around, what, memorial day? veterans day. >> mike: two weeks around there.
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before and after. >> ainsley: and if you have teddy bears and state flowers and that around when your loved one dies you can only leave them 21 days, the idea is to keep it clean but this is our argument. it is an american flag. not talking about stuffed animals. a lot of the people being buried are buried because they sacrificed their lives for our country, for this flag. >> mike: bring in the common-sense police, i believe because we are talking about it so much it might get changed. >> ainsley: why is it... >> dave: hear from you folks. >> ainsley: why is this considered clutter and not beautiful? this is our flag. >> mike: if it gets tattered you replace it. >> dave: because of the sticker on it. and, a real patriot wouldn't mind moving them and ensure they were straight and uniform, how low can we possibly sink? now it is better and that is made in the u.s.a. >> mike: and ray in new jersey, flags should be permitted on flag day, and flag day should be all year around, 365.
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anyone, especially vets, deserve it. come on people, it is about time we got love of god and the country back. >> ainsley: and this is a tweet from leslie, flags should be flown everywhere, always, but, particularly at vets' grave investigates. >> mike: i'll follow you, leslie. >> ainsley: good point, shouldn't all american flags be made in the u.s.a. >> dave: they are certainly not and it is difficult to find... >> ainsley: we like that. now for the rest of your headlines. an extreme weather alert, firefighters making progress overnight against the two wildfires burning in colorado. your home state, dave briggs. >> dave: yeah. >> ainsley: waldo canyon fire, 45% contained. more than 150 members of the national guard on the ground helping police patrol burned-out neighborhoods and fires claimed two lives and destroyed hundreds of homes and many people devastated, of course, by the loss. >> to the right of the dog house is a tire swing... that was
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connected to a fort that i had built 16 years ago. >> ainsley: wow, in the meantime people affected by the high park fire are now allowed to return to their houses. crews expect to have the fire fully contained by tomorrow. and, a nine-year-old washington state girl fighting for her life, after she lit a match, she was wearing a nightgown, it caught on fire. now, clark county fire officials are looking into the role that donnie fabric softener might have played in spreading the fire. i warning on the label says it can increase flammability in some fabrics, she's suffering from 2nd and 3rd degree burns on 75% of her body. the newly married alec baldwin sold his wedding pictures to "people" magazine after not one but two run-ins with photographers and ranting about how much he hates the
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tabloids, the most recent incident happening friday, the day before his wedding, the yoga instructor, got into an argument outside of his apartment building and last week he punched a photographer in the chin and word is he didn't score much for those wedding pictures. a syracuse, new york soldier comes home early to pop the big question to his girlfriend but that wasn't the only surprise. >> is that real? >> oh! >> ainsley: chris vandusen posing as a pizza boy, to get her to come outside, his girlfriend taking it all in stride. and, that is when see it there, got down on his knee, asking her to marry him and you can see, she said yes. look at that. >> mike: soon as i get out of middle school. >> we take life for grant and because we go through we go through you tend to realize you can't -- i can't get ahold of him. >> ainsley: what did you say? >> mike: she's young an cute. >> ainsley: young and cute. >> dave: when you shoot the
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couple, shoot -- at least include the man, come on. >> ainsley: don't ruin the great story, the two plan to move to texas with their one-year-old daughter after the wedding. congratulations to you guys and thank you for serving, appreciate it. >> dave: fantastic. tough, and the bar is so high now, for proposals. it is tough to impress and surprise the lady. all right, meanwhile, maria molina in for rick reichmuth has a check of the hot weather across the country. >> good morning, good to see you and we are heating up here in new york city with much cooler than earlier this morning and we're already talking about a temperature at 84°, a lot of sunshine, clear skies, a beautiful morning but it will get a little bit too hot, as we head into the afternoon hours, 92 is our anticipated high temperature, here in new york city but the issue is when you factor in the humidity, it feels even hotter, we could be looking at a heat index value in new york at like 97 degrees, as we
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head southward, hotter and raleigh, 101 will be your high temperature and the reason why it is hot, we have a large area of high pressure stagnant across the u.s. and that is bringing hot temperatures and it grabs moisture from the gulf of mexico and takes it into montana and the northern plains where the moisture will fire up some showers and storms and we could be seeing some of those storms produce severe weather in the form of large hail and damaging winds and you can also see another area of severe weather possible from parts of the great lakes into the mid-atlantic, areas already hit hard, friday night from those damaging storms that produce those power outages, stay alert, everyone, as far as the warning goes, later on this afternoon. and this evening. >> mike: nice job today. >> ainsley: and, all the folks waving in the background. everything you do to conserve gasoline in your tank, is all wrong, apparently. everything you have been doing for years. turn the air conditioner off, other things... >> mike: inflate the tires. >> dave: what we're talking
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about is myths we all believe will save gas. man was i trying a lot of these when i was below the e last week, but they are all myths, number one, we have all done that, turn off the air conditioner, right? open the window, the theory goes, air-conditioning runs down your gas. turns out, gar technology has come much further than that, and, actually opening the windows create more drag on your car than having the a.c. on. >> mike: i've done it over the years an shift into neutral, right? on down hills, when you are going downhill. >> alisyn: the cab drivers -- the cab drivers do that as well. >> dave: it used to be true but car technology came so much further it now costs you gas. >> ainsley: this actually, they say, does work, right? it can help. if you buy the cash payments. >> mike: a myth. >> ainsley: a myth? >> dave: when you walk up to the pump, it is a better price for cash, you get a much lower price but they say, if you use a
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cash-back credit card you save far more money than you would -- than the little difference at the pump. >> ainsley: what is the difference. >> dave: use a cash-back credit card is what they are saying, it says, rather than paying cash at the pump to get the lower price. you with me? >> ainsley: yes. -- sorry. i don't have a car. >> mike: i don't, either but i used to do this, overinflating your tires saves gasoline, that is a myth, too. >> dave: if you overinflate them you cost yourself a bit of gas mileage. >> ainsley: and, this is the myth number 5, gas mileage can be improved with fuel additives. all right, what the heck does that mean? >> dave: there are gadgets people sell and they say it improves your gas mileage, not true. >> ainsley: not true. just drive your car and... >> mike: be happy. a quick break, are democrats playing the race card, claiming republicans are going after eric holder just because he's black?
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>> mike: quick headlines, the soyuz spacecraft making a picture-perfect landing in kazakhstan, returning three crewmembers from a 7 month mission aboard the international space station and among them donald pettitte and he stopped by fox and friends, to raise money for injured service members and the former marine completed the mission, 71-year-old rick nolan arrived in san diego, after taking off for south carolina and raised more than $10,000 for the semper
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fi fund. >> dave: are republicans going after eric holder because he is black? house congratulations staged a walkout during a vote to hold attorney general eric holder in contempt, are they playing the race card? or do they really have a point here? here for a fair and balanced debate, democratic strategist david mercer and david webb, the co-founder of tea party 365. good to see you, gentlemen. is it racist, is there anything racist about the contempt vote of our attorney general. >> let me say first, eric holder, the attorney general is probably the most qualified attorney general we have ever had, with his history is a judge, as a u.s. attorney, as a partner in a -- one of the top firms in the country... >> dave: no republicans arguing his qualifications. >> if i may continue, though, the fact that he appointed an inspector general to look into fast and furious, they also disciplined those involved in
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arizona's fast and furious and working to get to the bottom of it and instead we have darrell issa leaving a trail of smears, the modus operandi of the republican party in trying to be obstructionist and not doing the business of the country, moving this country forward and... >> dave: is there anything racist about their intent. >> in my opinion i think they've left themselves open to perceptions of racism because, if they had adhered to the facts and in fact had even allowed a witness on the democratic side in 16 months of investigation, then, maybe we wouldn't even have a perception of racism, but, right now i do believe it is what they have been doing all along, political obstruction to defeat obama in november. >> dave: when you have the congressional black caucus, walk out with nancy pelosi, and a few others and you have allegations of racism, what do you make of them? >> at least she wasn't carrying the gavel this "timtime as she with the last time, false cries of racism and the "n" word and
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the... this is a perception they need to shift to. by the way, it is night numbers game, think about the law and answer what is asked. let him answer the question. 76 out of 100,000 documents, plus, it is not the numbers it is that the documents were subpoenaed and a carefully crafted subpoena and qualification, not an issue, alberto gonzales, and all qualified people and if it was race, why not go after the first hispanic, alberto gonzales if it is a bunch of racists on the right or the white side. the race card is played and diminishes real issues of race and there is nothing about this that is racist. 18 months, a dead border agent and a couple hundred-plus dead mexican citizens and 75% of the guns out there in an operation that had no procedural checks in place. and by the way, the big lie in this, you have to look at who
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you believe. on the day that holder was there testifying, on the hill, lanny brewer, testified on the hill there was no knowledge of that at the high levels an lanny brewer is in mexico advocating for it and you have to ask these questions. >> and the question you have to ask to get to the bottom of, why eric holder appointed an inspector general and, you see in fortune magazine details that have not been addressed by issa, he issued the citation of contempt with no facts and evidence and he said i don't see a cover-up and that he lied. why are we doing it? we know that that is -- the criminal citation is not going to go through, we just learned that. and... now it is a civil and that is not going to go anywhere and we have the ner general's report coming out. again the objective here was not to get in risewhat david mentio
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getting the guns they've street which holder is attempting to do. you have stores in phoenix, arizona that are running guns and we can get guns quicker than getting a salad there. >> that is not the issue. >> that is the real issue. >> dave -- >> instead of going after character assassination... >> the last word on -- >> the issue is playing the race card and the grandiose scheme and the national press club and press conference they did to lead into this and the letter i read which they sent out to dear colleagues, time to plan the backout and -- >> that was with steny hoyer, who said, this is about confrontation, rather than cooperation. and, that is the word we need to focus on, all they are about is confrontation, not cooperation. >> this is about a... >> not about racism and it is about the -- >> the constitutional responsibility of congress... >> to do your job. not these kinds of tax dollars in order to smear a person's name or an institution. >> dave: wouldn't you
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acknowledge it is all or nothing with documents, if i asked my kids for the report card and they gave me 2 or 10 pages, it is all or nothing, cherry picking the documents. >> we are not cherry-picking, he handed over as david alluded to, 7600 documents an appeared, nine times, and made available other senior staff and secondly, what the documents that are being asked for... >> redacted. >> fast and furious, having nothing to do with fast and furious and the reaction to fan fewer use. >> dave: these they're days of our lives... >> there we go. >> serious constitutional issues. >> dave: thank you, gentlemen for being here, they are serious issues and intriguing debate. >> up next the makers of this ring, can claim it will keep your spouse faithful forever, are they onto something? [ engine turns over ] [ male announcer ] we created the luxury crossover and kept turning the page, this is the next chapter for the rx and lexus.
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>> ainsley: last year consulting firms polled 101 divorce lawyers from the u.k. and found 25% of them listed extramarital affairs as a leading cause for divorce. >> mike: makes sense. >> alisyn: 25%, i would think it would be higher. >> mike: i think so, too. one web site is combating two-timing husbands by selling a wedding ring with the words, i'm married, engraved on the inside of it and it leaves a mark on your skin, if you take it off quickly, like in a bar or something, try to pretend you are not married. >> ainsley: it leaves that on your skin. >> mike: i'm married. >> ainsley: is that really necessary? joining us now is relationship expert and author of "the first husband", hey, laura day, thanks for joining us. >> thanks for having me. >> ainsley: i mean, as a gag gift i understand it is funny, but, really? if you have to do that i think you have other problems, right? >> absolutely, you do and in fact the kroum that created t--
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couple that created the ring to give to each other was a fun gift and, it has turned into a phenomenon but if you are giving it to your spouse, you are already in trouble. >> mike: it is called an anti-cheating ring. you studied infidelity and don't people go into these things replanned? it isn't, oh, it just happened, honey, we fell into bed together. it is pre-thought out. >> absolutely and in fact a lot of couples who get involved in extramarital affairs know each other's marital status, when they are walking into that sort of relationship. very rarely is someone caught off guard that the other person is in fact married. >> ainsley: and in your experience, i've always heard you are either a cheater or you are not and your experience, is, is that the case. >>you know, i think so and beyond that, the number one factor often that leads to extramarital affairs is jealousy. that really leads to the destruction of a relationship.
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>> alisyn: on that note, should relationships -- should you talk about like an ex-boyfriend or should you talk about... >> mike: no. >> ainsley: how cute you think another girl is? that is a no no, right. >> i'm with you guys, with the no-no, keep it in the present and keep it in your future and leave the past behind. >> mike: and you never had sex with anyone before. >> absolutely! absolutely! >> ainsley: and, that is in the category of talking about past relationships. >> mike: not good. and the ring, doesn't the ring wreak of mistrust and jealousy? >> it really does, the number one way to really set off the nature of your relationship together, that you don't think this person is going to honor you. and you don't even want to put it out to the world. you want to put out confidence and authenticity with each other and nothing that wreaks as you said with jealousy. >> mike: i wonder how long it takes for the imprint to wear off. >> ainsley: i was thinking that. >> ainsley: don't get any ideas!
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thank you! more "fox & friends" coming up in two minutes. >> mike: like when your socks leave an imprint on your leg. this is the plan that revolves around you. introducing share everything. unlimited talk. unlimited text. and a single pool of shareable data that powers up to 10 devices. the first plan of its kind. share everything. only from verizon. ♪ ♪ [ male announcer ] we believe you're at your best when you can relax and be yourself. and at thousands of newly refreshed holiday inn hotels, you always can. holiday inn. stay you. and now stay rewarded with vacation pay.
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>> dave: welcome back, we're gearing up for the euro 2012 finals today. i have a child's bicycle jersey on, but it is the italian jersey. >> ainsley: you are going down, you are going down! >> dave: spain looks for the third straight title after euro '08 and world cup 2010 and now, 2012, who do you have, michael. >> mike: i'm going with your jersey. night all right! thank you! thank you! we'll be watching this. brian, you are going down, brian, you are going down bye, guys! >> eric: we start with a "fox news alert," a desperate recovery effort now underway after those deadly storms brought the power of a hurricane but without the warning. mid-atlantic states they are,
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this morning, scrambling to try and restore electricity to more than a million people in the middle of what today is turning out to be a dangerous heat wave, good morning on this sunday morning, i'm eric sean. >> jamie: i'm jamie colby, we hope those folks get relief soon, welcome to a brand new hour inside america's news headquarters and, violent thunderstorms did pummel the region, killing at least 13 people, including two children. virginia seeing the worst of it, more people were killed here than in any other state. and, in west virginia, downed trees and live wires are littering the streets, the debris of damaged homes are scattered on the ground at this hour. and, in our nation's capitol, at least one man was electrocuted by downed power lines, folks cannot believe all the damage. >> tree limes, flying branches, and, then, very short time later, we began to see flames. flames in front of this house and we began to see flames very much in front of the house down the street. >> and it
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