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safe from both external threats and essay from the cruelty of people can sometimes inflict on one another. most of us i would think agree our children need to learn math, reading, basic science, civics and history. most of us would agree cultural and political issues divide people need not be present inside the school. first learn to read and write and do some basic computation. be able to name at least five the presidency. then we can graduate to discuss all of the social engineering issues which tend to dominate our headlines today. several weeks ago book bands were all the rage. meanwhile an alarming number of our students cannot read which is sort of the ultimate book ban isn't it? tonight we celebrate the pursuit of knowledge in the sharpening of minds. the eve of labor day was school getting back into session all across the country seems the ideal time to talk about how we could provide the best learning environment for our young people how to provide a safe learning environment without our schools resembling military. how we can allow kids to become kids and draw the line of bullying and assault and abuse which makes some children literally afraid to go to school. how we can attract women and men to education as a profession including special education and counseling. how we can catch up after a rough couple of years brought on by a pandemic in the response thereto. people have different views on various aspects of education. people a good conscience can debate the role the government, state, federal, local. i suspect we all agree but as individuals and families and communities and indeed as a country we are well served by an education citizenry thomas jefferson is believed to have said it is a vital requisite to our survival as a free people. school is not always entertaining or fun but our students should not be afraid of going to school. they should not live in an anxious dread of being bullied. going to school should not be taking your life literally into your own hands or risking your mental well-being. i very much wanted our next guest to join us tonight for this special because i want those children, those students who feel scared or anxious or prone to absent themselves from school to be equipped so they can avoid or manage or conquer those fears. joining us now clinical psychologist, doctor bullying does real damage to young people. so, there is a student watching who dread school because they feel alone, anxious, intimidated, what can they do? what advice would you have for them? >> first of all, i am surprised your demographic let's assume a mom and dad wanted to watch it or they got a poly side project. critically important school is about preparing for life. think about a situation or a class not sure how to handle it navigated that thought keeps coming up, that tells you something. what's telling you is a got a little problem you've got to solve for the best way to solve problems is to have a conversation with somebody, right? that's only doing counseling as we have a conversation for that conversation helps to broaden my thinking, my perspective semi- options for how to deal with it. look for things externally. i can talk to somebody. i can arrange something else during that time i can plan ahead. most importantly look internally. learn to manage your thoughts. a connection between thoughts and our feelings and our behaviors. we can manage that when you look and listen to all successful people athletes, teachers, principals, munitions, everybody learns this life skill and that is how do i manage a mind that can be prone to worry? that is a great life skill. trey: appearance you and i are both parents. we don't like to think that our child could be the perpetrator. but if you are a parent, do you not also have an obligation to sit down to make sure your child is not the one causing angst and anxiety and pain to another student? >> absolutely buried pre-be mit is adolescence. they are learning how to manage and navigate the world and relationships. they're going to make mistakes. if you get that upset about one interaction you need to manage her fears, one interaction does not make a diagnosis. step and help them think broader what were you feeling when you did that? what were you thinking what you think the other person felt? looking back on it what would you like to do different? at the time we need to help them think broader. help them see other perspectives and alternatives for share a little of our life we had to navigate those as well that's adolescence. trey: fear is a prison. adults are in it, kids are in it. give us the keys to get out of the prison, that château fear give us the keys on how to get out of that. >> the first of all it's the biggest mistake we make is avoidance. we avoid and think that is the best strategy adults do as well it is actually the worst strategy we can have because we are allowing fear and worry to make our choices in life. a lot of times as her choices from things we know we like it. again i come back to it is just a problem to solve. we have increasing rates of anxiety and excess worry. use good language when you're talking to young adults about it. i keep thinking and playing and rehearsing, face it look at options and alternatives of how to step into it and different strategies they are not all going to work all the time. but you want to start collecting some strategies and ways to manage situations where our mind over thanks. because that again his late life skill we are all going to need to the future. trey: dr. gilliland equipping us to navigate what can be a very challenging thing we call life. thank you for joining us, happy labor day weekend to you and your family. >> good to be of the same to you and yours. trey: coming up students and schools are facing threats to many of us did not grow up with. both inside and outside the school walls. the founder of safe school systems author of education in a violent world. doctor steve webb joined u ♪ ♪ the impact of a meal goes well beyond feeding our bodies. food can open endless possibilities for people to thrive. because when people are fed... futures are nourished. everyone deserves to live a full life. and with your help, together we can end hunger. join the movement at feedingamerica.org/actnow it's something about having that piece of paper. some people think that's worth more than my skills. i've run this place for 20 years, but i still need to prove that i'm more than what you see on paper. you gotta be so good they can't ignore you. it's the way my mind works. i have a very mechanical brain. analytics and empathy. that's how i gain clients. i am more... i'm more than who i am on paper. here's why you should switch fo to duckduckgo on all your devie duckduckgo comes with a built-n engine like google, but it's pi and doesn't spy on your searchs and duckduckgo lets you browse like chrome, but it blocks cooi and creepy ads that follow youa from google and other companie. and there's no catch. it's fre. we make money from ads, but they don't follow you aroud join the millions of people taking back their privacy by downloading duckduckgo on all your devices today. goli, taste your goals. join the millions of people taking back their privacy trey: welcome back to special edition of sunday night in america bids school is supposed to be a safe place to learn. but for some it's a target it's the place to reap the maximum pain and anguish on others it is a congregation of children which those with malevolent intentions know full well. most people could never imagine hurting a child but most people would do everything in th their power to protect a child. the list of school shootings keeps getting longer and longer. what is the answer? surely no one believes in dead children is the price to pay for living in a free country? what about some of the threats that are harder to see? social media and other forms of technology? doctor steve webb is the author of education and world bids founders safe school systems. doctor webb i do want to talk about school shootings. but we forget to that young people are facing dangers from things other than guns things like social media. cyber bullying can also have deadly consequences can it not? parks absolutely and think for having me on your show. this has become such an important issue the united states surgeon general has issued an advisory. we talked about the potential risk of harm for kids and their mental health and well-being. we have known about this for a long time. this is nothing new it's just the fact why are we doing something about it? trey: cyber bullying is real, it is lethal. if you were in charge i mean there athere's some states talkg about requiring a certain age limit or parental consent. what are some ways for people who are sick and tired of bullying like i am to do something about it to help protect those being bullied? >> we have already got some age restrictions. rebecca harassed to the point she committed suicide in 2013 she was utilizing an app called ask.fm is an anonymous app a lot of these suicides are things we are seeing today in our schools and around our communities are doing with anonymous apps and the fact that kids between the ages of 10 and 19 their minds, their brains or cognitive development mix the risk-taking certainly spiked. it did for her and she was 12 years old. not supposed to have that app and still until 13 or over. we have already got agent restrictions to these apps but parents need to pay attention to those and make sure those are not finding their way onto the kids found many 10 kids are able to find apps to hide the fact they have got these apps and sexting photos and other dangerous things on their phone they can hide it from their parents. parents need to be aware. trey: i want to move to another topic with lethal consequences. for some that word was columbine and now it's too many schools to remember the names. so what happened? i know we have isolated school shooting since 1800s but something seems to be going on now there are just more and more of them. when and how did our schools become target and how do we fix it? >> you just mentioned columbine that was 1999 we are still talking about it. that was really one of the first times when these two killers were taken videos of themselves and trying to become famous by becoming a school shooter. the famous a part of it we are allowing these children these young people to be targeted by people who just want to be famous they're going to commit suicide at a called a strategic suicide utilizing our kids as pawns to become famous. how we stop it is every instance in research for my book there is a social media presence with that killer. a social media presence were they told people they were going to be a school shooter we laughed it off as routine. this cannot be routine in our society has to be taken seriously when a week, as a society should not take this anymore. trey: i cannot agree more columbine seemed like a long time ago. we seem to average one a month. but you are doing what you can to stop it and i salute you for it and i thank you for joining us on sunday night. >> thank you so much. trey: next what happens in a mental health crisis meets a counseling shortage? what are the best solutions for special education students quester question required to ade senior vice president alice lee parallel learning ceo diana next. [sound of door opening machine beeps, stomping] [male narrator] these are more than just the sound of a safe place to go after school. these are the sounds of interests being ignited and of mentors making an impact. at boys & girls clubs, we don't do just one thing. we do whatever it takes to meet the needs of every kid who comes through those doors. [sound of falling dominoes] because whatever it takes is what it takes to build great futures. [sound of knocking] great futures start here. [stomping coordinated with graphics] >> i'm jackie ibanez in new york, ukraine defense minister has officially resigned just hours after president zelenskyy announced plans to have him voted out of office. the chair will replace him once approved by parliament. >> there has been, stopping corruption is a key factor in the effort for ukraine to join the european union and nato. electricity recovery continues from hurricane idalia. the powerful storm left a large path of destruction behind. nearly 30,000 are without power at this hour. i'm jackie ibanez, now back to suwannee for all of your headlines, log on to fox news.com. . >> welcome back to special edition of sunday night in america for the beginning of period of adjustment. for many students new classes, new teachers perhaps a completely different school environment. it can be scary, and hard, what makes it even harder is the fear or the reality of being bullied or intimidated or assaulted or threatened by others. it's not just within the walls of the school put the old days we left school we left many of the problems thereto. but not in the age of social media. cyber bullies enabled by modern technology could find you 24 hours a day seven days a week. how can we spot the signs of a young person under assault by others? the victim educate appropriate perpetrators to make sure parents not to look for on both ends. senior vice president and technology company. i have to confess i have zero tolerance. no matter how young they are. i've seen the devastating impact it has on people who are habitually bullied. but could agitate to parents and grandparents do to stop the bullying? >> i so out there and making sure bullying is not acceptable. i was an educator at the start of the school year absolutely important that we set a positive school. when i was back in the classroom, what i really work to do as i wanted my students to get to know each other. to know each other and work out to respect each other's differences. but we aren't seeing right now unfortunately there's one in every seven minutes from seeing students being bullied. 160,000 students are deciding to not go to school every single day because they are being bullied. that is not okay. as an educator it's not only on the school but it's on the families we have to do something about it. we believe we have to educate the entire population on what bullying is. what are the strategies to prevent it and who to go to if we do see it. if you are on the receiving end of it we want to encourage our students an instead of bystande. >> there is a difference between folks who said let kids be kids and then kids wind up hanging themselves in the garages of their homes because of being cyber bullied. there is a big area between just letting people be young people and work out their differences but let me ask him or think there were guidance counselors at the schools i attended growing up. i will mention one in particular his name is jim who helped so many young people navigate that challenging stage of life. are there still guidance counselors are people students can go talk to at schools? and are there enough of them? >> you brought up the points around bullying is much more prevalent but it is less apparent now. back in the day when we were in school you could see it in the locker rooms, and the library, on the school buses. but now it's happening over social media direct messages text messages. one of the advantages of covid as it did bring covid relief funding to schools. but many school district opted to do is they spent their resources on educating not just our school counselors but teachers, on bullying prevention strategies. let's not just in the hands of the school counselor, multiple people can assist. the fact is there is a shortage of school counselors. what we believe is there are other resources out of their digital curriculum tools that can teach students about bullying prevention the strategies and what to do if it does occur. >> or i'm about to say it will make me wildly unpopular with young people. but that is okay because i am never running for office again. but there are age limits on how old you have to be to purchase a firearm. to purchase alcohol, tobacco, to buy a lottery ticket, to sign a contract. if you have to be a certain age to access things that could hurt you or others, is it also may be time to say happy certain age before you can get on social media or access certain parts of social media? am i just becoming like an old man? >> know i have heard many folks have similar opinions. i cannot speak specifically to that what i will speak to is that we as educators, a parent to myself it is a community approach. we all have to be there to ensure our students are safe. we want them to be at school, be themselves and not have to deal with this but they are. so we have to address it. research has shown if we are addressing it quickly and consistently that ultimately it will stop the bullying behavior. what is unique as we have our parents they can talk to the students. the difference is at school there is a consistent message we really want to ensure both school and family are elaborating in talking about bullying. trey: as long as eight teach trigonometry there's going to be fair ifear in school but it shot come from your peers, what they say about you or what they do to you that it's just a different type of fear and i applaud you for trying to do something to help other people's children thank you for joining us on a labor day weekend. happy labor day to you and your family. god bless you for being an education. >> in education. >> thank you appreciate it. >> many of our children have learning disabilities or otherwise need different teaching methods for the evidence shows the number of children who need special education services has risen over the past couple of decades. what happens when our school district struggled to fill vacancies with teachers who are specialized in this type of trading? htraining? how do we apportion resources? how do we measure success? our next guest struggles learning disability ever oma growing up and now she is the ceo of the parallel learning devoted to addressing the unprecedented demand for special education service. diana joins us. welcome diana. it sounds like they need is great the supply of specializedd teachers may be dwindling. is that the case? and how can it be remedied? >> first off thank you for having me on the show. and for covering this very important topic. yes there is definitely a shortage. there is always been a shortage of special education providers for special education covers all students needs outside of the general education population classrooms. termite students who struggle with learning differences like dyslexia, dysgraphia, just calculate common to learning differences like adhd, autism and so forth g gszings says incentivize them to also stick around is a very big issue of turnover in the realm of special education especially because these teachers these providers are working in a very silent environment their work with a very small population of students versus the general education teachers who have a very large community around them. with that in mind the biggest incentive beyond any monetary incentive is simply what you can do for students, changing lives for so many students are disenfranchised by the typical american education system for giving them the heightened extra resource that they need to be really productive members of society. post- graduation and in the classroom and beyond the classroom. trey: diana and t diane and thef full disclosure i married to someone a first grade classroom. she never complained about anything. but testing and measuring student attainment and accomplishment and achievement is hard in any classroom. is it even more difficult with special education to actually test or measure how a teacher is doing? i would find it very frustrating if someone not in my classroom was judging me. particularly if i had a special education classroom. >> yes. it looks different for every single student in terms of the needs and what can be created. every student that is in special education has an individualized education plan or an iep and in those iep's there are goal set for each student to help them overcome the challenges in the evaluation and diagnosis process. those teachers are expected to help those children ultimately reach those iep goals. the problem comes down to a lack of time, lack of resources, the amount of work that is expected in special education teachers far greater than any other teacher in the school. every teacher works so hard. but specifically special education teachers are left doing a ton of administrative work of tom and documentation associated with all of the services being provided and ultimately will spend a lot of extra time with each of the students and working to the caseload. with that their number of different measures to your point it's very difficult to really measure outcomes across the school districts. but in the realm of special education to have this additional stress of really making sure students are meeting the goals stated in the individualized education plan. we have that little resources that little time to devote to each student it can be difficult. >> dina thank you for two things number one showing people you can become a ceo even if you have a different way of learning. and for dedicating your life to education. thank you for joining us on a sunday night. >> absolutely, thank you for having us. trey: up next is college worth it? how can students and families afford it? west texas a&m university president has an idea. he joins us af ♪ if i could be you and you could be me ♪ ♪ for just one hour ♪ ♪ if we could find a way to get inside each other's mind ♪ ♪ if you could see you through my eyes instead of your ego ♪ ♪ i believe you'd be surprised to see that you've been blind ♪ ♪ walk a mile in my shoes ♪ ♪ walk a mile in my shoes ♪ ♪ yeah before you abuse, criticize and accuse ♪ ♪ walk a mile in my shoes ♪ ♪ walk a mile in my shoes ♪ ♪ well before you abuse, criticize and accuse ♪ ♪ walk a mile in my shoes ♪ (sfx: crowd noise. ref whistle) sarah, you got this. ok? (sfx: referee whistle) ♪ say, what you wanna say ♪ ♪ and let the words fall out ♪ ♪ honestly, ♪ ♪ i wanna see you be brave ♪ ♪ with what you wanna say♪ ♪ and let the words fall out ♪ ♪ and let the words fall out ♪ but they lost ♪ and let the words fall out ♪ not really. ♪ what you wanna say ♪ not where it counts. ♪ i wanna see you be brave ♪ ♪ just wanna see you be brave ♪ ow! uh oh. you, ok? no... i mean yeah. -just hit my melon. -yikes! should we see a doctor? i can't tell a doctor i slipped on a toy. i'm a triathlete! i had a concussion. most happen doing ordinary things. sometimes the tough thing to do is to get help to prevent serious damage. i like your sensitive side. don't mess with your melon. if you hit it, get it checked. loving this pay bump on our allowance. wonder where mom and dad got the extra money? maybe they won the lottery? maybe they inherited a fortune? maybe buried treasure? maybe it fell off a truck? or maybe they switched to xfinity mobile - the fastest mobile service. save hundreds a year over t-mobile, at&t and verizon. now i can buy that electric scooter. i'm starting a private equity fund that specializes in midcap. you do you. switch to xfinity mobile today. every day, businesses everywhere are asking: is it possible? with comcast business... it is. is it possible to use predictive monitoring to address operations issues? we can help with that. can we provide health care virtually anywhere? we can help with that, too. is it possible to survey foot traffic across all of our locations? yeah! absolutely. with the advanced connectivity and intelligence of global secure networking from comcast business. it's not just possible. it's happening. trey: welcome back to graduate high school and go to college and get a job so you could be a productive member of society and support your loved ones. those are still good things to do but college now negotiable? confidence in college waning? only 36% of americans say they have a lot of confidence in higher education which is a big drop from just a decade ago. the question is why? it's at the cost of education? is a big unemployed or underemployed after a four-year degree? we still here moving stories from her friends and neighbors that someone was a first person and thein their family to gradue college. but is the way we view higher education changing? joining us now is the president of west texas a&m university welcome mr. president. is college just a prerequisite for some jobs like being a doctor or being an attorney? is there still stand alone value and a four-year degree? >> it's a pleasure to be here. i do think there is high value to a college degree. especially when universities focus on the concept of engagement citizenship. the primary purpose for me at any college education but especially a public college education is to improve the state of our republic. that is what we are about with the fact of the matter is it is incredibly important in the general sense and also importuning specific sense as you mentioned for job creation and capability of performing various functions doctors, lawyers, schoolteachers, architects, engineers and many others. there is a two-pronged approach to this thing. general education appreciation for a free society number one. number two vocational skills that allow people to support themselves and their families. trey: alright, i'm going to raise an issue for just because i raise it does not necessarily mean i agree with that person may or may not i did not actually attend class enough when i was at baylor to get indoctrinated by my professors. i was more likely to be indoctrinated by my fraternity brothers. however, you mentioned >> engagement and education citizenry. there are folks on the right to think some colleges are the last bastions for the hippy movement it trends too far left. so is there merit to that? what you say to the parents of a conservative child or conservative parents that they are going to hear both sides of it if they go to college. >> it is a good appointive trey. it is true in a lot of cases appeared on certain campuses in certain locations. in the where we are in the texas panhandle we are working diligently to hold onto conservative values that exist in the texas panhandle print self-reliance the idea of accepting personal responsibility for your actions. this sense you can improve yourself through education. a commemorative faith, family, so on and so forth these exist across the texas panhandle. our goal to reflect those values. i think it's very important we do that because these are the people we serve. half of our students come from the top 26 counties of texas. which by the way is right in the heart of food, fuel, fiber production in the united states. the fact of the matter is you cannot produce food, fuel, fiber and cities and metropolitan areas it's in rural locations and we are largely rural here. i do not have to tell you with the value system of most rural folks would be. you know what is. in fact that is incredibly important. colleges in many ways take on the identity of the regions they serve. a special regional institutions bby th the way we, west texas am university but regional universities, regional institution educate about half the people graduate from college. i kno note for example many laws study prelaw in a regional university and then go on to law school like a baylor. trey: before i let you go the affordability of college, i think i read this correctly that textbooks are free but you are school trying to do something to keep the cost of a degree down. when you say about folks concerned about the affordability of a four-year degree? >> we are doing everything that we can to keep the cost down texas a&m university system under the board's leadership and chancellor sharp' at leadership we are holding tuition and academic fees and flat until 25. that is a good step already. but wwhat we are doing is next o fall in the fall of 2024 students will no longer pay for textbooks. we are diligently working now to find substitutes for that use of textbooks because of increasing costs. trey: good for you. and look if you want to change the world teach that's what i tell people thank you for dedicating your career to education. thank you for joining us on a sunday night happy labor day weekend to you. talk about texas a&m university. >> yes mr. president, thank you. coming up this labor day weekend there is a shortage of workers. a host of teenagers who want to work. sounds like something could be worked out congressman dusty johnson is trying to do just that. joins us next on sunday night in america. ♪imagine no possessions ♪i wonder if you can ♪no need for greed or hunger ♪a brotherhood of man ♪imagine all the people ♪sharing all the world...you, ♪you may say i'm a dreamer♪ ♪but i'm not the only one ♪i hope some day you'll join us♪ ♪and the world will live as one♪ -you want to feel important. you want to be a part of something bigger, something that matters and can help change things. -you want to feel like you belong. we know. we felt that way too, and that's why we did something about it. -we aren't just army national guard soldiers. -we are normal people just like you. -and together, we can make a difference. -take on your legacy. visit nationalguard.com to find out more. trey: welcome back to a special edition of sunday night in america paid some america businesses are struggling to find employees but especially young employees. why is that? is it too hard for young people to work and go to school? or regulation perhaps well-intentioned not reflective of the real world? congressman dusty johnson has ideas on how to be more flexible when it comes to balancing work and education for young people. joins us now congressman welcome. tell us how did you identify this as an issue? >> i grew up having jobs and frankly most americans my age he did. in fact two thirds of americans had summer jobs when i was growing up and now that number is close to one third of american teens we are losing this culture of work. i have always been annoyed the idea a 15-year-old who could do athletics in the evening, who could certainly play your games until midnight is not allowed to work past 7:00 p.m. on a school night. think we should be willing to give this kid's a little more flexibility. because work is opportunity. trey: i hear or used to hear certainly when i was i heard there is a labor shortage. i had an employer and say i have worked but i cannot get people to come apply for it. are you convinced there's a labor shortage which can be met with young people working? was your focus more on the other intrinsic value aspects of a job which you also made reference to? >> i do think it would help the workforce shortage but you are right at identifying that's actually a secondary motivator of mine. it may be good for american business but i am more interested what's good for america's young people. because i know how much i learned when i was 14, when i was 15 when i was 16 from those great jobs. by great jobs i don't mean they were paying me $50 an hour. i don't mean there were times they weren't difficult. of course a lot of the jobs available to teens are going to be a little difficult. but that is how you learn. i know i got where i got today because of this incredible work experiences. work is not punishment. work is opportunity. why are we letting our federal government make it so much more difficult for a young person who wants to work, to work? trey: to mention the federal government some of our viewers are probably sitting there shaking their heads with you saying okay you can play sports until 10 you can text, you can watch tv, you can stream miniseries but you cannot work. is that indeed the current state of the law? how did it get there in one of the prospects of you being able to change it? >> yes that is the lot today federal labor law says a 15-year-old cannot work past 7:00 p.m. on a school night. it also says that there is any school that week the student cannot work more than 18 hours. you can have a friday holiday and a monday how you could have a kid look at the four-day holiday and say i want to work two full shifts and a half day over that weekend i want to earn a little bit extra money for that car and we have the federal government sink no, no, no. you cannot know what is best for you. your parents cannot know what is best for you for the employer cannot work with you to make that decision instead forget about it. we need to have you be idle at about weekend more hours. it does not make any sense to me. as far as prospects an anytime u try to provide more flexibility for american workers it seems like there are plenty on the left who make it sound like you want to return to six -year-olds to the salt mines. of course it is not my intention. there are no requirements this just provides more flexibility to young american workers if they want to grab that extra shift they can. i would say the prospects are mixed it clearly helps to have republicans in the house to brew that gives an opportunity to build a little momentum. trey: the shocked look on my face is anyone in politics would intentionally misrepresent someone's position or try to make it seemed like they want to do some harm i do not know where that came from. i am just so shocked about it. let me say this about south dakota. i came into congress with governor christie nome, very good work ethic. i traveled some with john thune who did more before 7:00 a.m. than the rest of us did for the entire day. there must be something about south dakota you guys and gals start off working. maybe come out of the nursery working? >> this is tough country, trey. these summers are hotter than heck the winters are as cold as it gets. both days of fall are beautiful of course. the reason i bring that up as the people who settled here the people stopped her, looked around at the sometimes difficult environment and said guests i'm going to pioneer here and going to grow crops and winter raise my family those are really hearty folks. we are the grandsons and granddaughters and great grandsons and great granddaughters of those folks. their work ethic still lives within us. that makes us an outstanding state. trey: congressman, and the grandson of somebody who wanted to play golf year-round. [laughter] which is why i chose the south carolina and not south dakota. but i am glad you are there. i'm glad you joined us on labor day weekend. my best to you and your family thank you for joining us on sunday night. part of your send it with us. hope you have a great labor day and have a great week ahead. till next week you can find us online at county america or on the trey gowdy podcast. good night from sout ( carolina ♪ ♪ >> you're looking at a live look at jacksonville, florida. you are watching "fox and friends," i'm ashley strohmier, in for carley shimkus. hi, kevin. >> kevin: i'm kevin in for todd piro. good to see you. missouri love up here and we are

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